
    Matter of the Accounting of the Trustees of the Estate of Harry Holbrook, Deceased.
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, Westchester County,
    
    
      October, 1902.)
    Trustees, Several—Entitled to Only One Commission on Annual Income Unless it Amounts to $100,000.
    Unless a trust estate’s annual income amounts to $100,000, the trustees, however numerous, are together entitled to only one commission on the income.
    Proceedings upon the accounting of trustees.
    Grant Hotman, for trustees; Anson Baldwin, special guardian.
   Silkman, S.

The claim is made by the trustees that they are each entitled to a full commission--upon the income, although the aggregate annual income is much less than $100,000.

Prior to the amendment of section 2736 of the Code of Civil Procedure in 1892, not more than one full commission upon income could be allowed upon the accounting of either executors or trustees where there were more than one, unless such income amounted to $100,000 or more annually. Matter of Willets, 112 N. Y. 289. That section then read: “Where the value of the personal estate of the decedent amounts to one hundred thousand dollars or more, over all his debts, each executor or administrator is entitled to the full compensation (on principal and ■income) allowed by law to a sole executor or administrator, unless there are more than three, in which ease the compensation to which three would he entitled shall he apportioned among them according to the services rendered by them respectively; and a like apportionment shall be made in all cases where there shall be more than one executor or administrator.” The words in parentheses were not in the original section, but were added by the Laws of 1892, chapter 636.

By section 2811 of the 'Code of Civil Procedure this section 273'6 was declared to apply to trustees as well as to executors. If this section 2736, as then amended, and with the words “ on principal and income ” interpolated, became a part of section 2811, it remained so only until the next session of the Legislature, when section 2734 to 2741 inclusive, were repealed, and section 2730, which in terms applied to executors only, was amended to include the substance of sections 2734 and 2741. Laws of 1893, chap. 686.

This Legislature of 1893 left section 2811 as it was with its reference to section 2736. "What the Legislature really intended, it is difficult to say; whether by the repeal of section 2736 they intended to repeal the reference to it contained in section 2811, or whether it intended section 2736 should continue to be read' as amended into section 2811; or whether the intent of the repeal was to destroy the amendment of 1892, and leave section 2811 to be read with its reference to section 2736 as originally enacted. The latter, I think, is the only construction which it is fair to adopt.

It can hardly be that by oversight or inadvertence section 2811 with its reference to section 2736 has been allowed to remain in its present form for so many years.

nevertheless we find in section 2811 a reference to section 2733. The original section 2733 related to the form of affidavit to he attached to an executor’s account but in the convulsion of 1893 when the Legislature altered some sections and repealed others we find an entirely new subject covered by section 2733, namely, advancements, with which trustees have nothing to dó, and which is something to be wholly disposed of before the trustees as such take possession of the estate.

The Court of Appeals in Hurlburt v. Durant, 88 N. Y. 122, held that the then sections 2736 and 2811 of the Code contained the statutory provisions for the compensation of executors and testamentary trustees.

In the Matter of Todd, 64 App. Div. 435, the court says: Sections 2802 and 2730 of the Code of Civil Procedure clearly contemplate that the estate shall be charged certain fees for the receiving and paying out of the money coming into the hands of the trustee.” The court apparently follows section 2736 in its consolidation with other sections into section 2730, and finding further authority in section 2802 for allowing trustees the same ■commission as executors. The facts in the Todd case did not necessarily call to the attention of the court the confusion in the legislation, and it was not necessary to the decision of that case that the court should have considered it.

■•Section 2802 would seem to relate entirely to annual accounts ••of trustees, and these accounts must necessarily be accountings of income; and if, under the authority of that section, trustees are to have the same compensation as executors, then we must regard the income as a separate and distinct fund from the principal for the purpose of determining such compensation, and which construction is consistent with the view which I hold.

I do not think that even if section 2736 stood to-day as amended in 1892, it would authorize the granting of more than one commission upon income to trustees whére such annual income was less than $100,000. I think the object and intent of the amendment of 1892 was to obviate the question which had arisen frequently in surrogate’s courts, namely, could the surrogate, in determining whether the amount of the estate was more or less than $100,000, add the income received by executors to the amount of the estate as it came into their hands upon the death of the testator. In order to set at rest the doubt upon this-point the Legislature directed that such income might be included with the principal. In enacting section .2811, making the provisions of section 2736, with other sections, applicable to trustees as well as executors, it was only intended to make the application so far as it might he pertinent and reasonable.

Executors and administrators collect income merely because they are for the time being possessed of the assets of decedent for the purposes of administration, and of necessity must receive the income during that limited period. Their commissions are calculated upon the estate in their hands as one fund. With trustees it is different. The principal and the annual income are separate funds. The trustees are entitled to commissions upon principal at the statutory rate of 5 per cent, on the first thousand, 2½ per cent, on the next $10,000, and 1 per cent, on the balance. They are also entitled to treat each year’s income as a separate fund for the purpose of arriving at the commissions calculated in the same way.

If we are to accept the construction claimed here by the trustees, then we must regard the principal and income in the hands of the trustees as one fund, and having had their 5 per cent, on the first thousand, and 2½ per cent, on the next 10,000 once, they cannot have it twice, and on all subsequent income the commissions can only be allowed upon the 1 per cent, basis.

■Counsel for the trustees also claim that the rule laid down in Matter of Willets, supra, has been abrogated by the amendment of 1892 to section 2736. I do not think that the Legislature intended to alter the wise and salutary rule regulating trustees* commissions on income laid down in that case. The court there say: “ When trustees account in reference to commissions which, they are required annually to pay over and account for, no matter how much the principal may be or how much the estate of the decedent,may have been, section 2736 does not apply, unless the income exceeds one hundred thousand dollars, and more than one commission can be allowed only in case the sum upon which commissions are computed amounts to at least one hundred thousand dollars.”

The decree may provide for the allowance of one commission upon income to be divided between the three trustees, calculated with annual rests at the rate of 5 per cent, on the first thousand, 2½ per cent, on the next 10,000, and 1 per cent upon the balance.

Decreed accordingly.  