
    In the Matter of the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of Frances L. Wallace and Talbot J. Taylor, as Committee of the Person and Property of Allen Wallace, Incompetent. Frances L. Wallace and Talbot J. Taylor, Appellants.
    First Department,
    January 28, 1916.
    Incompetent persons ■— commissions of committee — double commissions — extra allowance.
    As the committee of an incompetent ceases to have power to reduce to possession any property of the incompetent after the latter’s death, commissions should not be allowed on the corpus of the estate claimed to have been received after the death of the incompetent, especially where there is no proof that the principal or any part of it was at any time received by the committee.
    Double commissions should not be allowed to the committee of an incom petent, where no one of the separate accounts equals $100,000, although the estate exceeded said amount.
    Although the advance of moneys by a committee for the support of an incompetent in excess of the income received, entitles the committee to reimbursement, they should not be allowed commissions thereon, as they have not received such moneys.
    Extra allowance to one of the committee of an incompetent reduced.
    
      An extra allowance to the wife of the incompetent who was one of the committee should he disallowed, where what she did both for the incompetent and for the interest of her infant daughter was that which duty and natural love and affection dictated, and where her own personal interests were also affected and served by her vigilance and work.
    Appeal by Frances L. Wallace and another from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, made at the New York Special Term and entered in the office of the clerk of the county of New York on the 14th day of October, 1915, as disallows certain commissions awarded them by the referee, and reduces an extra allowance of commissions made by said referee to Talbot J. Taylor.
    
      Nathan Burhan, for the appellants.
   Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, on opinion of Shears, J.

Present — Clarke, P. J., Scott, Dowling, Smith and Page, JJ.

The following is the opinion of the court below:

Shears, J.:

I cannot confirm the report of the learned referee as it stands, although it is not opposed. Among the items of commissions allowed is $7,687.28 to each member of the committee, based upon the assumption that the committee received the corpus of the estate, amounting to $749,728.33, after the death of the incompetent. The committee of an incompetent ceases to have power to reduce to possession any property of the incompetent after the incompetent’s death, so that the committee could not have legally received any of the principal after the incompetent’s death. Furthermore, there is no proof that the principal or any part of it was at any time received by the committee. The proof is entirely to the contrary. Down to the death of the incompetefit the trust fund of $750,000, bequeathed by the will of the father of the incompetent, was held by the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company as trustee, the income being turned over to the committee and used for the benefit of the incompetent. By the settlement made with the residuary legatees this trust fund became, on the death of the incompetent, the property of the incompetent’s estate, and as to all of it, except $100,000 which was to be held until the death of Virginia F. Bacon, became payable to his estate; that is, to an executor or administrator, not to a committee which ceased to act coincidently with the incompetent’s death. The proof shows clearly that Mrs. Wallace was in due time appointed administratrix of the estate of the deceased incompetent, and that, as the estate was so large that a heavy bond would have been required, the principal was, by decree of the surrogate, only constructively turned over to the administratrix, the surrogate directing that the trust company, as trustee, should terminate its trust, except as to the said $100,000, by delivering the fund to itself, subject to the order of the administratrix, countersigned by the surrogate. This course was pursued. There is, therefore, no foundation whatever for an award of commissions to the committee of the incompetent for receiving and disbursing this fund. In the next place, commissions amounting to $2,796.31 to each member of the committee, based on receipts and disbursements of income, have been allowed made up of the statutory allowance on different amounts received by the committee and at different times reported to the court. This allowance is a double commission, on the theory that the estate exceeded $100,000. No one of the separate accounts equals $100,000. Had the court passed on each account when filed and allowed commissions, each member of the committee might now be authorized to be paid, but the sum allowed would have to be fixed on the basis of a single commission instead of double commissions. Included in the items on which commissions were allowed was the sum of $46,434.87, claimed to have been expended by the committee in excess of the amount received by them. The advance of moneys for the support of an incompetent in excess of the income received would entitle the committee to reimbursement, but as they have not received the amount they cannot be allowed commissions on it. The statute only allows commissions on moneys received and paid out. Besides, the evidence before the referee showed that this large sum was not paid by the committee, but by Mrs. Wallace, as the wife of the incompetent, and a considerable part of it was paid before the committee was appointed. This item of the commissions is, therefore, fixed and allowed at $1,761.98 for each member of the committee, being five per centum on the first $1,000 two; and one-half per centum on the next $10,000, and one per centum on the balance of $146,198.12, the total amount received and paid out by the committee being $157,19 8.12. The learned referee has awarded Mr. Taylor, one member of the committee, an extra allowance of $22,500 and Mrs. Wallace an extra allowance of $12,500 on the ground that they rendered extraordinary and unusual services in excess of the ordinary duties of an executor or administrator. The interests of an infant six years of age being involved, and the sum of $60,000 having been spent in counsel fees, much as I dislike to substitute my judgment for that of the learned referee, I do not feel justified in allowing $85,000 additional fees out of this estate. It is true that a very difficult situation confronted Mrs. Wallace, and that both Mrs. Wallace and her relative, Mr. Taylor, handled the situation with great judgment and skill and achieved a fine result for the infant. It must not be lost sight of that the services of skilled counsel, who were liberally paid, must have been an important contributing factor. What Mrs. Wallace did, both for the incompetent and the interests of her infant daughter,, was that which duty and natural love and affection dictated. Her own personal interests were also affected and served by her vigilance and work. While this is all deserving of commendation, it should not, in my opinion, he made the basis of an extra allowance from the infant’s estate. The case of Mr. Taylor is different because of the business experience and judgment that he brought to his duties and the time that he devoted to the matter. In view of all the circumstances it seems to me that an allowance of $15,000 to Mr. Taylor is liberal and at the same time not excessive. With these modifications the report is confirmed. 
      
       See Code Civ. Proc. § 2338; Id. § 2730; now Code Civ. Proc. § 2753, as amd. by Laws of 1914, chap. 443; since amd. by Laws of 1916, chap. 596. — [Rep.
     