SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-2969-98T2
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ESTATE OF DORIS SUMMERLYN,
DECEASED.
________________________________________
Submitted December 15, 1999 - Decided January
11, 2000
Before Judges Baime, Brochin and Eichen.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New
Jersey, Chancery Division, Essex County.
Nagel Rice & Dreifuss, attorneys for appellant
David Jameson (Lori I. Mayer, of counsel and
on the brief).
No other parties participated in this appeal.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
EICHEN, J.A.D.
This is an appeal from that part of an order entered in the
Chancery Division fixing the executor's commissions on corpus in
the administration of the estate of Doris Summerlyn, and a
subsequent order denying reconsideration. The executor contends
that the judge erred in requiring him to personally pay the fees of
the certified public accounting firm (CPA) and attorneys he
retained to assist him in preparing the account and various tax
returns for the estate, or suffer a reduction of the amount of his
corpus commissions by the amount of the fees.
The allowance of corpus commissions is a discretionary
determination which will not be disturbed unless there has been an
abuse of discretion. In re Estate of Moore,
50 N.J. 131, 149
(1967). If, however, in making the allowance the court did not
utilize "the proper legal approach," which requires giving "due
appreciation and consideration of all the legally significant
factors," then "it is not a question of abuse of discretion but
rather one of more fundamental error." Ibid.
We have carefully reviewed the record in this case and,
applying these principles, conclude that the judge utilized an
improper "legal approach" in approving corpus commissions.
These are the undisputed facts. The testator died July 5,
1997 leaving an estate valued at $477,875.40, which consisted
primarily of securities left to fourteen charitable organizations,
and personal property bequeathed to her niece. The will appointed
David Jameson, who was the testator's friend, as executor of the
estate. It expressly authorized him as executor to retain any
professionals he deemed necessary or helpful to assist him in
administering the estate, and directed that the expenses of
employing such professionals not "be deducted from any commissions
or other compensation payable to my fiduciary."
At the unopposed hearing on the executor's "Complaint for the
Settlement of Account,"See footnote 11 the executor sought allowance of $9,800 to
the CPA for preparing the account and the estate's federal and
state tax returns; $4,262 to counsel for the estate for preparing
the inheritance tax returns; an additional $500 as a counsel fee to
another attorney for certain undefined services rendered to the
estate; $19,725.64 corpus commissions; and $468.39 income
commissions.
The Chancery Division judge impliedly found that the
professional fees were not excessive and approved them, as well as
the full amount of commissions on corpus sought by the executor;
however, the judge ordered that the various professional fees
"shall be paid by the Executor personally or as a reduction of the
Executor's [corpus] commissions." In making this ruling, the judge
explained his reasons, in part, as follows:
[a] fiduciary [who] wants to get complete
corpus commissions, ... must be considered, at
least by this Court, as having the ability to
completely fulfill [his] fiduciary functions,
and amongst those functions would be the
preparation of [the] ... Tax Returns and
accountings, if necessary.
On appeal, the executor argues that the judge erred in failing
to follow the direction of the will that professional fees not be
deducted from the executor's commissions. He also argues that even
if there was no such testamentary direction, in view of his lack of
training and experience in such matters, he was entitled to retain
professionals to assist him in preparing the account and tax
returns without incurring personal responsibility for their fees.
He argues that a lay person is not expected to have the
professional skills needed to perform such services and, therefore,
the judge erred in ordering him to pay the fees personally or
suffer a reduction of his corpus commissions.
We agree that the will authorized the executor to retain
professionals to assist him in preparing the account and tax
returns in administering the estate, and that the expenses for such
services should be a charge against the estate and not a personal
charge. See, e.g., In re Risica's Estate,
179 N.J. Super. 452, 455
(App. Div. 1981). However, we disagree that the judge could not
reduce the amount of the executor's corpus commissions,
notwithstanding the provision in the will directing against such
reduction.
The amount of corpus commissions allowable to a fiduciary is
a matter controlled by statute, subject to the court's
discretionary review. Although a testator may direct that
commissions not be reduced by the amount of professional fees
sought in an account, that direction does not control the amount of
commissions ultimately allowed by the court.
