Ohio R. Superi. Ct. 72

As amended through October 29, 2024
Rule 72 - Executors and Administrators Commissions
(A) Additional compensation for extraordinary services may be allowed upon an application setting forth an itemized statement of the services rendered and the amount of compensation requested. The court may require the application to be set for hearing with notice given to interested persons in accordance with Civil Rule 73(E).
(B) The court may deny or reduce commissions if there is a delinquency in the filing of an inventory or an account, or if, after hearing, the court finds that the executor or administrator has not faithfully discharged the duties of the office.
(C) The commissions of co-executors or co-administrators in the aggregate shall not exceed the commissions that would have been allowed to one executor or administrator acting alone, except where the instrument under which the co-executors serve provides otherwise.
(D) Where counsel fees have been awarded for services to the estate that normally would have been performed by the executor or administrator, the executor or administrator commission, except for good cause shown, shall be reduced by the amount awarded to counsel for those services.

Ohio. R. Superi. Ct. 72

Commentary (October 1, 1997)

This rule is analogous to former C.P. Sup. R. 41. Division (A) has primarily been amended for grammatical purposes. The term "parties" has been replaced with the more descriptive term "interested person". The manner of service pursuant to Civil Rule 4.1 has been replaced with the more appropriate reference to Civil Rule 73(E), which incorporates by reference Civil Rule 4.1.

Division (B) has been amended to parallel R.C. 2113.35. The rule defines the delinquent filing of inventories and accounts as acts that are included within the phrase "not faithfully discharged the duties of the office".

Division (D) has been amended to be more inclusive and to apply to all counsel fees and not only extraordinary fees. The rule continues to allow the probate court discretion to reduce fiduciary fees by the amount of attorney fees charged in performing fiduciary services. The remaining language changes in the division are grammatical and not substantive.