25 N.Y.S. 270 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
The controversy here is solely between one of the present executors of the will, and the personal representative of a former executor, deceased. It relates solely to the award of commissions to the two, respectively, and it must turn, as we think, upon the single question of the power of the surrogate to make the order appealed from. The testator, Lyman Soule, died in ¡November, 1885, leaving a will, by which he nominated Howard Soule, Charles F. Durston, and Charles G. Briggs as its executors, and they received letters testamentary in June, 1886. Mr. Briggs died in August, 1887, and Mr. Everts was appointed his successor in April, 1891. In May, 1891, the proceedings for an accounting were instituted which finally resulted in the decree the modification of which is the subject of this appeal. All parties interested were •duly served with citation to such accounting, among whom the respondents here, executors of the will of the deceased executor, Briggs, appeared by attorneys, who represented them throughout the proceedings. Those proceedings were adjourned from time to time until August, 1892, during which period of more than a year negotiations for an amicable adjustment of all questions arising upon the accounting were pending between counsel for the numerous parties interested, and frequent conferences on the subject were held, at nearly all of which one or the other of the attorneys for the executors of Briggs were present. The result of these negotiations seems to have been a compromise and settlement of all differences between the parties, and an agreement, in which all united, upon the provisions of the decree to be entered; and it was delegated to two of the attorneys, one of whom represented the executors and one various legatees, to draft the decree, and the decree thus prepared was duly entered by the surrogate as of the 1st day of August, 1892. Among the matters so agreed upon was a provision to the effect that three full commissions should be allowed to the executors, one of which should be awarded to Mr. Soule, one to Mr. Durston and the third to Mr. Everts and the estate of Briggs jointly; and the agreement between the two last-named parties was that such third commission should be divided equally between them, and so it was provided by the decree as entered, so far as the provision on that subject went. But just at this point the difference arose. Counsel for the executors of Briggs depose that they understood that the agreement for an equal division of the commissions in question extended to all the commissions earned and to be earned throughout the entire administration of the estate, and supposed
Order of the surrogate of Cayuga county, appealed from, reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements, and the application to open the decree denied. All concur.