In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Brown

9 Mills Surr. 535, 78 Misc. 342, 139 N.Y.S. 459
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 535 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Brown) 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 Judicial Settlement of the Account of Brown, 9 Mills Surr. 535, 78 Misc. 342, 139 N.Y.S. 459 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Ketcham, S.

The contestants claim that the accountant should “ return ” to the estate the salary which he has received from a corporation in which he held office and in which the estate held stock. This argument rests primarily upon the assumption, which the contestants plainly state, that the corporation involved was the estate and was treated as such. But the corporation was a separate entity. The executors did not own it, nor as such executors did they or either of them conduct it. Their only relation to such coroporation was that of stockholder.

Two cases are cited to support the demand that the accountant return the salaries.

In Matter of Froelich, 122 App. Div. 440, the business which the executor continued belonged to the decedent personally and itself was a part of the estate. There was no intervention of a corporation in which the estate held stock. The will created a trust to take charge of the decedent’s business and to continue the same, and expressly provided for the [537]*537trustee’s, compensation in addition to his commissions. The claim of the accounting trustee for a salary in addition to the testamentary provision was denied, upon grounds and precedents wholly inappropriate to a case where the executor has been paid by a corporation, and not by the estate, for services rendered to the corporation, and not to the estate.

The case is ample authority for a, recompense to the executor for a service even though it were rendered to the estate if it were performed outside the duties imposed upon him in his capacity as executor or trustee. It surely cannot be cited to support inquiry on an accounting in this court with respect to a payment to an executor for his services, when they were rendered outside of his executorial capacity; they were not rendered to the estate and the payment was not made by the estate.

In Matter of Popp, 123 App. Div. 2, the business of the testator was continued under a direction in the will, but without any provision for extra compensation. It was there said: If he (the executor) be allowed compensation out of the- estate of the deceased other than that fixed by statute, it cannot be for services in his office, but only for something he has done apart from and entirely outside of his office, i. e., as an individual and not as an executor or administrator.”

The expression quoted had nothing to do with any compensation unless it is payable out of the estate. The case has only to do with services to the estate. The court concedes the propriety, in a proper case, of compensation to the executor “ for something he has done apart from and entirely outside of his office,” but it takes no thought of a service done for an individual, whether natural or corporate, when such individual is separable from the estate itself.

The objection is overruled, upon the sole ground that the services in question were not performed within the accountant’s function either as executor or as trustee, and that the salaries [538]*538cannot be returned to the estate because they were not taken from the estate.

It is not forgotten that the law, though obliged to recognize corporations as individual entities may, upon just occasion, look through the corporate personality if it be found to be a mere mask and may work equity without regard to the forms in which the parties appear; but the mere statement of this resource of the law intimates that it cannot be availed of in this proceeding. Where the relief prayed for would necessarily dispose of an interest or controversy in which a corporation would be even formally concerned, it could only be awarded in a court having equitable jurisdiction adequate to the case and not then unless in a proceeding in which the corporation was impleaded.

It is no answer that this court may have recently been endowed with equitable faculties to “ affect the accounting party with a constructive trust” (Code Civ. Pro., § 2472a), for, if such faculties were available, the conceivable trust would legally concern the corporation from \ which the salaries were received, and the surrogate, however his powers may have been broadened by the section cited, cannot affect the accountant with a duty which was presumptively owing to a person not a party before him.

In Matter of Schaefer, 65 App. Div. 378, the executors had received certain money from the corporation in which their estate was a stockholder. The only question there considered was whether this money belonged to the estate of the decedent; and the opinion declared that this question depended upon whether the money “ was as a fact received by the appellants as a portion of the estate or as the income or profits of the interest of the estate in the stock of the brewing company.”

In that case the court recognized the possibility that the conduct of the accountants might create a grievance in behalf of the corporation from which the money was received, and in [539]*539this respect the opinion proceeded: “To entitle the surrogate to charge these executors with money thus received by them there must be competent legal evidence to show that such money actualy belonged to the estate of which they were executors, either as money or the proceeds of property belonging to the estate, or as income or profits of the property vested in them as such executors; ” and the court added, in words which are adapted to the present case: “ The services that they (the executors) performed for the corporation were entirely distinct from their executorial duties as representing this estate. It is quite clear that they would not be responsible to the estate for their acts as officers of the corporation in any proceeding that could be instituted before the surrogate. While a court of equity would under certain circumstances have power to hold them to account at the suit of a stockholder, the surrogate had no jurisdiction of such a cause of action. His jurisdiction would be limited to a determination of the question as to what assets of the estate had come into the hands of the executors, for which upon an accounting they were properly chargeable. The question as to whether or not these appellants had abused their power as directors and officers of the corporation in voting to themselves extra compensation to which they were not entitled, or in distributing the property or assets of the corporation improperly, cannot be determined in this proceeding.”

While the case last cited arose before the enactment of section 2472a of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1910, all that is said therein is applicable to the present discussion, for it still remains that the surrogate can only determine “ the question as to what assets have come into the hands of the executors [whether legally or in the course of a constructive trust] for which upon the accounting they are properly chargeable,” and it must be true, without the need of authority, that the only [540]*540assets for which upon an accounting in any court any executor can be properly chargeable must be assets which belong beneficially to some party already in the proceeding. Hence, if the surrogate has full power to impose a constructive trust upon the accountant, he is still helpless to consider a trust which is primarily, if not absolutely, for the benefit of a party over whose person he cannot obtain jurisdiction.

The accounting executor personally owned 503 shares of the stock of the Federal Brewing Company at a time when the Long Island Brewery, a corporation, held 2,035

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Related

In re the Estate of Luckenbach
46 Misc. 2d 864 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1965)
In re Judicial Settlement of the Account of Parascandola
223 A.D. 654 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mills Surr. 535, 78 Misc. 342, 139 N.Y.S. 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-brown-nysurct-1912.