We have the same power upon this appeal as the surrogate had upon the original application, and his determination is to be *260reviewed as if the original application was made to this court.. (Code, § 2481, sub. 6.) The application should have been granted. Subdivision 6 of section 2481 was intended to give to the surrogate-a broader jurisdiction than he possessed before the enactment of the present Code. (See notes to the section in Throop’s Code.) This jurisdiction is not'limited by subdivision 11 of section 3347. That provision applies solely to the mode of procedure. It has no application to the power given to the surrogate by section 2481. That is general, and may be exercised with reference to all decrees or orders, whether made before or after September 1, 1880. By section 2482 the provisions of chapter 18, relating to the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court, are expressly made applicable to all estates, whether the decedent died before or after that chapter took effect. The petition shows sufficient cause for setting aside the decree and allowing the petitioner to be heard upon the question of the guardian’s fees. The fact that the infant was represented upon the hearing before the surrogate, or that the error alleged is purely one of law, is not an insuperable bar. The rule that the remedy for an error in law when the party was represented on the trial or hearing, is by appeal only, is well applied when the party aggrieved is an adult and selects his own counsel, or when being an infant, the question has been fairly presented to and decided by the court, but when being an infant it is apparent that the claim made against him has no authority in law to support it, and that the guardian has wholly neglected the infant’s interests, the rule cited can have no application.
The power to set aside or reopen decrees for reasons of this character is inherent in a court of equity, and is a matter of common and frequent exercise; and the power conferred by the Code upon the Surrogate is to be exercised in like cases and in the same-manner as a court of general jurisdiction exercises such power. (Sec. 2481.) It cannot be doubted that the Supreme Court has power to vacate and set aside its own decree under circumstances similar to those presented in this proceeding; such a power is absolutely essential to the due administration of justice. (Sipperly v. Baucus, 24 N. Y., 46, and cases cited.) The surrogate had, however, no power to render the decrees in question, and for that reason, if none other existed, they must be set aside. The *261accounting appears to have been had upon the petition of the guardian. Upon presentation of the petition to the surrogate a citation was issued, and upon the return of such citation the same proceedings were had as would have been had upon a judicial settlement of the guardian’s accounts. We do not find in the Code any authority whatever for these proceedings. The provisions of the Code regulating the accounting of testamentary trustees are to be found in title 6, chapter 18, and those relating to the accounting of testamentary guardians in title 7, article 3, chapter 18. Referring now to testamentary guardian, it is provided by section 2856, that a judicial settlement of such guardian’s accounts may be had in the same cases in which a guardian appointed by the •surrogate may have a judicial settlement of his account. Such proceedings are provided for in sections 2817 and 2850, and can be had •only when the ward has attained his majority or a successor to the guardian has been appointed.
Turning now to the provisions regulating the judicial settlement of the accounts of testamentary trustees, it is provided in sectiori 2810 that such settlement may be had on the petition of the trustee when one year has expired since the probate of the will, or when the trusts have been or are ready to be fully executed, and such •accounting contemplates a distribution of the trust fund. It is apparent that these provisions have no application to the case under consideration, and that whether we regard Mr. Hawley as a testamentary trustee or a testamentary, guardian, he was not at the time of the presentation of his several petitions to the surrogate entitled to a judicial settlement of his accounts. It is further provided, however, by section 2802, that a testamentary trustee may at any time file an “ intermediate account ” with the surrogate having jurisdiction of the estate, and substantially the same provision is contained in section 2855 in reference to testamentary guardians. By •section 2511, subdivision 9, the expression “ intermediate account,” is defined to be “ an account filed in the surrogate’s office for the purpose of disclosing the acts of the person accounting and the •condition of the estate or fund in his hands, and not made the subject of a judicial settlement,” and by subdivision 8 a “ judicial settlement ” is defined to be “ a decree of the Surrogate’s Court whereby the account is made conclusive upon the parties to the special pro*262ceeding, either for all purposes or for certain purposes specified in the statute.”
I have now referred to all the provisions of the Code relating to accountings or settlements of accounts of guardians or trustees. From these citations it appears there are two classes of accountings provided for. The first are “ intermediate ” or to be made during the execution of the trust. Upon such accounting no decree is required, and the surrogate has no jurisdiction to make any. There is no authority for the citation of the beneficiary and no jurisdiction to make any order that will conclude any person interested in the trust Such accounts are intended solely as landmarks along the line of the execution of the trust, and are solely for the information of the beneficiaries and not for the benefit in any way of the trustee. The second are judicial settlements of accounts, and are had upon notice to all parties interested and contemplate a trial, a judicial determination and a judgment; they are conclusive upon all who have notice, but they can be instituted in such a case as the one under consideration, only after the ward arrives at the age of twenty-one years. As all the proceedings before the surrogate were had during the infancy of the ward, there was no case made for a judicial settlement of the guardian’s accounts. The surrogate had no jurisdiction to make any decree that would conclude the infant, and the decrees entered by him were without authority and are as to the infant void.
The decrees should be vacated and set aside, with costs to be paid. by the guardian personally.
Present — Barnard, P. J.; Dykman and Pratt, JJ.Decrees vacated, with costs to be paid by guardians personally.