79 N.J. Eq. 157 | N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. | 1911
On May 16th, 1910, Mrs. Adaline E. Bird, surviving trustee of Theodore S. Bird, deceased, filed a principal and income account extending from June, 1906, to April, 1910. To this account Adelaide Lyon, one of the beneficiaries of the estate, filed eighteen exceptions, which were dealt with by the Hunterdon county orphans court, and exceptions 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13 and 15 were dismissed; 16, 17 and 18 were stricken out as repetitional of 8, 9 and 10; 8 was sustained in part and dismissed in part; 11 was sustained to the extent of allowing five
The respondent, Mrs. Bird, trustee, in her answer asks that this finding against her be reversed. Cottnsel for the appellant claims that the answer does not formally present that issue, and that the question of disallowing the $458.60 item is not properly presented and cannot be adjudicated. Assuming that it is in shape for consideration, I will dispose of it by holding that the orphans court was right in allowing the exception to that extent and in disallowing the executrix a credit for the sum mentioned, and that part of the decree will be affirmed.
Only exceptions 11 and 12 are involved in this appeal. Originally, there were three executors, one being Mrs. Bird. The other two died, one May 8th, 1907, the other August 31st, 1907. The surviving trustee, Mrs. Bird, has done practically nothing with reference to the administration of the estate, almost everything having been done for her.
On May 15th, 1906, the three executors named in the will filed their account showing the corpus of the estate which had come to their hands to be $81,629.48. On this amount the orphans court allowed them a commission of five per cent., amounting to $4,275, thus reducing the principal to $69,691.93. Under the will of the testator certain specific legacies were bequeathed to the widow and to the relatives of the deceased of the value of $131.01, and also pecuniary legacies amounting to $5,000; and all the remainder of the estate (real and personal) was devised and bequeathed to the executors, in trust, to collect the interest on securities and the rents from real estate, and to divide the net annual income into two parts, one to go to the testator’s widow and the other to his daughter during then-joint lives, and on the death of each to divide the one-half among the children of the deceased life tenant, but not until the youngest child should attain the age of thirty years. The trust will
The executors settled their account in eleven months after their assumption of the administration of the estate. Of the $8.1,629.48, upon which the allowance was made, $72,417.62 was the amount of the inventory and appraisement, of which they became possessed upon proving the will and qualifying as executors and trustees, and the difference, $9,211.86, came from the payment of installments on lands of the testator contracted to be sold.
True it is that tiróse occupying the dual capacity of executors and trustees under a will are entitled to commissions on the corpus of the estate in each capacity (Pitney v. Everson, 42 N. J. Eq. (15 Stew.) 361), yet, as sections 128, 129 of the Orphans Court act (P. L. 1898 p. 762) provide that the allowance of commissions'to executors, administrators, guardians or trustees shall be made with reference to tlreir actual pains, trouble and risk in settling- an estate, rather than in respect to the quantum of the estate, and that such commissions on any estate where the receipts exceed the sum of $50,000 shall be determined by the orphans court on the final settlement of their accounts, according to the actual services rendered, not to exceed five per centum on all sums which come into their hands, it seems to me that the allowance of the full five per cent, commissions to these executors by the Hunterdon county orphans court was excessive and unwarranted. The account was the final account of the executors, and, at that time, it was proper for the orphans court to make them an allowance of commissions on the principal, but, something like one per cent, on the amount of the inventory, and, possibly, two or two and one-half per cent, on the principal which augmented the amount of the inventory, would have been a fairly reasonable allowance in view of the fact that the executors closed their account ■ within a year and then transferred the securities to themselves as trustees; in fact they got
If trustees administer an estate for a quarter of a century, investing and reinvesting, perhaps over and over again, the securities of the estate, and, in the end, are entitled to no more than five per cent., upon what theory can the maximum allowance to these executors, whose duties with reference to the corpus of the estate were more or less perfunctory, be possibly justified ?
This court held (In re Hibllers Estate, 78 N. J. Eg. (8 Buch.) 217) that where one was named executor and trustee and his duties as executor were inconsiderable compared with his duties as trustee, in determining his compensation, the principal fund should be deemed as having passed to him at once as trustee, and an allowance on the corpus should be held to have been an allowance to him as trustee, though the accounts were filed as executor. In that case the trustee had filed several accounts as “executor,” arid had been allowed three per cent, commissions on the corpus of a very large estate, besides five per cent, on the income. After managing the estate for twenty-two years he resigned and asked to be relieved from the trust and applied for an allowance of two per cent, on the corpus as trustee. As the trust had probably eleven years to run as to one portion and sixteen years as to another, the applicant ivas denied further commissions on the corpus, so that the court would be in a position thereafter to allow commissions to the new trustee on the corpus of the estate not exceeding two per cent., making in the end five per cent., if so much should be earned.
