On January 22, 1936, Francis E. Laimbeer, who had been the executor and trustee of this estate since October 10, 1916, was summarily removed for cause, and a successor trustee appointed. Therеafter, a proceeding was instituted to vacate five
The pertinent paragraph of adjudication in this decree reads as fоllows: “ Ordered, adjudged and decreed, that each and every decree entered in this Court in any accounting proceeding in the estate of Henry Grube, deceased, namely, the decrees dated on or about September 21, 1922; on or about October 6, 1924; on or about June 18, 1925; on or about January 15, 1927; and on or about March 12, 1931, be and the same hereby are in all respеcts opened, vacated and set aside.”
No appeal has been prosecuted from this decree, wherefore, since the time for such action has fully expired, it reрresents the law of the case and is binding and conclusive upon all concerned, including the court (Matter of Kennedy,
Objections have been interposed to the accounts, the judicial settlements of which have been vacated. It is asserted that certain of these objeсtions are substantially identical with those interposed upon the former accountings and which were then determined adversely to the objectants. Others appear to be new and tо be addressed to the subsequently-discovered acts of the trustee which resulted in his removal and the vacating of the former decrees.
The present motion seeks primarily to limit the issues upon the trial to those which were not previously tendered, litigated and determined. The position of the trustee is, in substance, that he should not be obliged, for example, to again prove the making and propriety of disbursements shown in the accounts in respect to which issues were previously joined, and determined adversely to the objector.
The determination of the mоtion turns upon the legal results of an unconditional vacating of a decree. This subject has received more or less incidental attention in various utterances in this State, although it has аpparently never been accorded the same analytical scrutiny here as in the courts of certain other jurisdictions.
It is, of course, obvious that when an order or decree is vacated, it is nullified, and the resulting situation is precisely the same “ as if it never had existed.” (Chapman v. Dyett,
Thе quotation of a few typical excerpts respecting the latter question is of slight assistance. The Court of Appeals observes in Stannard v. Hubbell (
This statement is open to the criticism of equivocation on the precise point here in issue, since it is capable of an interpretation that the situation of the pаrties is that existing immediately prior to the entry of the judgment and after the litigation of the issues.
Mott v. Union Bank of City of New York (
The only New York authorities which have been found which advance the applicable rules beyond this point are decisions of inferior tribunals. Thus it was said in McCollum v. McClave (
Union Bank v. Mott (
Barkin v. Rosenbach (
In Simpson v. Young Men’s Christian Assn. of Bridgeport (
The most comprehensive discussion of the question which has been found is contained in Dorman v. Usbe Building & Loan Assn. (115 N. J. Law, 337;
In thе opinion of this court, the reasoning adduced for the result in the case just cited possesses peculiar cogency in the case at bar. The situation of the contending partiеs has materially altered since the former hearing on the objections was held. Then the accountant was in the position occupied by any other fiduciary enjoying an inferencе of proper dealing which, whereas not of sufficient cogency to overcome specific evidence of unauthorized acts, nevertheless could not fail to affeсt his opponent in his investigation of the facts relative to his transactions in respect to the conduct of the trust affairs. The present situation differs by reason of the demonstrated faсt that in his dealings with the estate funds the acts of the accountant were tainted with the fraud as a result of which the decrees of judicial settlement were vacated. It may well be, therefоre, that, with this altered viewpoint in his search for relevant data, the objectants may succeed in uncovering facts conducive to a result differing from that previously attained.
The foregoing disposes of the main issue raised by the motion. The decision of the subordinate portion thеreof relative to the scope of the permissible examination of the accountant under section 263 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, which is now pending, substantially determines itself as a сorollary to the main question decided. Since the parties are again at the inception of their litigation in respect to the propriety of the acts of the accоuntant as reflected in the accounts as filed, all parties interested are entitled to the unrestrained right of inquisition envisaged in the authority to examine the fiduciary “ under oath * * * as to any mаtter relating to his administration of the estate or fund ” with the addition that “ if any party interested shall demand in writing that a voucher be produced and filed for any payment alleged by the account to have been made, the accounting party shall produce and file such voucher or make satisfactory proof of such payment.” (Surr. Ct. Act, § 263.)
The motion is accordingly in all respects denied, with costs.
Enter order on notice in conformity herewith.
