Section 2528 of the Code provides that a party of full age, etc., may prosecute or defend a special proceeding in this court, in person or by án attorney regularly admitted, etc., at Ms election, with certain exceptions. Section 2538 makes provision for the service of certain papers in Surrogates’ courts, upon attorneys, as provided by §§ 796-802. This court, being of record, and attorneys being thus authorized to practise therein, it is claimed that it is clothed with sufficient power over its suitors and their attorneys to prescribe the terms on which a change of attorneys may be effected, such as is exercised by other courts. But in attempting to do so, this difficulty is encountered. Surrogates can exercise jurisdiction only over executors and administrators, as such, except that they may, in a proper case, impose costs upon them personally. Here, the claim of the attorneys, hitherto acting for the executrix, is against her personally, and not as executrix. If this court were, therefore, to make an order directing Mrs. Halsey, personally, and not as executrix, to pay those attorneys a certain sum of money for their services rendered, before permitting a substitution, under what provision of the Code would I find the power to compel the payment? Would not the order be a mere brutum f ulmén, except only as it might have the effect of bringing the proceeding to a halt until the order should be complied with? It is
While this court should not shrink from the exercise of any authority with which it is plainly invested, it should carefully avoid arrogating to itself such as is not sanctioned by the statutes, whose creature it is.
Although these courts have become courts of record, yet they have not yet come to recognize an <£ attorney of record.” In the courts of general jurisdiction, formerly by the rules of practice, and now by various sections of the Code of Civil Procedure, none of which are made applicable to Surrogates’ courts, attorneys were and are required to sign process, summonses, notices of appearance, orders of arrest, all pleadings, etc. Before the adoption of our first Code of Practice, all pleadings in the Supreme court were required to be subscribed by the attorney and filed with one of the four clerks o.f that court, and became records thereof, and the attorneys then became “attorneys of record,” and they are still so styled, although the practice is somewhat changed; while here, many of the applications and pleadings may be oral. No law or practice requires that any of the various petitions, citations, answers, objections or process shall be subscribed by an attorney, and if he have one, a subscription by the party suffices; nor is a mere notice of appearance of an
In the present proceeding, if costs shall, at its termination, be awarded, as is probable, to the executrix, she will be entitled to such as may be allowed in a case of contest, and such additional per diem allowance for services rendered by any and all of her attorneys throughout the proceeding, as if only one had been at any time engaged therein.
Application denied.