In Re the Accounting of Parascandola

15 N.E.2d 593, 278 N.Y. 234, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 1291
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 24, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 15 N.E.2d 593 (In Re the Accounting of Parascandola) 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 Parascandola, 15 N.E.2d 593, 278 N.Y. 234, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 1291 (N.Y. 1938).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

The testator, Joseph Auditore, died in May, 1920. His widow, Guisippina Auditore, now Guisippina Tarascándola, and Frank Auditore, his brother, were appointed administrators with the will annexed of the goods, chattels and credits of the decedent. Frank Auditore violated the trust confided in him. He was removed as administrator. He and the surety upon his bond, as administrator, were held responsible for the loss caused to the estate by his breach of trust. (Matter of Auditore, 249 N. Y. 335.) The appellants John J. Kean and Edward H. Wilson acted as attorneys for the administratrix in the proceedings to recover for the estate the loss caused to it by the wrongful acts and neglect of Frank Auditore. As a result of their skill and work, the surety on the administrator’s bond was compelled to pay to the estate the sum of $254,148.72 in October, 1931. Then the appellants filed a petition in the Surrogate’s Court asking that their compensation for services rendered to the estate be fixed and determined in accordance with the provisions of section 231-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act. The proceeding to fix the compensation of the appellants was consolidated with a proceeding instituted by the administratrix for the settlement of her account and on December 30, 1931, upon the consent of, or, at least, without objections from, the persons interested in the estate, an order was made by the Surrogate which provided that the sum of $50,000 be paid to the appellants “ on account of compensation for their services rendered to the estate of Joseph Auditore.” Objections to any payment of compensation beyond that amount were filed by the legatees.

The appellants filed a supplementary petition for compensation for additional services. The legatees, contend- *239 mg that the appellants had been overpaid, asked the court to compel the appellants to refund to the estate such alleged overpayment. The controversy was referred to a referee to hear and determine. He found that there has been an overpayment to the attorneys in the amount of $29,305.29, and that they should be directed to refund to the estate such excess sum.” His report was confirmed by the Surrogate and the order confirming the report was unanimously affirmed by the Appellate Division.

The testator, during his lifetime, was associated in the business of stevedoring and shipping with his brother Frank. The business was conducted in corporate form. For that purpose a number of corporations were formed to conduct the enterprises of the two brothers. The testator and Frank Auditore each owned half the stock in these corporations, and, during the lifetime of the testator, they together conducted the corporate business. After Frank Auditore was appointed administrator with the will annexed of his brother’s estate, he held all the stock of these corporations — one-half in his own right and one-half as administrator — and he controlled and managed the corporations. In his management of the affairs of the corporations, after the death of his brother, Frank Auditore misappropriated the funds of the corporation. In 1923 Mrs. Parascandola, as administratrix with the will annexed of the estate of her husband, brought a stockholder’s action in behalf of the corporations against Frank Auditore, individually and as her co-administrator, to recover for the corporations the amount which Frank Auditore had taken from the corporations. The appellants were retained by Mrs. Parascandola to bring that action and, thereafter, to avoid the appointment of a receiver in that action, the parties agreed that the appellants should become officers and directors of the corporations. Since November, 1923, the appellants have controlled and managed the affairs of the corporations.

*240 For the services rendered to the corporations the appellants should receive reasonable compensation from the corporations. Benefit to the corporations would, of course, indirectly benefit the testator’s estate. Indeed, the stock of the corporations was the only asset of substantial value in the estate, and the estate would, upon the liquidation of each corporation, be entitled to half the surplus remaining after the creditors of each of the corporations were paid. When the appellants were placed in control of the corporations, a duty towards the corporations arose to exercise that control faithfully and for the benefit of the corporations. They were, however, placed in control of the corporations only because they had been retained by the estate for the protection of the interests of the estate. In the exercise of that control they owed a duty to the estate as well as to the corporations. Thus, the duty of the appellants to the corporations and the services which they rendered to the corporations arose out of and are inextricably tied up with their duty to the testator’s estate and their services to the estate. Nevertheless, even if it were possible to disregard the corporate form of the business in which the testator and his brother Frank were jointly interested, it would still be true that the estate could profit only indirectly from services rendered in the conduct of the joint business, through its right to a share in the surplus remaining after the business was liquidated, and that compensation for services rendered to the business must be deducted before that surplus can be fixed.

The stockholder’s action brought by the appellants resulted in a large judgment against Frank Auditore in favor of the corporations. A judgment for a sum of money is only a trophy of an empty victory unless it is collected and it was impossible to collect the judgment from Frank Auditore, for he was insolvent. Until that point, the appellants had sought recovery from Frank Auditore only for damages caused to the corporations by *241 breach of duty which Frank Auditore owed to the corporations which he controlled. Indirectly that breach of duty to the corporations had, of course, damaged the estate of which Frank Auditore was administrator, and which owned half the stock of the corporations, and constituted a wrong to the estate. The appellants, thwarted in their attempts to collect damages for wrong to the corporations, successfully asserted the claim that Frank Auditore as administrator and the surety on his bond were responsible for the loss caused to the estate by his misappropriation of the funds of corporations in which the estate was a stockholder. The surety was compelled to pay to the estate the amount of that loss. (Matter of Auditore, 249 N. Y. 335.) The estate was made whole. A fund of $250,000, after deducting therefrom the reasonable cost of collection, became available for distribution among the creditors and legatees of the testator. The corporations did not share in the recovery. The appellants, through whose skill and labor the estate was enriched, are entitled to compensation from the estate for sendees rendered exclusively for the benefit of the estate.

For services rendered in obtaining recovery of the loss caused by the wrongdoing of Frank Auditore and for other services rendered exclusively for the benefit of the estate, the appellants claim that they are entitled to receive much more than the $50,000 which by direction of the Surrogate was paid to them “ on account ” in December, 1931.

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Bluebook (online)
15 N.E.2d 593, 278 N.Y. 234, 1938 N.Y. LEXIS 1291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-parascandola-ny-1938.