The question presented on this accounting concerns the propriety of the allowance of commissions and expenses to the administrator.
He owed no duty to the decedent or to the estate as might have been the case had he been named as executor in a previous will. His primary concern was to obtain for himself a part of the assets of the decedent in the capacity of a statutory distributee in intestacy, He was a mere intermeddling volunteer, and in favor of such the law creates no obligation of reimbursement or remuneration except in so far as their acts can be demonstrated to have been substantially beneficial.
In the present instance, no such showing has been made. The sole assets of the decedent consisted of three savings bank accounts which required no custodian in the nature of a temporary administrator for their preservation.
Aside from commissions to the deposed administrator, the controversy centers upon an unpaid bill for premiums on his bond in that capacity and for the services of his attorney. Neither of these expenditures can by any flight of the imagination be deemed tb have been beneficial to the estate and no authority or valid argument has been advanced as a reason why the funds which, on the law of the case, the testatrix dedicated to others, should be employed for the indemnification of a volunteer who has been unsuccessful in bis efforts to divert a part of it to himself.
There is no more reason under the present circumstances for saddling the cost of bond premiums and attorneys’ fees on this estate than there would be of requiring a successful defendant in a replevin action to solve the like obligations of his defeated antagonist. It is not the policy of the law to reward unsuccessful litigants out of the property of their more fortunate opponents. (Matter of Sloat, 143 Misc. 170, 171, 172.)
This does not, of course, mean that the attorney for the accountant does not possess enforcible rights against his client in his individual capacity, but merely that such obligations of the latter are not solvable from the assets of this estate.
Enter decree on notice accordingly.