In re the Estate of Reckford

181 Misc. 211, 46 N.Y.S.2d 898, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 181 Misc. 211 (In re the Estate of Reckford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Reckford, 181 Misc. 211, 46 N.Y.S.2d 898, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Foley, S.

By a prior decision in this accounting proceeding, certain provisions of the will were construed. (Matter of Reckford, N. Y. L. J. December 15, 1943, p. 1773.) The questions of the amount of commissions to which the trustees are entitled were left open for subsequent determination. Disposition is now made. An interpretation of the terms of new section 285-a of the Surrogate’s Court Act is required. Four general questions are presented:

(1) Whether a trustee is entitled to commissions for receiving the funds within the trusts which have not terminated?

(2) Whether under the terms of subdivision 3 of the new section, where part of a trust has terminated, the period less than five, years for which a trustee is only entitled to one half of the so-called minimum principal commissions, is measured from the date of the qualification of the trustee to the terminating date of the trust or a part of it, or to the date of- actual distribution of the fund? ,

(3) What compensation may be awarded to the estate of the deceased trustee?

(4) Whether under the terms of the new section a trustee is entitled to distributing ” commissions for paying over the fund to himself as trustee to be held upon further trust?

(1) During part of the period included within the transactions set forth in the account, three individual trustees functioned. One of them, John K. Beckford, died February 20,1941. A corporate trustee was appointed in his place. Commissions for receiving principal were sought by the trustees under the provisions of section 285 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, as they existed immediately prior to September 1, 1943. For the reasons stated in my decision in Matter of Hurlbut (180 Misc. 681) such commissions are disallowed. In their application to testamentary trustees, the terms of section 285 have been repealed. An entirely new method of computation was enacted in the new section 285-a. As to a continuing trust, the new method is based upon annual withdrawals of principal commis[214]*214sions at the rate of 110% of annual income commissions. In Matter of Hurlbut (supra) it was determined that the intent of the Legislature was to make the new section, in its application to all trustees, prospective in its operation, beginning with September 1, 1943, the effective date of the new section. It was further determined that the terms were not retroactive so as to permit an award of principal commissions under the provisions of the prior form of section 285, nor to permit the award of principal commissions based upon income earned prior to the effective date of the statute. It was further determined that no allowance of receiving commissions”, as they were known under the former law, could be made.

Many attorneys, who were either themselves trustees or who represented individual trustees, have complained about the injustice of the situation created by the new section which prevented an individual trustee from obtaining a lump sum award of commissions for receiving principal by a decree made after September 1, 1943. These attorneys have pointed out that an accounting was postponed by them with the worthy motive of saving expense to the beneficiaries. By contrast, a trustee who had accounted and had been awarded commissions for receiving principal by a prior decree was in a fortunate position. The trustee who had not accounted and had not been awarded such commissions was required by the terms of the new section to wait a period of approximately from five to eight years until the annual withdrawals would equal the amount of receiving commissions.

It was stated in Matter of Hurlbut (supra) that the new section was drafted and advocated by the Trust Companies Association of the State of New York. Not all the corporate fiduciaries have approved the revolutionary changes. Many representatives of banks and trust companies have expressed their disapproval of the entire section or expressed a desire to see many of its defects corrected. They point out that unless the present high rates of commissions are drastically reduced, corporate fiduciaries ■ will lose business by their elimination as executors arid trustees by makers of wills. The terms have been severely criticized as showing that its advocates who recom-. mended this legislation gave scant consideration to the rights of individual trustees and none to the beneficiaries of trusts. The inequities and injustices, however, cannot be corrected by the courts in an intrusion into the field of legislative jurisdiction. Whether an amendment should be made to the new section, which would permit the award of commissions for receiving [215]*215principal, is a matter solely for legislative action. Receiving commissions are, therefore, disallowed.

(2) The second question presented is whether under the terms of subdivision 3 of the new section the award of one half of minimum commissions is measured by a period from the date of the qualification of the trustee to the date of the termination of the trust or of a part of it, or to the date of the distribution of the fund.

Subdivision 3 provides that a testamentary “ trustee who is acting at a time of distribution of principal shall be entitled to receive and may retain from principal as a minimum principal commission hereunder a sum by which the commissions from principal which he has theretofore at any time received is less than a sum equal to five per centum on the first two thousand dollars of principal distributed; two and one-half per centum on the next twenty thousand dollars thereof, and two per centum of the balance thereof. If such distribution is made within a period less than five years after the date of the trustee’s qualification, he shall be entitled to receive a minimum principal commission at one-half of such rates.” (Italics supplied.)

There may be in the minds of some persons a misunderstanding as to what is meant by “ the date of the trustee’s qualification ” in the subdivision. Under section 167 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, a trustee qualifies by filing his oath of office, his bond, when required, and a designation for the purpose of service of process. In many cases such instruments are filed even before the will is admitted to probate. Under section 88 there is provision for the issuance of letters of trusteeship. The Surrogate holds that the date of the issuance of such letters is the date of qualification ■ intended in subdivision 3. That is, the date when the trustee is formally qualified to assume his duties.

In the pending proceeding the trust for the benefit of one of the life tenants, a son, John K. Reckford, terminated on February 20, 1941, approximately three years and five months after the qualification of the original trustees. The trust for the daughter Adelaide Reckford terminated on September 26, 1942, four years, eleven months and twenty-six days after the qualification of the trustees. The individual trustees had qualified on September 30,1937.

The subdivision must be interpreted as it was enacted by the Legislature, and the Surrogate is compelled to hold that the five-year period must be measured from qualification to actual distribution ” and not to the date of the termination [216]*216of the trust.

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181 Misc. 211, 46 N.Y.S.2d 898, 1944 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1695, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-reckford-nysurct-1944.