In Re the Accounting of Bushe

124 N.E. 154, 227 N.Y. 85, 7 A.L.R. 1590, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 652
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 15, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 124 N.E. 154 (In Re the Accounting of Bushe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Accounting of Bushe, 124 N.E. 154, 227 N.Y. 85, 7 A.L.R. 1590, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 652 (N.Y. 1919).

Opinion

Crane, J.

On December 21st, 1910, letters testamentary upon the last will and testament of Frederick P. *87 Adams of the town of Coxsackie, Greene county, New York, deceased, were issued to Eugene L. Bushe, Edward P. Dwyer and Alpheus C. Dwight. The three-executors subsequently filed an account of their proceeding to December 31st, 1912, and by a decree judicially settling their accounts they paid over to themselves as trustees about $800,000 of personal property, after having been granted $32,297.76 for commissions and allowances. The three trustees continued to act until August 5th, 1914, when Alpheus C. Dwight died, and thereafter the remaining two trustees carried on the work of the trust. In January of 1917 Bushe and Dwyer, the surviving trustees, filed their accounts from December 31st, 1912, to December 31st, 1915, and cited Harriet M. Dwight and Thomas H. Low, as executors of the last will and testament of Alpheus C. Dwight, as parties to the proceeding.

The surrogate decided that the estate of Alpheus C. Dwight was not entitled to full commissions for receiving the amount above stated and that he had a discretionary power to fix this trustee’s compensation according to the value of the services which he had performed. In his memorandum opinion he said: “ The legal representatives of the estate of Alpheus C. Dwight, deceased, are entitled to an allowance for services actually performed for the benefit of the estate by the deceased executor and trustee of Alpheus C. Dwight, not by way of commissions but as payment for such services. * * * I have not computed the value of services of the deceased executor and trustee at full one-half commissions for receiving, where the amount has not been paid out, for' the reason that the law does not contemplate that an executor or trustee shall be entitled to commissions for the mere act of receiving property. Such commissions are allowed for the services of legal representatives in taking care of, investing and reinvesting such property and for the responsibility connected therewith. He having served after the accounting in 1913, to the time of his death, *88 approximately one-half the time that the surviving executors and trustees have served to the time of the accounting, I have computed such services to be of the value of one-half the legal commissions due the surviving executors and trustees, believing this to be the fair and just compensation for such receiving.”

On appeal the Appellate Division reversed the surrogate regarding these commissions and held that as a matter of law the estate of Alpheus C. Dwight was entitled to receive one-half commissions on all the principal received and on all the principal paid out and on the income received and paid out during his lifetime. The order of the Appellate Division states that this modification is made as a matter of law and not in the exercise of the court’s discretion. The trustees of the Adams estate having appealed to this court we must decide what right the estate of a testamentary trustee dying before a judicial settlement of his accounts has to compensation.

It is urged that such a trustee who does not continue until judicial accounting is entitled to no compensation; that commissions are a matter of statute and that no provision has been made by the law for such a case. Section 2753 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by chapter 443 of the Laws of 1914 and by chapter 596 of the Laws of 1916, reads: On the settlement of the account of any executor, administrator, guardian or testamentary trustee the surrogate must allow to him ” the rates of commissions therein fixed.' These words indicate that commissions as a matter of right can only be allowed to an accounting testamentary trustee. There is nothing in the Code provisions fixing the compensation of a testamentary trustee who dies before a judicial settlement of his accounts or whose estate, he having died, is made a party to the accounting proceedings of a substituted or surviving trustee. As it has been held that a trustee is not entitled to any commissions until allowed by the court (Matter of Worthington, 141 N. Y. 9; *89 Beard v. Beard, 140 N. Y. 260; Matter of Ziegler, 168 App. Div. 736; 218 N. Y. 544) and the statute gives the surrogate power to allow commissions only on the settlement of the account of a testamentary trustee, there may be some force in this view that the estate of Alpheus C. Dwight, under these circumstances, was entitled to no commissions.

On the other hand, it is said that where a testamentary trustee dies after having received the estate and before final accounting his estate is entitled as a matter of right to one-half the statutory commissions fixed for receiving but nothing for turning over the property to his successor or survivor. This reasoning is based upon that line of authorities which hold that executors, administrators and trustees are entitled to one-half commissions for receiving funds and the other half for paying them out (Matter of Willets, 112 N. Y. 289), and to a practice, which is said to exist, of allowing such half commissions for receiving where the executor or trustee has died before an accounting. (Palmer v. Dunham, 6 N. Y. Supp. 262; affd., 125 N. Y. 68.)

Still another view is that the surrogate or Supreme Court has discretionary power and may award or withhold commissions in certain cases; and under circumstances such as here existing, may allow such sum as is reasonable for the services of a deceased trustee, not exceeding the statutory percentage.

The reasoning to sustain this view is that the testator in selecting a trustee intended to pay him, and that he is entitled to compensation, and that commissions are allowed for the care and management of the estate and not for the simple act of receiving and paying out. (Wagstaff v. Lowerre, 23 Barb. 209.)

All of these views have some reason to support them and perhaps some authorities, but the latter view, in our opinion, has been the general practice adopted by the courts and finds support in the decisions.

*90 It is fully established that a surrogate may, in his discretion, refuse commissions altogether by reason of an executor’s or trustee’s misconduct (Matter of Rutledge, 162 N. Y. 31), and yet no such power is given by statute.

In Matter of Allen (96 N. Y. 327) a testamentary trustee had resigned and his successor had been appointed. A dispute arose over his right to compensation. This court said:

The testator thought proper not only to create the trust, but to require for its execution three trustees, and the law now permits compensation to persons placed in that situation, and who serve to the end of the trust without regard to the actual trouble or labor to which they have been put. (Collier v. Munn, 41 N. Y. 143.) It is true the petitioner cannot claim on that ground. He does not intend to continue. For reasons involving no blame, he resigns, leaving the trust still existing and to be further executed by another person.

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Bluebook (online)
124 N.E. 154, 227 N.Y. 85, 7 A.L.R. 1590, 1919 N.Y. LEXIS 652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-bushe-ny-1919.