150 N.Y.S. 774 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1914
The appellant Harry Allen appeals from so much of a decree of the Surrogate’s Court as refuses to allow his claim to be reimbursed out of the estate for legal expenses rendered to him as executor of the last will and testament of John 0. Latham, deceased. Ho question is made by the respondent as to the reasonableness of the amount claimed, the sole question being whether or not appellant is entitled to be reimbursed.
The services claimed fall under two heads, to wit, those rendered to the appellant as one of the proponents of the will, and those rendered in resisting objections to his appointment as executor. Mr. Latham’s will named three executors, this appellant and two others. These retained a firm of attorneys to present the will for probate, and they were met with what appeared to be serious opposition to the probate on the part of the widow of the testator. As the contest progressed, appellant became dissatisfied with the manner in which it was being conducted on behalf of the proponents, and retained another firm of attorneys to assist in the proceeding. Both firms of attorneys thus retained were of high standing at the
It is certainly the right, although perhaps not the absolute duty, of a person named in a will as executor not only to present the will for probate, but also to insist upon the issue to himself of letters testamentary. In so doing he but carries out the expressed wish of the testator, and the legal expenses necessarily incurred in the performance of this right are a proper charge against the estate. The multiplication of attorneys is of course to be deprecated, and the better course undoubtedly is that all of the executors shall be represented by the same attorneys. But when several persons have been named as executors a certain degree of personal and individual responsibility rests upon each of them as to the manner in which any opposition to the probate of the will shall be met, and when one executor is honestly, not capriciously, dissatisfied with the method of defense adopted by the original attorney for the executors, we are not prepared to say that he may not employ an additional and independent attorney. Whether or not he shall be allowed the expense incurred in so doing must depend in each case upon his good faith, the reasonableness of his acts and the benefits accruing to the estate therefrom. In the present case every indication points to appellant’s good faith; his action in retaining additional counsel seems to have been reasonable, and we have no doubt that, if the contest had been as bitterly carried on as there was every reason to suppose it would be, the services of the counsel retained by the appellant would have proved beneficial to the estate.
As to. the expense incurred in obtaining letters testamentary, that seems to be even more clearly a proper charge against the
The decree appealed from should be reversed in so far as it confirms the report of the referee sustaining the objection to the above-mentioned claims of appellant, and disallowing said claims, and said decree is hereby modified so as to overrule said objections and allow said claims, and as so modified is affirmed, with costs to the appellant payable out of the estate.
Clarke, McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Dowling, J., concurred in the allowance of the counsel fee for services rendered in the probate proceedings, but dissented from the allowance of the counsel fee for services rendered in resisting the objections to the appointment of the executor.
Decree reversed and modified as indicated in opinion, and as so modified affirmed, with costs to appellant payable out of the estate. Order to be settled on notice.