13 Mills Surr. 341 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1914
In an. accounting proceeding where there is no contest the parties ask, in behalf of a special guardian whose
This new section is in terms contrary to the long settled policy of this State. I do not mean to impute to the legislature the slightest intention of enacting a mischief, but I feel bound to inquire what they must be taken to have meant by that new section, and how it ought to be construed-so as to- fit it harmoniously into the settled jurisprudence of this State. ISTo injustice
In the first place, it will be observed that the new section contains no real limitation, on its face, on the amount of the proposed allowance. It does not read “ compensation in no case to exceed fifty thousand dollars, or five hundred dollars, or fifty dollars even.” In a vast estate I might be persuaded to estimate the allowance to be made to the guardian at too large an amount, or in another instance at a sum so large as to exhaust the estate here to he distributed. The statute would not, in terms, forbid this. Under similar conditions that very eminent man, Mr. Bradford, who sat in this seat, protested against a construction of a contemporaneous statute in this State which left to the surrogate the power of fixing costs without reference to any standard in the way of a fee bill. To give the law before him consistency with justice Mr. Bradford read into the act a superseded fee bill of another court. (Western v. Romaine, 1 Bradf. 38.) This was going a long way, but his construction was followed. (Willcox v. Smith, 26 Barb. 329, 330.) This wise course prevented such scandalous practices as those animadverted on in Matter of Stevens (114 App. Div. 607, 614; affd., 188 N. Y. 589).
It must be recognized that before the late. Surrogates’ Law of 1914 the Court of Appeals had distinctly denied that a Surrogate’s Court had power to award a special guardian compensation out of the general estate. (Matter of Robinson, 160 N. Y. 448, 452; Matter of Budlong, 100 id. 203, 205; Matter of Holden, 126 id. 589; Matter of Farmers’ Loan & Trust Co., 49 App. Div. 1.) The legislature is to be presumed to have known this and also that it was a general principle of law in this State that costs and allowances of guardians could not be made payable out of other people’s property, (Gott v. Cook, 7 Paige, 544.) On what theory such a sudden departure from precedent was justified I am not informed.
But- if the construction just denoted shall be regarded as forced, there is another consideration which cannot be overlooked, although I am reluctant in a court of first instance to go into a question of legislative power, for the reasons I stated in my judgment in Matter of Thornburgh (72 Misc. Rep. 621). The consideration to which I allude is the power of the legislature to enact that provision of section 2748 of the Code of Civil Procedure which is said to enable the surrogate to compensate a guardian of infants at any amount he fixes out of property belonging to others than the infants themselves. This legislation, it is asserted, enables the surrogate to- transfer the
It is quite true that at present an accounting proceeding in this court may have reference to the former equity jurisdiction conferred on this court, and- that the accounting proceeding now bears some likeness to a former administration suit in chancery. I briefly referred to this point in Matter of Watson (86 Misc. Rep. 594, 595). But I am unwilling to think that the theory prevailing in chancery, that in an administration suit the fund is in court, has any relevancy to conditions in a court of probate. Much depends, on the theory on which the several courts act in regard to the situation of the legal title.
The old common-law theory of legal title is not, I fear, always sufficiently guarded in our country, and there is a disposition of late years observable among us to regard all our courts as having some extended1 and mysterious power over legal
The legislature has not the power to authorize the surrogates to grant allowances to one party out of the private property of other parties. In Westervelt v. Gregg (12 N. Y. 202), it was held that the legislature had no power to take away vested rights and transfer them to another. Matter of Hatch (11 J. & S. 89), reads to the same point.
I recognize that I have stated only my own opinion, but I shall act on it until I am advised by authority of my superiors that I am in error in my construction, and then the responsibility for the results will no longer be mine. There having been no contest, the special guardian is entitled to- twenty-five dollars- costs, payable out of the estate, but to no allowance, as his infants receive nothing out of which it can be' made payable.
Decreed accordingly.