
    
      In re Estate of Robert Soutter; Duchess D'Auxy, App’lt, v. Timothy H. Porter, Resp't.
    
      (Court of Appeals,
    
    
      Filed May 3, 1887 )
    1. Executor—Supplementary accounting—When ordered.
    James T. Soutter. by his last win and testament, gave his son Robert one tenth ot his estate Thereafter Robert died, leaving a will, by which he bequeathed one half his estate to the appellant, ami appointed respondent Ills executor, and after the accounts of the executor had been judicially settled the surrogate refused to grant an application for an order to compel him to lile a turther account, made on the ground that after the death of James T Soutter his executors loaned a large amount ot the assets of his estate to a film composed of William K Sou Iter, oue of his exccutois, ami the respondent Porter, and that Porter should account in refetence to the assets of James K Soutter, which thus came to the firm of Soutter & Co. Held, that the respondent cannot he held to have received any poilion of those assets as executor of Robert Soutter, simply because he was a member of the firm of Soutter & Co He could uot become responsible tm such assets of Robert Soutter until they should come into his hands as executor
    2. Same
    The proper remedy of this appellant was to have an administrator de boats non, with the will annexed, of her husband's estate, appointed, who could call the executois of James C. Soutter to account, and compel payment by them to him of whatever may still be due under the will of James T. Soutter to the estate ot Robert Soutter.
    
      Lewis Sanders, for app’lt; Stewart L. Woodford, for resp’t.
   Earl, J.

James T. Soutter died in February, 1873, leaving a last will and testament in which Agnes G. Soutter and William K. Soutter, his son, were appointed executors. The will was admitted to probate, and both executors qualified as such. In that will, among other dispositions of his property, the testator gave his son Robert Soutter one-tenth thereof. Thereafter, in July, 1873, Robert Soutter died, leaving a last will and testament, in which he appointed the respondent, Timothy H. Porter, his executor. That will was admitted to probate, and Porter qualified as executor. In it the testator bequeathed one half of his estate to his widow, the present appellant, who has since remarried and become the Duchess D’Auxy, In the winter of 1884 the respondent, Porter, presented his petition to the surrogate of New York, praying for a judicial settlement of his accounts as executor and as trustee under the will of Robert Soutter, and that he be allowed to resign his trust, and that his letters testamentary be revoked. In pursuance of that petition, citations were issued to the appellant and to the other parties interested in the estate, requiring them to appear on a day named to attend the accounting and the hearing upon the petition, and the citation thus issued was served upon all the parties named therein. The respondent filed his account as executor, which was duly examined and considered by the surrogate, and on the tenth day of March he made his decree, in which he ordered and adjudged that the account as filed be judicially settled and allowed, and the executor was directed to make certain payments to the appellant and to the trustee appointed in his placo. It was further ordered and adjudged that, after making such payments, the letters testamentary to the respondent should be revoked, and his resignation as executor and trustee accepted.

There is no dispute that the respondent fully performed the directions contained in the decree, and that his letter's thus became revoked, and his resignation accepted. After-wards, on the 31st day of March, 1886, upon the affidavit and application of the appellant’s attorney, the surrogate made an order that the respondent should show cause before him, on the 15th day of April, 1886, why he should not file a further account as executor of Robert Sou tier's estate, and why the decree entered on March 10, 1884, should not be set aside, and the account re opened. That order was served upon the respondent, and in pursuance thereof he appeared before the surrogate, and, after hearing the parties, on the 15th day of June, 1886, he made an order that the application to open the decree of March 10, 1884, and to compel a further accounting, be denied. From that order the Duchess D’Auxy appealed to the general term, and from affirmance there to this court.

The appellant united in her motion before the surrogate two distinct applications for relief—one to vacate and set aside the decree, and to re open the account; and the other for a further accounting. Upon the argument before us her counsel distinctly abandoned her claim to vacate and set aside the decree, and to re open the account; and contended only that the courts below erred in denying her a further accounting.

