The present action has the merit of novelty, if it have no other. It seeks to invoke the aid of the equitable powers of this court to ■compel an attorney to pay over moneys which he. has received for the executors of an estate, and to perpetually enjoin the enforcement of a decree of the Surrogate’s Court.of the county of Queens, which directs the payment over of the moneys of the estate with which the executors are properly chargeable, to the persons entitled thereto. It further asks for the construction of a certain agreement ■of indemnity executed by those entitled to distributive shares in the ■estate, and for an accounting between all the .parties in interest and a determination of the respective rights and liabilities of all.
These are the material allegations of the complaint; and it is evident to our minds that it fails to state facts constituting a cause of action. .
If the services performed by the attorney Provost were rendered in and about the estate of the testator, then the reasonable amount and value of such service constituted the same a proper charge against the estate. (St. John v. McKee, 2 Dem. 236 ; 2 Wms. Exrs. 194, 195.) If upon the accounting before the surrogate it had appeared that the seiwice had been rendered in connection with the estate, the decree should have made allowance to the executors for the same, and if the surrogate improperly refused to allow the item, then the remedy afforded to the plaintiff was' by appeal from such decree; this court would not lend the aid of its equitable powers, even though it possessed the right, by countenancing an action where the remedy afforded by appeal is ample and complete. There is-, therefore, nothing stated in the complaint, independent of the agreement, which affords any basis whatever for the maintenance of this ■action. ■
Nor is the plaintiff aided by the terms of such agreement. The complaint is that the money was the proceeds of the sale of real estate. The executors were bound' to receive such sum; and if they permitted the- attorney to receive it, they became chargeable with and liable for his acts, and they cannot be heard to shelter themselves behind the attorney’s dereliction. The agreement itself does not assume to hold'harmless either executor for an act of malfeasance upon his part, and they having no-defense and not being pro
The plaintiff is not without a remedy, if he has been wronged. If the attorney improperly retains moneys in his hands which he should pay over to the executor, he can be compelled summarily, by order of the court, upon making proof of the fact, to pay them over; or an action will lie to recover the same. If the services were rendered, and the sum retained by the attorney is a proper charge, and the same was incurred pursuant to the agreement, then the plaintiff has his remedy by action against the parties executing such agreement. But the attempt to maintain this action, in view of the averments of the complaint, is without precedent, and cannot be sustained.
It follows that the interlocutory judgment should be affirmed. •
All concurred.
Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs, with leave to plaintiff to serve amended complaint within twenty days on payment of the costs of the demurrer and of this appeal.
