Pomeroy v. Mills
Pomeroy v. Mills
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from the decree of the orphans court of Morris county apportioning between the appellant and respondent their commissions as executors of the will of George Pomeroy, deceased. The amount of the commissions is $9,684.66, or two per cent, upon $484,233.01, and it was by the decree under review divided between the two executors as follows: $3,873.87
In his letter of April 1st, 1881, the appellant announced to-the respondent that he had paid out the money. In a reply sent to him the next day, the respondent protested against the payment, because the executors were required under the will to make provision (which they had not yet done) for a fund to raise $1,000 ■ a year for the testator’s widow, and for the expenses of settling the estate, including the commissions. By his letter of the 25th of the same month to the respondent, the appellant stated that there were only $441.90 left in the hands of the executors, a sum insufficient, as he said, to pay the expenses and commissions, and requested the respondent to name a sum sufficient for that purpose, and promised that he and his two sisters would refund it to the estate. Under the circumstances,, it was just to require him.
The appellant insists that the apportionment of the commissions was unjust. In Pomeroy v. Mills, 10 Stew. Eq. 578, the court of errors and appeals said, in reference to the allowance to be made to the executors for their services in settling this estate, that the estate was almost entirely made up of securities readily salable in the New York market, which were either sold there by a firm of brokers, of which the appellant was a member, at the usual commissions, or transferred by the executors to the legatees in specie; that the indebtedness of the testator was very slight; that no litigation attended the administration, and that the executors were prepared to settle their accounts in about a year after the probate of the will, and that while it was true that seldom could an estate of such magnitude be administered with so little pains, trouble and risk, it was, on the other hand, to be remembered that the provisions of the will had been executed thus far with discretion, fidelity and promptitude, and that those qualities formed a highly valuable element in the services rendered; that one of the executors (the respondent) was a counselor of this state, and, while he could not be allowed counsel fees aside from commissions, the fact that his professional skill had made it unnecessary to invoke other legal assistance might justly be regarded. Taking all things into consideration, the court adjudged that two per centum on the aggregate of $484,233.01 would be a reasonable compensation to the executors.
"When it is considered that almost, if not quite, all the active business of the settlement which was not done by agents, was done by the appellant, and that the respondent’s participation in the settlement was almost entirely supervisory and advisory, and that each executor appears to have discharged his duty towards the estate with discretion and fidelity, and that each in his sphere brought to the business valuable qualifications, there is no ground for any discrimination in the apportionment of the compensation, and I am, therefore, of opinion that there ought to be none, but that the commissions should be equally divided. Squier v. Squier, 3 Stew. Eq. 627. It will not be amiss to add
The decree should be reversed, but without costs. The commissions should 'be divided equally between the executors, and the appellant should be required to pay the respondent his share of them, with interest thereon from the 5th of September, 1881.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.