
    In the Matter of the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of William P. O’Connor, as Executor of the Will of John McElvoy, Deceased.
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, Westchester County,
    
    
      Filed May, 1888.)
    
    1. Will—Construction of—Trust for masses void.
    The testator, by his will, after directing- the payment of his debts and funeral expenses, gave his executors $500, to be expended by them in having masses said for the repose of his soul. The executors paid $250 for masses, and $300 f r funeral expenses, and credited themselves in their account therewith. The objection being made that such expenses were unathorized in law, exorbitant, and not justified, Hdd. that the trust for masses was void in its creation, and the expenditures therefor unauthorized; that the executors should be charged with the amount paid for masses. Following Holland v. Alcock, 14 N. Y. State Rep., 761.
    3, Executor chargeable with loss to estate resulting from his negligence.
    Such acts of negligence or careless administration on the part of an executor, as defeats the rights of creditors or legatees, or parties entitled to a distribution, amounts to a devastavit. A person accepting the trust of executor, must perform it, using due diligence, and not suffer the estate to be injured by his neglect.
    3. Same—When liable for neglect.
    The executor knowing of the decedent's liabilities to certain creditors, very soon after the death of the decedent, for which said creditors afterward obtained a judgment, allowed certain bonds to remain in the possession of a person who acknowledged that they were the property of the deceased, without taking measures to recover them or their value, whereby there was insufficient money to pay the judgments of said creditors. Held, that the executor, by reason of his devastavit, was liable for the amount of the bonds in question, as assets in his hands. ■
    The testator by his will, first directed the payment of Ms debts and funeral expenses, and gave $500 to his executors, to be expended by them in having masses said for the Tepose of his soul. He also gave his brother Michael McElvoy $300. The rest and residue he bequeathed and devised to his niece Mary Ann Murphy. The executor or survivor of them, was given power to sell estate. He had real •estate at White Plains, Westchester county. The testator died in 1883. The will was admitted to probate in July, the same year. The following November, Mary Ann Murphy conveyed the property referred to in the opinion, for a consideration of $1,500, as expressed in the deed. In the accounting of the executor (one only of whom acted), the personal estate appeared to be $1,444.32. This did not include bonds of Jersey City, about which there appeared the following statement in Schedule G-. of said accounting: “ There were two bonds of Jersey City, of the par value of $1,000 each, belonging to the deceased, which did not come into my hands. They were taken by the residuary legatee, Mary Ann Murphy, without my knowledge or consent, and sold by her. They were worth $2,060, and I respectfully insist that I am entitled to commission on said amount, as though said bonds or the proceeds thereof, had come into my hands. ’ ’ One Clifford, as receiver of John Masterson commenced an action to foreclosure a mortgage, the payment of which had been guaranteed by testator The executor was made a party to said foreclosure action, and a deficiency judgment resulting from this foreclosure action, was commenced about the time of the accounting of the executor. The other facts will be found in the opinion.
    
      T. G. Barry, for executor; R. E. Prime, for Gifford, creditor.
   Coffin, S.

In the recently decided case of Holland v. Alcock, 108 N. Y., 312, the court of appeals held that, where the testator gave the residue of his estate, amounting to about 10,000, to his executors “ for the purpose of having prayers offered in a Roman Catholic church, to be by them selected, for the repose of my soul, and the souls of my family, and also the souls of all others who may be in purgatory,” the trust attempted to be created was void, because there was no beneficiary in existence or to come into existence, who was interested in or could demand an execution of the trust, and no defined or ascertainable living person had, or ever could have, any temporal interest in its performance. For the same reason, the trust attempted to be created by the will in this case is void. 1 ,

