149 N.Y.S. 530 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
This is an appeal from an order of the Surrogate’s Court directing that the executor take up within ten days after the entry of the order a referee’s report and pay within the same time to the referee the sum of two thousand three hundred and forty dollars as and for his fees and to the stenographer seventy-three dollars and fifty cents as the balance of his fees upon said reference. The order was based upon an affidavit of an attorney for two judgment creditors of the estate which sets
It, therefore, appears that a summary order has been made for the payment of this large sum of money as referee’s and stenographer’s fees upon an affidavit by an attorney based upon information and belief, where the referee’s report has neither been delivered nor filed, where no bills or affidavits from either the referee or the stenographer were submitted and where said fees have not been taxed. The sole authority claimed for such order is certain surrogates’ opinions which do not appear to have been reviewed by an appellate court. In Matter of Hurd (6 Mise. Eep. 171), decided in December, 1893, in the Surrogate’s Court, Kings county, the referee filed his report within sixty days from the final submission of the case. Nearly a year
Referring to the accounting proceeding in the Surrogate’s Court, the surrogate proceeded: “ The accounting executor is its officer, over whom it has general supervision and control. Code, § 2472, subd. 3. It is his duty as such officer to manage, pay out and distribute the personalty according to the will of the testator and as directed or approved by the court that, by its letters testamentary, has authorized him so to do. For the purpose of such distribution the fund is in court, and there the executor seeks the final approval of his acts, with directions as to the distribution of the funds remaining and his discharge from the responsibilities of his office. To ascertain the facts in the matter, the court appoints another as its officer, i. e., a referee, and, being furnished with his report, approves or disapproves of the conduct of its accounting officer. Such a distinction as the foregoing must have entered Judge Rapallo’s mind when he said in Attorney-General v. Continental Life Insurance Co., 93 N. Y. 45-47: ‘ Ordinarily a referee must look for his fees to the party who takes up the report, and not to the adverse party. Geib v. Topping, 83 N. Y. 46. In this case the party in whose favor the report was made, being a receiver appointed by the court, whose legal expenses are properly payable out of the fund, the court had power in the first instance to order the referee’s fees paid directly out of the fund.’ I think the analogy between a receiver and an executor or admin
In Matter of Maritch (29 Misc. Rep. 270), decided in the Surrogate’s Court, New York county, October, 1899, the question involved was the stenographer’s fees upon a reference. Surrogate Varnum said: “The right of the moving parties to make this application has been questioned. The practice of this court and the authorities which I cite recognize that they have the right to maintain it. Matter of Hurd, 6 Misc. Rep. 171; Estate of Maria Smith, Surr. Decs. 1894, p. 329; Estate of Philip McDowell, Surr. Decs. 1896, p. 139; Matter of Henry W. Andress, Surr. Decs. 1898, p. 396.” In Estate of Luigi Manfredi (Surr. Decs. 1912, p. 1024) Surrogate Fowler said: “ The power of this court to require a party to pay the referee his fees and take up his report can be exercised only when the party so required is the representative of the estate. Matter of Hurd, 6 Misc. 171; Matter of Maritch, 29 Misc. 270. As to who ultimately is to be charged with the referee’s fees is determined by the decree to be entered in the proceeding.”
The appellant cites the following authorities: Matter of Kraus (4 Dem. 217). Surrogate Bollins held that the Surrogate’s Court is without power to direct a referee to file his report in advance of receiving his fees; or to require any party to pay those fees in advance of such filing. But if the referee shall see fit to file his report without exacting his fee, a party making such payment may, in a proper case, be subsequently reimbursed out of the estate or fund. The court refused to make any provision for the payment of such fees before the report was filed, although the administrator had sufficient funds in his hands to make such payment.
In Morrow v. McMahon (71 App. Div. 171) the action was brought to settle the accounts of the appellants as executors, to obtain a construction of a will, and to establish that a beneficiary and remainderman thereunder was dead, and that by
In Carter v. Builders’ Construction Co., No. 2 (130 App. Div. 609) the action was brought to foreclose a mortgage upon real estate. The respondent was appointed referee to sell, and incurred certain expenses in advertising and selling. There was a resale ordered. The referee requested the plaintiff to advance enough to pay the expenses already incurred; the plaintiff refused; the referee obtained an order directing him to do so. This court by Mr. Justice McLaughlin said: “ Ordinarily the expenses incurred upon the sale of mortgaged premises pursuant to a judgment are paid from the proceeds of the sale, and it may be if enough is not realized from the sale to pay the necessary expenses attending it, then the party at whose instance the sale is made would be liable in an action to recover the same, but such payment cannot be directed in the summary way here attempted. A party cannot be compelled by order to pay the fees or expenses of a referee. [Citing cases.] The referee was not- obliged to act, and before he incurred any expenses he could have insisted that the judgment creditor advance the necessary amount, and if this were not done, he could refuse to act. Not having done either, it would seem that his only remedy now is by action.” The order was reversed.
It seems to me that neither Matter of Hurd nor Attorney-General v. Continental Life Insurance Co., upon the authority of which all the surrogates’ cases rest, support the order in the case at bar. In Matter of Hurd the referee’s report had been signed and filed, and the motion was to tax the referee’s fees. In the Continental Life Insurance Company case the report had been made in favor of the receiver, whose duty it was to take up the report, and as all payments by the receiver from the funds in his hands were under the order of the court, a proper case was presented for exercising the power of the court over said funds in the hands of the receiver. No such situation is here presented. The report has never been filed, the fees have never been taxed and there is no affidavit of the referee or stenographer showing that the amounts charged for represent the days necessarily employed in the reference under
Upon the ground that the court was without power, upon the facts disclosed in these papers, to make the order appealed from, it should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellant, and the motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Laughlin and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.