Dann v. Runyon
Before: Harrison
Synopsis
Estates oe Deceased Persons—Compensation oe Executor Fixed by Will—Extea Services—Renunciation oe Will.—A will fixing the compensation of an executor in an amount in excess of Ms legal fees must be deemed to fix the measure of Ms compensation for all services of every kind to be rendered by Mm; and no claim for extra services, however beneficial to the estate, can be allowed to the executor, unless he has, by a written instrument, filed in court, renounced the provision of the will for compensation, as provided in section 1616 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
HARRISON, J. Appeal from an order settling the annual account of the executors, and striking therefrom an item of $1,226.86 for extraordinary services claimed to have been rendered by one of the executors.
The appellants are the executors of the last will and testament of the deceased, and in his will appointing them he made the following provision in reference to their compensation: “In lieu of the commissions allowed by law for executors, which I deem insufficient, I do hereby provide that my said executors shall be entitled to receive the sum of five thousand ($5,000) dollars each as and for full compensation for their services respectively as such executors, in addition to their actual expenses.” Neither of the executors filed a renunciation of his claim for compensation provided by the will.
The personal estate of the testator was valued in the inventory returned by them at the sum of $245,405, and the real estate at $99,500; and in the account presented by them for settlement it appears that the estate of the decedent accounted [196]for by them amounts to $422,244. The real estate consisted of four farms, not adjoining each other, and aggregating about 1,650 acres, the most distant being about eighteen miles apart. A portion of this land was planted to fruit trees and devoted-to the culture and production of fruit, and a portion was rented to tenants. One of the executors — Dann — had been in the service of the testator for upward of ten years prior to his death, at a salary of $100 per month, as the active manager of all his. farming operations, both in the culture of fruit and other produce, and upon the death of the testator the executors deemed, it for the advantage of the estate that he should continue in this management; and he thereupon continued to manage the farms and business connected therewith. It is for this management that his claim for extraordinary services was made, computed at the rate of $100 per month. The court finds that Mr. Dann was well qualified to perform these services, and that they were beneficial to the estate, and that the income of the estate, was increased thereby, and also that the services were not such as were incumbent upon him in the common course of his duties as executor.
Section 1616 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the executor “shall be allowed .... for his services such fees as are provided in this chapter; but when -the decedent by his will malees other provision for the compensation of his executor, that shall be a full compensation for his services, unless by a written instrument filed in the court he renounces all claim for compensation provided by the will.” As no renunciation of the claim for the compensation provided by the will was filed by either of the executors, the court was required, under this section, to hold that the provision thus made was a “full compensation for his services,” and to deny his claim for any further allowance for extraordinary services. It will be observed that the amount of compensation provided in the will is largely in excess of the commissions to which the executors would have been entitled if no provision had been so made, and it is reasonable to suppose that when the testator appointed the manager of his farms to be one of his executors he had this fact in mind, and made the appointment in order that after his death his estate might continue to receive the benefit of his services and
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