In re the Accounting of Chemical Corn Exchange Bank
In re the Accounting of Chemical Corn Exchange Bank
Opinion of the Court
Margaret Daly died in 1952. She left a will in which she named four executors, one of whom is respondent Janet M. Mackey, an old friend, to whom she bequeathed the sum of $15,000 and some household furnishings. Following the clause designating the executors, the testatrix stated, ‘1 In the event Janet M. Mackey shall serve as Executrix hereunder, I request that.she act without compensation.”
All four of the executors qualified. Despondent advised the other three that she was going to claim commissions. That provoked the present controversy which, it should be noted, neither affects any beneficiary nor the size of the legacies provided by the will. The three appellants contend that the sentence in question is a “ direction ” against respondent’s receiving commissions. Since the gross estate is over $100,000, three full commissions are allowable by law, and they will be
The issue was presented on the accounting proceeding brought by the executors, and the surrogate, ruling against Miss Mackey, found that testatrix intended that she should not receive commissions; accordingly, a commission was awarded to each of the other three. The Appellate Division, however, reversed, unanimously holding that the “ I request ” provision merely denoted the expression of a wish or desire and that the will, read in its entirety, indicated no contrary design. The consequence of the decision was to effect a four-way division of the three full commissions allowed by statute.
We start with the proposition that an executor is entitled to commissions for services rendered (Surrogate’s Ct. Act, § 285), a fact quite obviously known to the testatrix of the will before us. She, as well as any other testator, could, of course, have provided otherwise. She could have specifically directed that, if her nominee serve as executrix, she do so without compensation; but an intention to alter the law’s ordinary operation or change the meaning usually accorded a precatory word will not be inferred ‘ ‘ ‘ unless the context clearly indicates the contrary. ’ ” (Matter of Krooss, 302 N. Y. 424, 428-429.) The language here employed is not clear enough to compel a conclusion different from that reached by the Appellate Division.
In short, as that court held, the will not only fails to disclose a design on the part of testatrix to deny commissions to respondent, but, considered in its entirety, indicates that testatrix’ “ I request ” Avas meant to be precatory, expressive of a wish rather than a command. The will was drafted with care and precision and the probability is that, had a direction or a proviso been intended, language less dubious and ambiguous would have been used. The thought would, more than likely, have been expressed in terms not of request but of command — she ‘ ‘ shall ’ ’ act without compensation — or of proviso — “ provided ” she so act.
The several cases relied upon by appellants, depending as they do upon variant testamentary language and different facts, are plainly distinguishable. Only one merits discussion. In Matter of Kernochan (104 N. Y. 618) the testator, after nominating several executors, requested that “ each executor and
The order should be affirmed, with costs to all parties appearing separately and filing separate briefs payable out of the estate.
Conway, Ch. J., Desmond, Dye, Froessel, Van Voobhis and Burke, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of the Accounting of Chemical Corn Exchange Bank, as Executors of Margaret B. Daly, Janet M. Mackey
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published