151 N.Y.S. 194 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
Lead Opinion
Samuel K. Wester died January 10, 1908. The appellants and several other persons were appointed executors of his will. The executors, other than the two appellants, were members of the family of the deceased, that is, they were his wife and his children. The testator directed in a codicil to his will that none of his executors should receive any compensation except the appellants here, and as to them the codicil provides: “ Except that Montgomery S. Sandford shall receive an annual salary of One thousand Dollars, and that David S. Wester shall receive * * * an annual salary of Fifteen Hundred Dollars. The above salaries to be in full for all commissions or salaries as executor or trustee.” The appellants and three others of those who were appointed executors qualified and have all acted as such continuously up to this time. A few months after the will was probated an action was brought in the Supreme Court by certain members of the family for a construction of the will. This action did not terminate until March 15, 1910, at which time a decision was rendered (See Nester v. Nester, 68 Misc. Bep. 207) sustaining the will generally but holding-invalid certain provisions thereof, anlong which was a provision that the executors and trustees should pay to the widow the sum of $3,000 per year during her life. From the time
An executor has a right within a reasonable time to renounce
But it is contended by the appellants that there was no election here for the reason that an election cannot he made until the person electing has full knowledge of the facts necessary to enable him to make an election; and in this case they say that they did not have full knowledge of the facts until the decision of March 15,1910, which cut off the annuity to the widow, thereby abbreviating their terms of office. But this assertion seems to have little force, for very soon after these appellants assumed their offices, and more than two years before the decision was rendered, the widow had by written instrument surrendered her annuity. The appellants were fully aware of this; they recognized the validity of this surrender and acted upon it.
The appellants elected; there can be no doubt about that. Afterwards they attempted, or at least indicated a wish, to renounce their election; but in this they seem utterly to have failed. In writing, they pretended to renounce the specific compensation; in fact, they did not renounce it at all, but continued to accept it. Had they come out boldly after the Supreme Court decision, and after filing their written renouncement, and taken the position that they had previously been deceived, thinking that their terms of office were to be continued much longer, previous to the decision, than they were to be under the decision, and that they had acted, therefore, in ignorance of all the facts, their position here would be much improved. They took no such frank and open position, however, but clung to their monthly salary with the same tenacity that they had clung to it before. They did not renounce; they only said that they had renounced. What they did amounted neither to a renunciation of their previous election nor the specific compensation.
Their whole attitude in this matter does not commend itself to the court. If they had concluded to renounce their specific compensation upon the rendition of the Supreme Court decision, assuming that they had a right to do so then, it was their duty to make their intention known. Their dealing in this particular with their coexecutors, and with the persons interested in the estate, was not open and fair and above board, as the law requires executors to act, and as it is assumed that honorable men will act; they were resorting to stealth and cunning to carry their point. They concealed their purpose to attempt to get a large amount of money from the estate in excess of what the testator had willed them to have for their services; and, while harboring such a purpose, one of the appellants bargained with his coexecutors for extra pay for his services as bookkeeper. Had his associates known of his purpose to attempt to get this large sum of money in commissions they would not, it may be assumed, have agreed to the fifteen dollars per week extra compensation which they voted him. In
It is our conclusion, first, that these appellants, with full knowledge of the facts, elected to accept the specific compensation given to them by the will of the testator; second, that they attempted to renounce this election but failed; third, that they are not entitled to the commissions allowed to executors by law, and that the only reward for their services which they are entitled to is the specific compensation provided in the will.
The decree should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Smith, P. J., dissenting in opinion, in which Woodward, J., concurred, except as to the views expressed in reference to the case of Matter of Arkenburgh (38 App. Div. 473).
Dissenting Opinion
An irrevocable election, as I read the authorities, implies a deliberate selection between two known alternatives. After an election has been made if the apparent situation is materially changed that election may be revoked, if such revocation works no harm to other parties. In 15 Cyc. 262 (note), in speaking of this rule, the editor says: “Knowledge is not to be imputed as a matter of legal obligation, as the doctrine of election is not properly a rule of positive law, but a rule of practice in equity. ‘ In order that a person who is put to his election should be concluded by it, two things are necessary. First, a full knowledge of the nature of the inconsistent rights, and of the necessity of electing between them. Second, an intention to elect manifested, either expressly, or by acts which imply choice and acquiescence.’ Spread v. Morgan, 11 H. L. Cas. [Clark’s] 588, 615; 11 Eng. Reprint, 1461, per Lord Chelmsford.” In Story’s Equity Jurisprudence (Vol. 2 [13th ed.], § 1097) the author says:
These executors have apparently been denied the right of election for two reasons. First, because from the beginning they have drawn from the estate monthly the amounts named as their salaries under the will; and, secondly, because they have concealed from others interested in the estate the fact that they had elected to take the commissions allowed by law. The receipt of the salary allowed by the will was consistent with the fact of their election to take such salary prior to the decision of Mr. Justice Foote, which changed the situation and rights of the trustees materially. Thereafter the monthly allowance was taken not as salary, but on account of commissions, and there can he no claim that they ever intended by such acts to waive their right to legal commissions. As far as the trust funds were concerned, they were required to take out their commissions before handing over the trust income to the beneficiaries. Otherwise they would have been deemed to have waived the rights to such commissions. (Olcott v. Baldwin, 190 N. Y. 99.) The fact that instead of reckoning each month upon just what commissions were payable upon the payments made to the beneficiaries, they took from the funds the amount provided by the will, prejudiced no one and may he fully compensated, if need be, by charging interest upon the amounts improperly taken at that time. Confessedly, the moneys that have been drawn from the estate are very much less than the commissions allowed by law. The fact that these trustees concealed from others interested in the estate that they had made their election to take the commissions allowed by law, is in no sense a legal fraud, nor, in my judgment, are these executors subject to the criticism in the prevailing opinion for having committed any ethical wrong. They were working harmoniously
Were this question res nova, I should concur in the result reached in the prevailing opinion, on the ground that under the will of the testator these trustees were entitled to no greater compensation than that allowed thereunder. The decision of the Second Department in Matter of Arkenburgh (38 App. Div. 473), though made by an able court, is not convincing. Under that decision a testator may deny to his executors any compensation, and if they act they can receive no compensation, because they have been denied the same in the will. If, however, a testator provides in his will that an executor may have $100 for his services and no more, the executor may elect to take the full commissions allowed by law, notwithstanding the prohibition in the will. This, to my mind, presents a legal paradox so absurd that such construction should not be permitted. If under section 2730 of the Code of Civil Procedure (as amd. by Laws of 1905, chap. 328), which is now section 2753 of the Code of Civil Procedure (as amd. by Laws of 1914, chap. 443), the right to the election is given to the executor, where there be no words of limitation in the will, the section as thus construed is logical and perhaps reasonable. Where, however, the will prescribes a definite limit to the compensation which they shall receive, that limit should, in my
I, therefore, vote for a reversal of the decree in the matter complained of by the appellants.
Woodward, J., concurred, except as to the views expressed in reference to the case of Matter of Arkenburgh (38 App. Div. 473).
Decree affirmed, with costs.