52 N.J. Eq. 807 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1894
The question to be decided in this case arises under a statute passed in 1890 and another passed in 1891. By the first it is
Now, on this state of facts, it is claimed, on behalf of the register, that he is entitled, under the statutes above referred to, for auditing and reporting the last account, the one-tenth of one per cent, on $368,000, or the sum of $368; while the executors insist that the balance carried from the preceding account .into the last account constituted no part of the estate accounted for by the last account, but represented that part of the estate which had been accounted for in the previous accounts; that such balance had been ascertained by the auditing of the previous accounts, and that the register did not, and could not, when
The rule regulating payment, prescribed by the statute of 1890, is a purely arbitrary exaction. It is not compensation according to the value of the work, but the one-tenth of one per cent, must be allowed whether the work occupies ten days or ten minutes, and whether the work is fairly worth the sum which must be allowed or only an infinitesimal part of it. For auditing and reporting the account of an estate of $500,000, consisting of twenty items or less, the surrogate is entitled to $500, though the actual value of the skill and labor bestowed is worth less than $5. It is obvious that the effect of a statute which imposes burdens in this arbitrary manner, and without the slightest regard to benefit, should not be enlarged by construction. As the legislature cannot compel one citizen to give his property to another, it would seem logically to follow that it is not within its power to ordain that the estates of decedents shall be required to pay a particular class of public officers $50 for a service which is not reasonably worth $1. To earn the fees given by the statute, a surrogate must both audit and report. The words of the statute are “ for auditing and reporting.” Nothing is given for merely reporting, but- to be entitled to the fees allowed it must appear that the surrogate has not only reported the account but also audited it. To audit an account is to examine and digest it, or examine and verify it, or examine and adjust it. In actual practice, to audit an account is to see that the accountant is charged with everything with which he is justly chargeable, and that nothing is placed on the credit side of the account for which he is not justly entitled to credit, and then, after the debit and credit are thus made up, to ascertain the balance remaining in his hands.
Adopting either of these definitions as a correct exposition of what is meant by the word “auditing” in the statute under con