The executors in their account in this case charged themselves with income collected $6,955.60, and showed disbursements of all that sum except $285.66; among which disbursements were about $3,500 of income divided between the life tenants (which in reality was executing their office of trustees) and $347.78 of commissions, being five per cent, commissions on the income. This was in April, 1906, and here ended the executors’ duties as such, and the corpus of the estate passed to them as trustees, and that, too, by devise and bequest in that behalf in the will
In re account of New Jersey Title Guarantee and Trust Co., 32 N. J. L. J. 137, the Morris county orphans court dealt with the allowance of commissions upon an estate which had been administered by a trustee for little over six and a half years. On tiie income five per cent, was allowed, although the estate was a large one. As to commissions on the principal of the trust fund the court allowed one per cent., considering the character of the services and risk incurred by the trustees up to the time of the accounting, and remarked (at p. 141) (quoting from Conover v. Ellis, 49 N. J. Eq. (4 Dick.) 549) that "where the final.distribution of an estate by an executor is, by will, deferred for a considerable time after the settlement of his account, he will not, in the allowance of commissions upon that accounting, be paid for that distribution, or be paid commissions at the highest rate permitted by the statute. The court will reserve a portion of that which it may allow for his final compensation when he shall have completely performed his duty.” This decision of the Morris county orphans court was sustained by the ordinary in this court on December 20th, 1908, without a^ opinion being filed. An appeal was taken, and the court of errors and appeals held that, under the circumstances, the award of five per cent, commissions upon the income should be sustained, although it declared it was not to be understood as holding that even in that case so large an allowance would be proper in the future. And on the question of the allowance of the commissions on the corpus the court thought that as the trustee had administered the trust for so short a time (it was six and a half years), and had so little to do with making or changing investments, that no commissions on the corpus ought to have been allowed, and
As the court of errors and appeals decided In re New Jersey Title Guarantee and Trust Co., supra, that no allowance of commissions on the corpus should then be made—not even one per cent, to a trustee who had managed an estate for six and a half years, when the trust had still a iong time to run, and the trustee had had little to do with making or changing investments—how can there be any justification for the payment of' five per cent, commissions to the trustees in this case, although in their capacity as “executors,” when only eleven months after they assumed their duties they simply charged themselves as trustees with the securities which had come to their hands? However, there is no exception here involving the allowance of five per cent, on principal made to the executors in 1906, but that allowance is animadverted upon for the reason that in the twelfth exception, which is involved in this appeal, objection is made to the allowance of another five per cent, to the surviving trustee, Mrs. Bird, upon $15,798.39 of principal collected, which was not in the inventory or account of the executors, the allowatiee amounting to $789.9.1. The exception to this item will be sustained and the credit of these commissions to the trustee will be disallowed in tolo. She has already received one-tliird of $4,275, being the amount of commissions allowed the executors on the settlement of their account. This makes an allowance of $1,425, or one sixty-six hundredths and two-thirds per cent., to her, and she has done practically nothing with reference to the estate, everything being attended to for her by her attorney and agent. She will be required to manage this estate for many years to come before she may be considered as having earned any further commission on the corpus. This disposes of the twelfth exception.
As to the eleventh exception, Lhe five per cent, commissions allowed to Mrs. Dilts for collecting rents, she being the widow of one of the deceased trustees, and the similar allowance to Mr. Hulsizer, attorney for the estate, for collecting interest on mort
The rule regulating the allowance of commissions, I take it, is, that such allowance on the principal or income of an estate, must be made directly by the orphans court to the executor or trustee, who, out of such allowance, must compensate agents, whether attorneys or others, for performing the representative’s duties. In addition, there is to be allowed any expenses aetualty, that is to say, legitimately, incurred in the management of the estate and in making collections; and, obviously, such expenses are those only which are necessarily incurred, and a claim for their allowance should be scrutinized by the court. The allowance of commissions on principal and on the collection and disbursement of income must be made with reference to the actual pains, trouble and risk of those administering the estate; and commissions on the principal where the estate, as in this case, exceeds $50,000, must be determined with reference to the actual services rendered, and the maximum rate should be allowed only when clearly earned—never for the mere asking.