87 N.Y.S. 833 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
I think that the trustee is not chargeable with a devastavit as to the real estate dividends received from the Sixth Avenue Railroad Company. The testator died in 1888, and his original executors and trustees were succeeded by this trustee in 1896. These real estate dividends had been received by him and by his predecessors at various times throughout a number of years, had been classified by them as income and- had been paid by them to the life beneficiaries. But upon the trustee’s accounting, in 1901, the surrogate determined that the dividends must be credited to principal, and
Thus, it appears that this claim of devastavit is based upon the refusal of the trustee to take proceedings to recover certain payments made on account of income, which payments were embraced in certain of his prior formal accountings, and were stated therein as distributed to the life beneficiaries, and that such payments as so made had been approved by judicial decrees, which are in full vigor. But the parties to these accountings are concluded by the decrees. (Code Civ. Proc. § 2813.) The case is, in principle, similar to Bowditch v. Ayrault (138 N. Y. 222). In that case, the court, per Peckham, J., say: “ The part payments made by the trustees upon the several past accountings made by them, must remain unaffected
The trustee then has the protection of adjudications that determine
The division of the estate into five separate trusts was embraced •in the previous accounting. This was objected to and passed upón by the surrogate, and I think that the matter is now res adjudicata. ■(Authorities supra ; Matter of Garth, 10 App. Div. 100 ; Kager v. Brenneman, 47 id. 63; Matter of Willets, 112 N. Y. 289.)
The trustee did not unqualifiedly refuse to accept the check of refund tendered to him. It was tendered with a proposed receipt reading, in part, “ being the amount of the real estate dividends from
• The decree of the surrogate should be affirmed.
All concurred.
Decree of the Surrogate’s Court of Westchester county affirmed» with costs payable out of the estate.