The contestants’ counsel did not base any objection upon this specific ground, but, seeming to class the $500, attempted to be devoted to the saying of masses, with the charges for burial amounting to about $300, as funeral expenses, he objected that the sum of $800, paid for such expenses was “ unauthorized in law, exorbitant and not justified.” Still, the objection maybe regarded as broad enough to cover the question relating to the validity of the trust, which was void in its creation, and which has been executed in good faith. According to the case above cited, the expenditure for masses was “unauthorized in law.” The case of Holland v. Alcock related to the will of Thomas Gunning. Smyth, the sole acting executor under that will, had an accounting before the surrogate of Yew York, in which proceeding the validity of the trust for masses was recognized, without objection, and the propriety of the expenditure therefore was not questioned. Yo appeal was taken, and the surrogate’s decree in the matter was declared by the supreme court, in an action brought by the legatees to recover the sum paid for masses, to be bir cling and conclusive as to the correctness of the expenditure. But, in this case, there has been no adjudication of the' question by any court, and it must be held, in accordance with the decision of the court of appeals, that the trust is void; and it follows, as a necessary sequence, that the payments made thereunder were unauthorized, and that the executor is chargeable therewith.

The executor credits himself with the full sum of $500, paid for masses for the repose of the soul of the deceased, when his testimony shows that he so expended $250 only, the other $250 having been contributed by Mary Ann Murphy, and with which he charges himself. Of course, he cannot be credited with the amount he paid, and should not be charged with the amount contributed.

A more serious question, in so far as the amount involved is concerned, arises as to the liability of the executor for the sum of the two Jersey City bonds, valued together at $2,060. It seems to be well established that such acts of negligence or careless administration as defeat the rights of creditors or legatees, or parties entitled to distribution, amount to a devastavit, for if persons accept the trust of executors, they must perform it; they must use due diligence, and not suffer the estate to be injured by their neglect. Williams on Ex’rs, 1636; Lowson v. Copeland, 2 Bro. Ch. Cas., 156.

The facts, as disclosed by the testimony, are these: The executor knew, within a few months after the time of the admission of the will to probate, of the existence of the decedent’s liability, for which the creditor subsequently obtained his judgment. He also knew, during the life-time of the decedent and shortly before his death, that he was the owner of the Jersey City bonds. When he sought, after he became executor, on several occasions, to obtain possession of them, Mary Ann Murphy, who had the custody of the papers and the effects of the deceased when he died, repeatedly, during six months, denied that she had them. She sent him to various persons and places, in a vain quest for them, and several times went to him and inquired if he had found those bonds yet; and finally, at the end of the six months, confessed to him that she had them all the time, and had recently sold them, claiming then that they had been given to her by the deceased.- This the executor did not believe, for when he filed his verified account in this proceeding, he stated in it that these bonds belonged to the deceased, and insisted that he was entitled to his commissions on the amount of them. She had, therefore, at that time, in her hands, the proceeds of the real estate sold by her and also the proceeds of the sales of the bonds, together amounting to about $3,500. This the executor then knew, and he also then knew of the claim of this creditor; yet he utterly neglected a very plain and urgent executorial duty in not taking prompt measures for the recovery of the value of the property wrongfully converted by Miss Murphy. Perhaps the reason why he did not do it, was a belief, based upon the advice of counsel, that the creditor would fail to obtain the judgment which he afterwards did. As between her. as residuary legatee and devisee, and himself as executor, had she been the only person interested in the estate, he might have been justified in tolerating her misconduct, but as between him and a claimant against the deceased, his negligence is gross and without excuse.

It is unnecessary to consider here the validity of the conveyance to the Rev. Mr. Walsh, as, assuming it to be void, this court has no incidental power, in this proceeding, to order a sale of the real estate for the payment of the creditor’s claims. Bevan v. Cooper, 72 N. Y., 317.

It is objected by the executor’s counsel that the creditor cannot recover here, because he did not present his claim under the published notice of the creditors to do so. Conceding that there was no such formal presentation of the claim, in this instance, as the statute contemplates, its only effect would be to limit his recovery in any action he might, bring on it, to the amount of the assets remaining in the executor’s hands unadministered at the commencement of the action, and to deprive him of the right to costs. The objection cannot avail in a proceeding like this. But the effect of this decision is to find, virtually, in the hands of the executor, one-half of the trust fund for masses, and the amount of the bonds in question.

A decree will be entered in accordance with the views above expressed.  