Judges: Ingalls
Filed Date: 7/6/1889
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
We have given to this case careful consideration, and have reached the conclusion that considering all the facts and circumstances involved, that the decree of the surrogate is just and defensible. The executors, from the commencement of their administration of the estate, under the will of Lydia Casey, deceased, seem to have disregarded the duties which the law imposed upon them as such executors, in the proper and orderly management of the estate, and in the distribution of the fund. In some instances legacies which were mere bounties have been paid in full, in preference to debts against the estate. In other instances liabilities have been created by the executors for professional services, and otherwise, and which they sought to be allowed to them in their account against the estate by the surrogate, without proof, either that they were reasonable in amount, or necessary for the protection of the estate. The surrogate was called upon to allow such items, in the face of the fact that the executors had not even paid such claims. It appears that after rejecting the claim of John O. Becker against the estate, that the executors instituted an action against him, and prosecuted the same to a result which was adverse to the estate, and a judgment for costs was entered up in his favor for $264.34, October 25th, 1887.
By their own showing, the executors, with a full knowledge of the nature of the action against Mr. Becker, and in which they assumed the risk of a judgment against the estate for costs, proceeded to disburse the funds of the estate by satisfying in full legacies created by the will of Lydia Casey, to the prejudice of claimants who had debts against such estate.
It is a well recognized principle of law that debts and the proper expense of administration are to be first paid, and in that particular they take precedence of legacies, and an executor who reverses the order of payment, does so at his risk. Nagle v. McGinnis, 49 How. P. Rep., 193. Matter of Dorr, 22 N. Y. State Rep., 124. The decree of the surrogate shows that he carefully examined the accounts of the executors, and has adjusted them in accordance with
Learned, P."J., and Landon, J., concur.