Court Opinion

ID: 7337165
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-25 23:15:36.23588+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:13.531224
License: Public Domain

PER CURIAM.
The contestants were successful before the surrogate in obtaining a construction -of the will favorable to their *672interests, and therefore the prohibition in section 2558 of the Code of Civil Procedure against awarding costs to the unsuccessful contestant of a will did not apply to them. At the time when the proceeding was submitted to the surrogate for decision, however, the contest as to the factum of the will had practically been withdrawn, and the contestants offered no testimony on that subject. The controversy really turned upon the correct construction of the will, and, in this view, the surrogate was authorized to allow costs, under section 2561 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
It is argued, however, that the award of costs, even if proper when made, should now be stricken from the decree, inasmuch as the contestants have failed upon their appeal to this court, and, furthermore, that in any event the amount awarded is in excess of that pre- • scribed by section 2561 of the Code. It appears, however, that this allowance to the contestants was really not opposed in the surrogate’s court by the counsel for the present moving party, school district No. 4 in the town of Hempstead. Indeed, that litigant procured the decree to be amended so as to obtain an award of costs which had not been allowed it in the original decree, without signifying any objection to the allowance to the contestants, either in respect to the power of the surrogate to make it, the propriety of making it, or the amount thereof. In view of all the circumstances in this proceeding, we are satisfied that the school district must be deemed to have been virtually a consenting party to that portion of the decree which awarded costs to the contestants, and for this reason the award made by the surrogate should remain undisturbed.
Motion for resettlement denied.