180 A.D. 604 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1917
This is an action for the construction of the provisions of the will of Roland D. Jones, deceased, creating a trust for the benefit of the plaintiffs and the defendant Roland D. J. Raught, his grandchildren. No facts are alleged upon which the plaintiffs would be entitled to any other relief in this action and a construction of the will is the only relief they demand, with the exception that they ask that in the event that an order heretofore made by the Supreme Court sustaining the validity of the trust provisions of the will, from which an appeal has been taken by the defendant Nettie Raught, the only living sister of the testator, should be reversed and the said provisions be declared invalid, then they ask that an adjudication be made with respect to the proportionate share or interest they take in the property which is the subject of the trust.
The respondents trustees, who were appointed by an order of the Supreme Court to execute the trust owing to the failure of the testator to name trustees, by their answer put in issue certain allegations of the complaint with respect to the interest of the plaintiffs in the income from and in the corpus of the trust and with respect to the value of the real estate left by the testator. They then allege as a further answer and a second separate and further defense and as a partial defense
For a third separate and further defense and as a partial defense the trustees reallege by reference the allegations of the second defense, the substance of which has been stated, and further allege that there is a defect of parties in the omission of the administrators with the will annexed, of Warrington as general guardian of the plaintiffs and of Warrington individually; and they demand judgment that the omitted parties be brought in, and that the court determine the assets for which they are accountable, and that the plaintiffs and the other defendants and the defendants to be brought in account to the trustees and to each other, as well as to the beneficiaries for their administration and management of the estate, and that the will be Construed, and that it be adjudicated and determined what disposition the trustees shall make of the property and assets found to be in their hands, and that they be discharged from liability upon compliance with the determination of the court as to the disposition of such assets, and for other and further relief.
Upon no theory can the plaintiffs be required to join in this action the persons who have from time to time administered the estate to enable the trustees to have such persons account herein to them for such administration of the estate. If the action were for an accounting by the trustees their contention might be arguable, but since there is no demand for an accounting and the quantum of the estate can in no manner affect the construction of the will there is manifestly no propriety in requiring the plaintiffs to bring in as parties defendant those whom the trustees may and should call to account for the management of the estate. If the plaintiffs were required to bring in as parties those who are accountable to the trustees for the management of the estate they might with equal propriety be required to bring in all debtors of the estate, for an accounting by those who managed the estate would not necessarily determine the amount or value of the estate. The respondents insist that the decision of this court in Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Stallo, No. 2 (166 App. Div. 649; affd. by Court of Appeals, 215 N. Y. 710) is authority for the order; but in that case the action was brought for an account
It follows that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.
Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling and Smith, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion denied, with ten dollars costs.