N.J.S.A. 3B:18-14 provides the maximum percentages allowed as
corpus commissions as follows:
On the settlement of the account of one
fiduciary, 5" on all corpus received by the
fiduciary where corpus receipts do not exceed
$200,000.00, and where corpus receipts exceed
$200,000.00, 5" on the first $200,000.00, 3½" on the excess over $200,000.00 up to
$1,000,000.00, and 2" on the excess over
$1,000,000.00 or such other percentage as the
court may determine on the intermediate or
final settlement of the fiduciary's accounts,
according to actual services rendered.See footnote 22
N.J.S.A. 3B:18-1 states that "[a]llowance of commissions on
corpus in excess of $200,000.00 ... to fiduciaries ... shall be
made with reference to their actual pain, trouble and risk in
settling the estate, rather than in respect to the quantum of the
estate." See also In re Estate of Seabrook,
127 N.J. Super. 135,
140 (App. Div. 1974) (observing that "'actual pains, trouble, risk
and services rendered' is the principal factor by which the court
determines what portion of the statutory maximum rate should be
applied to the statutory base...." (paraphrasing the principle
established by the Supreme Court in Moore, supra, 50 N.J. at 145.
Hence, it is clear that N.J.S.A. 3B:18-14 sets forth the
maximum allowable percentages for calculating the base amount of
corpus commissions permitted a fiduciary, including an executor,
and N.J.S.A. 3B:18-1 establishes the factors to be considered by
the court in exercising its discretion as to the amount allowed for
corpus commissions.
Seabrook illustrates the "legal approach" to be followed by
the trial court in making such an allowance, and this court in
reviewing the trial court's determination. There, the trial court
reviewed the various services performed by the estate's executors
and concluded that their "pains, trouble and risk" were "average."
Following our review of the court's discretionary determination, we
affirmed the trial court's reduction of corpus commissions allowed
to the executors.
In this case, we are unable to make a similar review of the
executor's "pains, trouble, risk and services rendered" because a
complete factual record was not developed during the probate
proceedings concerning those services. The only thing we know
about the services rendered in this case relates to the work done
by the CPA and attorneys retained by the executor. We know nothing
of the executor's personal efforts in administering the estate.
Although the administration of this estate on its face may not
appear complicated, speculation is not an appropriate legal
approach for reaching a conclusion about its potential
difficulties. Hence, we cannot simply conclude that the reduction
of the commission by the amount of the professional fees was an
appropriate exercise of discretion by the Chancery Division judge.
The judge should have reviewed the executor's affidavit of
services,See footnote 33 and arrived at his conclusions based on the affidavit.
The judge did not indicate that he followed this procedure, nor did
he make any findings in respect of the executor's "pains, troubles,
risk and services rendered," except to note what the executor had
not done in administering the estate. As a result, we are unable
to perform our appellate function and are constrained to remand the
matter so that the judge can perform the required analysis.
In sum, in allowing corpus commissions to an executor, the
trial court must apply the "legal approach" dictated by N.J.S.A.
3B:18-1 giving "due appreciation and consideration," Moore, supra,
50 N.J. at 149, to "the pains, trouble, risk, and actual services
rendered" by the executor. Seabrook, supra, 127 N.J. Super. at
140. This is so even if the "parties in interest do not object or
even consent to the amount requested by the fiduciary." Moore,
supra, 50 N.J. at 149. The trial court may not simply deduct the
cost of professional services performed by others and allow the
balance as a corpus commission, as occurred in this case.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with
this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Footnote: 1 1 None of beneficiaries filed any exceptions to the account. The Attorney General also did not object. Footnote: 2 2 The executor utilized these percentages and sought commissions in the maximum statutory amount of $19,725.64, computed as follows: 5" of $200,000, or $10,000 and 3-1/2" of $277,875.40, or $9,725.64, for a total of $19,725.64. Footnote: 3 3 Rule 4:88-1 required the executor to "file an affidavit stating in detail the nature of the services rendered in administering the estate and specifying the amount of commissions requested." We assume the executor filed such an affidavit although one is not included in this record.