The respondent denies the appellant’s right to a further accounting upon various grounds It is, among other things, insisted that as legatee she has no right under the provisions of the Code to a further accounting, and that the decree made March 10, 1884, absolutely binds her until it shall be vacated or set aside, and that the only person who can? call for a further accounting or pursue the assets which she seeks to reach is an administrator with the will annexed, to be appointed by the surrogate. We will, however, assume that the decree judicially settling the respondent’s accounts had no greater foice or effect than is prescribed by section 2742 of the Code, and that the appellant had the right, upon the presentation to the surrogate of proper facts, to have a further accounting.

This decree judicially settling the accounts of the executor should have some force and effect. All the parties interested having been cited, the presumption should be indidged that the account was correct, and that the executor had accounted for all the property that came into his hands as such; and a further accounting should not be ordered unless it is made to appear that there are other matters not embraced in his former account for which he is responsible, and has not accounted. Brown v. Brown, 53 Barb., 217. It is not too much to ask of a party, who seeks to compel an executor who has once accounted to make a further account, to present to the surrogate a clear case before he shall be required to grant the application.

Now, what are the facts here upon which the further accounting is sought H It is not disputed that the respondent accounted for every dollar that came into his hands as executor of the estate of Robert Soutter But the facts upon which a further accounting are asked concern the estate of James T. Soutter, and are these : At the time of the death of James T. Soutter, William K Sou tier, one of his exécutors, and the respondent Porter, were bankers and brokers in the city of New York, under the firm name of Soutter & Co.,'and continued to do business as such until September 28, 1885, when they failed. After the death of James T. Soutter, his executors loaned and placed in their hands as a firm a large amount of the assets of the estate of James T. Soutter, and at the time of their failure they were largely indebted to that estate. By the new accounting the appellant seeks to compel the respondent to render an account in reference to the assets of James T. Soutter, which thus came to the firm of Soutter & Co. and for which they were indebted. But those assets did not come to the respondent*, nor under his control as executor. No part of them was set aside or appropriated as the portion of Robert Soutter under his father’s will. They remained subject to the control of the executors of James T. Soutter’s will, and to those executors the firm were bound to account for them; and for aught that appears those executors and that estate are abundantly able to respond to the estate of Robert Soutter for his share of the former estate under his father’s will. The assets belonging to the father’s estate in the hands of Soutter & Co. are still subject to administration by the executors of the father’s estate, and, if any share of them belongs to the estate of Robert Soutter, it must come through them. The respondent cannot be held to have received any portion of those assets as executor of Robert Soutter, simply because he was a member of the firm of Soutter & Co. He could not become responsible for those assets as executor of Robert Soutter until they should come into his hands as executor. It may turn out on the accounting of the executors of James T. Soutter that no part of those assets will be needed to discharge the obligation of the estate of James T. Soutter to that of Robert Soutter. So far as it is shown in this record, if there is any further obligation on the part of this respondent as executor, it is because he neglected for so long time to procure, from the estate of James T. Soutter, Robert’s share thereof; but it is not shown that that neglect has caused any damage to the estate of Robert Soutter, and whether it has or not cannot well be known until there has been an accounting of the executors of James T. Soutter.

The proper remedy of this appellant is to have an administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of her husband’s estate appointed. He can call the executors of James T. Soutter to an account, and compel payment by them to him of whatever may still be due under the will of James T. Soutter to the estate of Robert Soutter, and he will have ample power by proceedings before the surrogate, or by a proper action, to call the proper parties to an account for the estate of James T. Soutter. It may turn out that that estate is still sufficient to pay -whatever remains due to the estate of Robert Soutter, and, if it is not, that the executors thereof are able to respond for whatever of that estate has been lost through their negligence or misfeasance. If, however, it should turn out that the estate of Robert Soutter has been damaged by the delay of the respondent in collecting from the executors of James T. Soutter what was due to the estate of Robert Soutter, the respondent can then be called to an account by the administrator cle bonis non. But in this proceeding, in the absence of any proof that any portion of the estate of James T. Soutter came to him as executor, or was ever set apart to the estate of Robert Soutter, or that the latter estate has been damaged by the delay, there is no ground whatever for calling him to an account.

We are, therefore, of opinion that the appellant did not make a case which required the surrogate to order the respondent to render a further account, and the order of the general term should be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.  