In re Epstein

158 A.D.2d 183, 557 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7864
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJune 28, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 158 A.D.2d 183 (In re Epstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Epstein, 158 A.D.2d 183, 557 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7864 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Per Curiam.

Decedent, whose will was admitted to probate in New York County on March 23, 1984, left a gross estate valued in excess of $9,000,000. Aside from $250,000 of specific bequests, one third of the estate was left to the surviving spouse, Sylvia Schoonheim, who was appointed coexecutor and cotrustee, with the residuary estate bequeathed equally in trust to the decedent’s two children from a prior marriage, Ryk and Doireann Schoonheim. The other coexecutor appointed under the decedent’s will was Harold Epstein, who was associated first with the firm of Epstein, Reiss & Goodman, and, after the firm dissolved, with the firm of Morrison Cohen Singer & Weinstein. Additionally, the Surrogate appointed two guardians ad litem for Ryk Schoonheim.

As a result of the settlement of three proceedings commenced in the Surrogate’s Court to remove Sylvia Schoonheim as coexecutor and cotrustee, for discovery of assets, and for an interim accounting, Sylvia Schoonheim agreed to resign as executor and trustee, to accept $100,000 in full satisfaction of all commissions, and to charge against her distributive share $814,000 representing improper transfers made by her from the estate to her personal accounts.

In the order appealed from, attorneys’ fees and disbursements to Mr. Epstein and his firms, the guardians ad litem, and other attorneys representing the various respondents were approved in the total amount of $1,359,384.93. It should [187]*187be emphasized that these are interim awards, unaccompanied even by a finally settled interim accounting. After six years of administration, a winding up of the estate and a final accounting is nowhere in sight. With the estate in this posture, we find these fee awards excessive and impermissible to the extent indicated below.

By its order, the Surrogate’s Court awarded or confirmed the following interim fees and disbursements:

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The Epstein Firm Award: Although the Surrogate’s Court gave recognition in its decision to the principle that executorial services were not to be billed as legal services (citing Matter of Hallock, 214 App Div 323), this salutary rule was not applied with appropriate rigor when interim fees of $451,000 were disbursed to the Epstein firm for services it rendered from decedent’s death to September 1, 1986. It appears that for this 2-year-and-9-month period, Mr. Epstein [188]*188took the position that he performed no executorial services, and that whatever work he did do was billable as legal work, even though he included in his legal billing such items as attending the appraisal of the contents of decedent’s apartment, traveling to and from and spending time in Holland for 9, 15-hour days (here there was even double billing on this travel expense since the estate was charged for the cost of another Epstein firm partner who accompanied Mr. Epstein, even though highly paid Dutch counsel were hired and in place), meeting or conferencing with his coexecutrix, meetings with an investment counselor, partners in a real estate venture, bank personnel and an insurance agent, and reviewing bank statements and transferring funds.

In his initial application for legal fees, Mr. Epstein claimed that he worked 783.8 hours. The burden was entirely upon him to differentiate between his executorial and legal services; yet, despite an invitation from the Surrogate’s Court to do so, he never submitted a breakdown between the two. Under the circumstances, we find, on a conservative basis, that at least some 200 hours of this time, billed at the Epstein firm’s rate of $250 an hour, were executorial, and thus compensable from the approximate sum of $225,000 which he has or will receive as commissions (SCPA 2307). For this reason, the initial fee award was excessive by $50,000.

Another impropriety was the failure to deduct from the legal fees charged by the Epstein firm the $93,000 it paid to the accounting firm of Friedman, Alpren & Green for having prepared the estate tax and other fiduciary returns. Preparation of the Federal estate tax return and fiduciary returns " 'are the function of the attorney for the executor so that money paid to an accountant under such circumstances is ordinarily deductible from the attorney’s fee to avoid duplication’ ”. (Estate of Bloch, NYLJ, May 20, 1987, at 15, col 6, at 29, col 1 [quoting Matter of Jones, NYLJ, Apr. 30, 1981, at 12, col 6]; see also, Estate of Daly, NYLJ, Dec. 4, 1986, at 15, col 4 [holding preparation of fiduciary returns are the responsibility of counsel]; In re Kramer’s Will, 70 NYS2d 239, 245-246.) No unusual circumstances have been shown to justify the retention of Friedman, Alpren & Green, the accountants hired by Mr. Epstein, and the payment to them by the estate of this $93,000. Under the prevailing rule, the Epstein firm should have absorbed this accountant’s fee.

Although it appears that the initial fee paid to the Epstein firm was approved by the oral stipulation of counsel [189]*189in open court on September 10, 1986, this circumstance does not place the fee arrangement beyond this court’s power to review and correct. The acquiescence of Martina Gilbert Schoonheim, the mother of decedent’s, children, noted on the record, does not estop these parties from objecting as they do now, given a record that does not support a finding that, Martina, the first Mrs. Schoonheim, made a knowing and intelligent waiver with respect to the size of any fee sought. Her focus was entirely on the recovery to be obtained from Sylvia, the second Mrs. Schoonheim. Nor are the children to be penalized by the inexplicable poststipulation silence of their "guardians” who never raised the slightest objection to any fee, charge, or disbursement claim. For the foregoing reasons, we vacate that portion of the order as directed payment of an additional $25,000 interim fee to the Epstein firm.

Because the Epstein firm has been dissolved, it should be Mr. Epstein’s responsibility to return any excess fee paid to that defunct firm, we accordingly direct that he immediately return the executor’s commissions already paid to him by the estate (in the approximate amount of $80,000), and that the $50,000 in excess legal fees and the $93,000 in accountant’s fees be a surcharge on any executor’s commissions ultimately payable to him on the final accounting.

We also direct that in the next accounting proceeding, whether interim or final, Mr. Epstein justify his payment to Dutch counsel of the sum of $140,000, and to explain what benefit, if any, inured to the estate in consideration of such fee. To the extent that such disbursement is not justified, it should also result in an additional surcharge upon any executor’s commissions due Mr. Epstein.

The Morrison Firm: We reject the self-serving apportionment Mr. Epstein makes between his legal (342 hours) and executorial (47 hours) services while associated with this firm. Of the 389 billed hours set forth in his application, we find that approximately additional 50 hours should be attributed to his executorial duties, so that, at the $300 an hour rate claimed, this fee is excessive in the amount of $15,000.

The Two Guardian Ad Litem Fees: By order of the Surrogate’s Court dated April 8, 1987, Ronald E. Stringer was appointed guardian ad litem for Ryk Schoonheim, then aged 17, in the intermediate account and removal proceedings pertaining to Sylvia Schoonheim, and by order of the next

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A.D.2d 183, 557 N.Y.S.2d 907, 1990 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7864, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-epstein-nyappdiv-1990.