It appeared that one John Perkins died, leaving a last will and testament, whereby he appointed his brother, George R. Perkins, trustee of his will, and made certain provisions for Ms widow and other persons. . In August, 1876, the executors filed an account, upon which citations were duly issued, and served upon all the parties interested in the estate, including the appellants; and such proceedings were had that upon the 5th of April, 1877, a decree was entered, settling the accounts of the executors, and a provision made for settling the trust of which the trustee was appointed, and directing the payment out of the estate of a sum equal to the semiannual interest upon the said trust fund. The appellants, although cited and duly served upon this accounting, did not appear. On the 2d of May, 1883, a second accounting was had. The accounts of the executrix were settled, and a second
The objection is raised that this appeal cannot be heard, because no findings were requested to be made by the court, no exceptions filed to the rulings of the court, and no decision in writing filed, stating separately the facts found, and the conclusions of law, as required by the practice. We would think that this objection was well taken, as this whole proceeding arose upon an accounting, before the surrogate. His rulings related to the matters contained in that account, and in the settlement of the account he had jurisdiction to construe the will. Such being the proceeding before the surrogate,-the mere fact that there was injected into it a motion to set aside previous decrees in no way changed the nature of the proceeding. It was an accounting over which the surrogate had jurisdiction, and for the review of which the well-settled rules of practice require the procedure which has already been intimated. But it is not necessary to limit our disposition of this case to this point. There is no question but that, if the surrogate was absolutely without jurisdiction to make the decrees in question, such decrees are no protection to the executors in the administration of the estate. But it has been well settled by numerous adjudications that upon an accounting the surrogate has jurisdiction to construe the will, where the construction is necessary-to determine questions arising upon the accounting, and that, with all the parties in interest present, the surrogate may construe the provisions of a will, and determine the meaning and validity of any of them, whenever such determination is necessary in order to make his decree as to distribution. To sustain the contrary of this proposition, the case of Johnson v. Lawrence, 95 N. Y. 154, is cited. But it was there 'held that the surrogate had no authority to construe the effect of the will up