130 Misc. 2d 317 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1985
OPINION OF THE COURT
The matter before the court is a petition for allowances and disbursements by the attorneys for Thomas Burns against the estate of Joseph Burns or the share of Katherine Buckley in that estate.
In order to gain the proper perspective it is essential to detail the history of this litigation from its inception.
Joseph Burns was a veteran of World War I who received 100% disability from the Veteran’s Administration for mental illness. He lived with his brother, Lawrence Burns, and in nursing homes and Veteran’s Administration hospitals. His
The rule of law in this case is found in SCPA 2301 and 2302 wherein it is provided inter alia that the awarding of costs or allowances is at the discretion of the court and may be directed to be paid “by any party personally or out of the assets of the estate or out of the share or interest of any person or from both in such proportion as directed by the court and justice requires” (SCPA 2301 [4]). SCPA 2110 also provides for the payment of attorney’s fees from the estate in general or from the share of any particular distributee or beneficiary at any time during the administration of the estate.
The cases interpreting these statutes and their predecessors in the law have uniformly held that where legal services have been rendered for the benefit of the estate as a whole resulting in the enlargement of all the distributive shares of all legatees or distributees, reasonable compensation should be granted from the funds of the estate. (See, Matter of Lounsberry, 226 App Div 291; Matter of Bellinger, 55 AD2d 448; Matter of Smith, 167 Misc 95.) The test generally applied to determine whether the legal services have “benefited the estate” is: have the services of the applicant resulted in an increase in the share to be distributed to all the beneficiaries in their capacity as such over what they would have received
A closer examination of the rule, however, is essential to reach the correct result. The law has always recognized that persons act in various legal capacities. As Surrogate Wingate holds in Matter of Smith (supra) involving the recovering of assets from an executor, the individual is a different "legal person” than that same person as a fiduciary of the estate. The court directed and the jury concluded in the case now before us that the respondent, Katherine Buckley, as an individual, wrongfully withheld assets from the estate and therefore had no right to these funds except in her legal capacity as a one-half beneficiary under the will of Joseph Burns. Except for the efforts of the intervenor-petitioner, there would have been no testamentary estate for the respondent, Katherine Buckley, or the intervenor-petitioner, Thomas Burns, to receive in their legal capacity as beneficiaries under the will of Joseph Burns. In that context, which this court believes to be the correct interpretation of the rule, all beneficiaries were benefited by the services of the applicant. (See, Matter of Smith, supra; Matter of Bellinger, supra.) Additionally, simple justice dictates that Katherine Buckley should bear the greater share of the financial burden placed upon the estate by her wrongful withholding of assets. Therefore, this court concludes that the intervenor-petitioner’s attorney is entitled to be paid from the assets of the estate for his services.
Having held that the intervenor-petitioner is entitled to reimbursement from the estate of Joseph Burns for attorney’s fees and disbursements, it now remains to be determined, the
The case before us represents an unusual circumstance in that there would have been no estate at all, no will offered for probate, no administrator c.t.a. appointed except for the acts of Thomas Burns and his attorneys. The applicant here before us Thomas Burns was relegated to a position of intervenor because of the court’s appointment of a neutral fiduciary in the Commissioner of Finance, but certainly Thomas Burns was the principal player and mover in this litigation. Thus, the services rendered in the proceeding for letters of administration and the objections to Katherine Buckley acting as executrix of the estate were necessary links in the chain of litigation to the successful conclusion of the discovery proceeding.
The respondent contends that the services of the intervenorpetitioner’s attorneys duplicated the services of the petitioner’s attorney, but it was abundantly clear to anyone sitting through the course of the trial that the petitioner and intervenor-petitioner worked in concert as a team without duplicating or overlapping in their presentation of the evidence.
Upon a review of the services rendered by the attorneys for the intervenor-petitioner the court finds that the services rendered to the motion to disqualify the respondent’s attorney in the probate proceeding, and the appeal of the probate decree had little or no benefit directly to the estate and therefore are excluded. Based upon the petition of the petitioner, the affidavit of services and the time records therein, and based upon the opposing affidavits of the respondent, the affidavits of the attorney for the estate and applying the rule laid down in Matter of Potts (supra) and the other applicable cases, this court allows a fee in the amount of $31,000 plus $400 in disbursements to counsel for the intervenor-petitioner to be paid one half from the general funds of the estate and one half from the share of Katherine Buckley. This decision is without prejudice to the intervenor-petitioner’s attorney receiving additional compensation directly from his client, Thomas Burns.