3 Mills Surr. 504 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1903
While it may be true that the apartment occupied by the testatrix was held on a letting from month to. month, and the executor could have effected a saving by removing the furniture to a storage warehouse before the will was-
The controversies relative to this estate have been conducted with great zeal, and the finding of the referee is that the services rendered by the attorney for the executor were reasonably worth the sums charged for them. With this finding I agree. The will was drawn by the attorney for the executor, and the residuary clause was adjudged void (34 Misc. Rep. 39). In the opinion of the referee he suggests this as a reason for striking off $150 from the attorney’s fee for services in the probate proceeding. If this could be done it must be upon the ground that the executor has a valid cause of action for damages, which it was his duty to urge by way of counterclaim. If he has such a cause of action, and if it is not barred by the statute, and if it would be a proper counterclaim to a claim against the executor for services rendered to him, he has not asserted i1, and no one has urged that he be punished for not doing so. The person who is now getting the larger part of the estate, and who appears as sole contestant, bases his claims on the invalidity of the will and, even if it be conceded that the attorney was in fault in preparing
Decreed accordingly.