Judges: Laughlin
Filed Date: 1/9/1903
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The action is brought to obtain an accounting by trustees under paragraph “c” of the thirty-third clause of the wilt of C. F. Theodore Steinway, deceased. By this clause of his will the testator gave and bequeathed all of his stock in the corporation of Steinway & Sons, consisting of 4,000 shares, to his four executors and trustees, to be managed by them until the 1st day of January, 1904, for the benefit of certain persons named in paragraphs “a,” “b,” “c,” and “d” thereof, and provided that one-fourth part of such stock should be held and managed for the benefit of the beneficiaries named in each of said paragraphs, respectively. He therein directed the trustees to pay to the beneficiaries named in each paragraph, in equal proportions, an annual sum representing an income of 5 per cent, on 1,000 shares of said stock, and provided for the disposition of the principal at the expiration of the trust. On the 9th day of May, 1893, the plaintiff in this action brought an action for. the construction of the will, contending that the trusts provided for in this thirty-third clause were void. Tire trial of the issues in that action resulted in a judgment sustaining these trusts. This judgment was affirmed on appeal. Steinway v. Steinway, 163 N. Y. 183, 57 N. E. 312. Final judgment establishing the validity of the trusts was entered on the 17th day of November, 1900. Pending that action the income was not paid over to the beneficiaries by the trustees. After the entry of the final judgment, a statement of the account for income was rendered by the trustees to the plaintiff, in which he was credited with the amount of the accumulated income of 5 per cent, and 2 per cent, interest thereon, and he was charged with one-twelfth of $39,719.11, said to be the costs of the litigation. The plaintiff objected to this statement of the account on the ground that the trustees had received more than .2 per centum on the moneys, and that he was not chargeable with these costs, and, if so chargeable, the amount was excessive. The plaintiff is a nephew of the decedent, and is one of three beneficiaries named
The names of the parties who it is claimed should have been made defendants are stated in the second ground of demurrer as required by the Code. It is manifest that the first and third grounds of demurrer are not tenable. The action is against trustees of an express trust for an accounting. The court, therefore, has jurisdiction of the subject-matter of the action, and the complaint sufficiently states a cause of action. The learned counsel for the appellants did not urge these grounds of demurrer on the trial, nor does he argue them on the appeal. He contends, however, that there is a defect of parties defendant, upon the ground that, the action being for an accounting concerning a fund in the hands of the trustees as part of their trust, all the persons entitled to share in the fund are necessary parties. The defect of parties defendant urged upon the appeal consists in the omission of legal representatives of deceased trustees and beneficiaries. The complaint shows the death of these persons, but it does not show the appointment of any administrator or executor of their estates. None of the persons who have died were interested under paragraph “c” of the will, unless it be the deceased trustee, whose only interest could be a claim that the trust funds should bear the costs to which reference has been made. All of the heirs and next of kin of those who were interested in the will and have died were made parties. William Steinway, one of the executors and trustees, and sole beneficiary during his lifetime under paragraph “d” of the will, died on the 30th day of November, 1896. The will provided that, in case of his death prior to the 1st of January, 1904, his son, George A. Steinway, should be executor and trustee, and should become a beneficiary under paragraph “d” with his sister, Paula Th. Steinway, and with the children of said William Steinway by his second wife. The claim is made that the legal representatives of both William and George A. Steinway are necessary parties defendant by reason of their interest in the compensation of the decedents as trustees, and also in the trust fund created by paragraph “d” in the income thereof. Louise Deppermann, one of four beneficiaries under paragraph “a” of the will, is dead, and it is claimed that her legal representatives should be made parties by reason of their interest in that trust fund and in the income thereof. Louise Cassebeer and Charles Zeigler, two of four beneficiaries under paragraph “b” of the will, are dead, and it is claimed that their legal representatives should be made parties defendant for the same reason. As has been stated, so far as these parties left heirs or next of kin who could succeed to any interest under the will, they have been