On July 19, 1904, Peter Ammon filed his account as executor of the above estate, and, on October 30, 1906, filed a supplemental final account. December 24, 1906, Gottlieb Blessing, as executor of the estate of Anna M. Wick, widow and only interested person in the estate, filed objections to the following items in said accounts:
Witness fees in Fred Wick ease................... $32 00
To executor personally serving notices of appraisal.. . 10 00
To executor personally serving citations............ 20 00
To H. ,S. Willson on probate of will................ 10 00
To U. S. Willson on probate of will............... 15 00
To John F. Wilson in Fred Wick case.............. 25 00
To H. S. Willson in Fred Wick case............... 150 00
Upon the trial objection to the first item, witness fees, was withdrawn and the executor is hereby credited with the same.. The second item of ten dollars for posting notices of appraisal by consent is disallowed.
The third item is of $20, claimed by the executor for having himself served citations. In connection with this item, the question arises: Can an executor claim an allowance for “ extra services ” rendered by himself in the conduct of the affairs of an estate, a compensation beyond the commissions allowed by statute ? This was a service that the executor was not; obliged to render. It could have been delegated to another at the expense of the estate; but he, having chosen to render the-service himself, must look to his commissions for remuneration. Any other rule would be obviously dangerous. I am aware of a long line of oases where executors have been allowed extra compensation for special services not executorial, which specially benefited and enhanced the estate, but do not regard the serving-of a paper by an executor within the rule laid down. It has been held that, where an attorney as an executor has rendered services-to -the estate, no allowance can be made to him beyond his commissions. The item of twenty dollars is disallowed. Clinch v. Eckford, 8 Paige, 412; Matter of Howard, 3 Misc. Rep. 170; Collier v. Munn, 41 N. Y. 143; Lent v. Howard, 89 id. 169 ; Smith v. City of Albany, 61 id. 444.
The two items of ten dollars and fifteen dollars, respectively, paid attorney H. S. Willson, for alleged services on probate of the will, are disallowed. The executor is an attorney, and prepared all of the papers and proved the will. For some undisclosed reason Mr. H. S. Willson, an attorney and a brother-in-law of the executor, sat in court for about an hour on two occasions in an ex parte matter, so carelessly conducted that a sup
It is urged that the item of twenty-five dollars paid to John F. Wilson, and seventy-five dollars paid to H. S. Willson, and seventy-five dollars paid to D. F. Searle, as attorneys, making a total of one hundred and seventy-five dollars, exclusive of disbursements by the executor, for their services in an action in the Supreme Court, brought by Fred Wick, to recover one hundred and twenty-two dollars claimed for services against the deceased, is too much and should be reduced to sixty-five dollars, the taxable costs. Section 2730 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “ in all cases such allowance must be made for their necessary expenses (executors and administrators), actually paid by them 'as appears just and reasonable.” Christian Wick, whose estate is here involved, died in May, 1903. His will was probated in June, 1903. Peter Ammon, named as executor therein, qualified and is now acting. Fred Wick, a nephew of the deceased, April 21, 1904, presented to 'the executor a verified -claim against said estate for “ doing work and chores through
Attorney John F. Wilson did work covering seventy-four of the eighty-eight pages of the referee’s report, and had paid to him for his services twenty-five dollars. H. .S. Willson and D. F. Searle did work covering the remaining fourteen pages of the report, and Searle summed up. H. S. Willson was connected with the ease from the beginning. One hundred and fifty dollars was paid them, which was divided. The summing up took two hours. The eighty-eight pages of the referee’s report, if written in ordinary long-hand, would cover about forty pages, 'and represents not to exeed four days’ work.
In the estate there were $917.50 in the bank and real estate worth about $600. The plaintiff proseeutéd his case with one attorney, and the executor, himself an attorney, had the help of three different attorneys in the defense of the action.
On the facts presented I do mot think the executor wisely and frugally managed the estate. One of the attorneys testified: “ Since 18-82 I tried only two cases alone in courts of record. I don’t like the practice of trying cases.” It was bad management to employ a mam to try a ease, to whom trials- were so distasteful that the executor felt called upon to employ two other law
I conclude and find that it was negligent management of this estate for the executor, upon the facts, to have employed an attorney unable to conduct the defense of the action; also to have refused to permit the surrogate to determine this claim, or at least to have declined to do so; also to have taken the case from the Supreme 'Court calendar, where it might have been tried before a jury without the expense of seventy dollars paid the referee.
There is evidence before me that the taxable costs, amounting
All admit, what is well known, that the value of legal services is, to a considerable extent, a matter of opinion; but, in arriving at the same, various well-defined elements must be considered, such as, in this case, the amount involved in the estate, the character and amount of the work done, the time occupied in its performance; the result, the standing and reputation of the attorneys performing the services; and the courts have uniformly refused to limit attorneys’ fees to specified and detailed bills of particulars, with fixed amount for each item, as in case of goods sold or manual services rendered. Matter of Sewell, 32 Misc. Rep. 604, and cases cited.
The claim of Dr. E. 0. Reams should be reduced from thirty-three dollars to thirty-two dollars.
The judgments for costs are properly set out in the final account.
Decreed accordingly.