The appellants, as executor and executrix of the last will and testament of Laura A. Klugh, deceased, presented their accounts to the Surrogate’s Court for final settlement. A reference was ordered, and on the coming in of the referee’s report a final decree was made stating’and settling the accounts and directing a distribution of the amount found to be in the hands of the accountants subject to distribution. The accountants, being dissatisfied with the decree as entered, appealed to this court where the decree was modified by allowing to the accountants certain charges which the surrogate had refused to allow. (See Matter of Garrabrant, 176 App. Div. 186; Matter of Klugh, Id. 187.) Thereupon an order was entered in the Surrogate’s Court making the order of this court the order of said-Surrogate’s Court, and fixing the amount of costs payable to the parties to the appeal. This order was entered on January 31, 1917, and on February 1, 1917, a decree was entered in the Surrogate’s Court “resettling” the former decree of that court, dated March 20, 1916, which had originally settled the accounts. The accountants moved to vacate this resettled decree, and from an order denying their motion they appealed to this court.
The order of this court did not, in terms, remit the matter *25to the Surrogate’s Court for the entry of an order in accordance with our decision, but itself modified the decree appealed from. All that was necessary, therefore, to be done in the Surrogate’s Court was to enter the. formal order that was entered making the order of this court the order of the Surrogate’s Court, and fixing the costs payable to the parties to the appeal which had been allowed by the order of this court. The original decree would then have stood as so modified. The increased. sums allowed to the accountants by the order of this court decreased the various sums directed to be paid to the several distributees, and it would have been proper and convenient, although not perhaps strictly necessary, to have so drawn the order entered upon the remittitur from this court, as to specify the altered amount to be paid to each distributee. This, however, is not what the resettled decree did. It made no reference whatever to the order of this court, but purported to resettle and amend the original decision, modifying the figures, however, so as to correspond with the modifications resulting from our order. This was an irregular way to arrive at the result, but we cannot see that, in this case, any one can suffer from the irregularity. We refer to it only because in another case the practice here followed might lead to more serious results.
There is only one practical question raised by this appeal which requires consideration. By the resettled decree the accountants are charged legal interest upon the sums due to the several distributees frota March 20, 1916, the date of the original decree, to the date of the payment. It is not disputed that this interest greatly exceeded the interest which the money had actually earned in the hands of the accountants. -
By the original decree the accountants were found to have in their hands for distribution among the legatees the sum of $9,762.54, which was required to be divided into nineteenths, the amount payable to each legatee being specifically set forth in the decree. By the resettled decree the accountants were found to have in their hands for distribution among the legatees only $8,774.32, and the amount to be paid to each legatee was proportionately reduced. It is on these reduced amounts that the accountants have been charged full.legal interest of six per cent. This was error. Interest upon a sum directed to be paid *26by a decree settling accounts of an executor or trustee is charged by way of a penalty for non-payment. But a debtor is not chargeable with interest as a penalty for non-payment unless the amount he is to pay is fixed or else is ascertainable by computations from fixed factors. In the present case the accountants were justified in declining to pay the legatees the sum fixed by the original decree, because, as the event has proved, these sums were too large. How much should be paid could not be determined until the appeal from the original decree’ had been heard and decided, nor were they called upon to pay the legacies in installments, or to make payments on account. Until the decree had been put in such form that it correctly fixed the several amounts which they were called upon to pay, they were not put in default for non-payment so as to be subject to the payment of full interest by way of penalty.
Of course if they had been unsuccessful in their appeal to ths court and the amounts payable to the legatees had not been reduced in consequence thereof, they would have been chargeable with full interest from the date of the original decree. (Matter of Ryer, 120 App. Div. 154.)
We see no necessity for vacating the resettled decree, but under the prayer for “other and further relief ” in appellants notice of motion the resettled decree will be amended by striking out the words “with interest thereon at the rate of six per centum per annum from March 20, 1916, the date of entry of the original decree herein ” whenever they appear, and insert in place thereof the words: “with such interest as the accountants have realized thereon,” with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellants to be deducted proportionately from the amounts payable to the respondents.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Davis and Shearn, JJ., concurred.
Order modified as stated in opinion and as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to appellants. Order to be settled on notice. •