Ackerman v. Bethune

3 Misc. 126, 23 N.Y.S. 805
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 3 Misc. 126 (Ackerman v. Bethune) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ackerman v. Bethune, 3 Misc. 126, 23 N.Y.S. 805 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

Pattebson, J.

I have gone over the pleadings and proofs in this case several times, and am not able to see why this action was instituted, or how the relief demanded can be granted.

The material allegations of the complaint are: That one Daniel P. Holland died in ¡November, 1889, leaving a last will and testament, by which he appointed this plaintiff his executrix, and the will was proven and letters were granted her; that in November, 1886, proceedings were instituted in the Supreme Court and an inquisition was ordered, and it was determined that one Thomas Wiggins was an idiot, and there[127]*127after the defendant, Elise Bethnne, was appointed a committee of the person and property of the idiot, upon executing a bond in the sum of $25,000, which bond was given, and she entered upon the discharge of her duties; that in February, 1888, a proceeding was instituted in this court by Daniel P. Holland to compel the payment to him of a certain amount which was claimed to be due him for legal services rendered by him to the idiot and his estate, and that the defendant, the present committee, was the respondent in that proceeding; that Holland died during the pendency of the proceeding, and that subsequently this plaintiff was substituted as petitioner in the place of Holland; that the proceedings were continued, and it was directed and adjudged by an order made at the Special Term of this court on January 9, 1891, that the defendant, as committee, pay to the plaintiff as executrix, etc., or to her attorney, out of the estate of the idiot, the sum of $3,304.75; that on January 9, 1891, by the direction of the court, judgment was entered and docketed in the office of the clerk of the county of Hew York in favor of the plaintiff, as executrix, against the estate of the idiot in the hands of the defendant, for $3,304.75, and that the 'defendant has not paid the amount so ordered to be paid, nor any part thereof; that execution was duly, issued on the judgment to the sheriff of the city and county of Hew York and returned unsatisfied; that property of the idiot in value to a large amount exists, which the defendant retains and withholds, or with which she is chargeable, and the manner in which she is supposed to be chargeable is set out by saying that the idiot is a person possessed of wonderful musical talent and ability to earn money as a musician, and that his services in giving musical exhibitions are of great value, and have commanded large sums of money, and that at the time the defendant entered upon her duties as a committee she took personal control of the idiot and commenced to use him in giving public musical concerts in different places throughout the country, and that she has since uninterruptedly continued to so use and apply his abilities to such uses by her, traveling [128]*128from place to place, retaining the possession of said idiot and deriving large sums of money as the proceeds and profits of his said abilities and services; that after such use of said idiot for some months, and in May, 1888 (which was before the beginning of this suit), she filed an account in which she said that she had net proceeds of concerts in her hands amounting to $1,076.69; that the use of the abilities and services of the idiot in giving musical concerts was reasonably worth the value of $10,000 a year as a net sum, and that the defendant, by reason of the use by her of the abilities of the idiot, is chargeable in such an amount for the time of said use; and the claim is made in this action that there should be an accounting of the committee with the plaintiff as to the value of the services of the idiot while he was so employed, and that the value of those services should be ascertained, charged against the committee, and then be made available to the plaintiff as an amount to which recourse might be had for the realization of the judgment which the decedent Holland had against the idiot, and the prayer of the complaint is that the defendant state and render an account of her proceedings as committee, setting forth the particulars as to her use of the idiot in giving musical exhibitions, and the times and places as to each such exhibition 'by her, with the sums received and paid out on account of each such exhibition; that she be chargeable with the sums which are the reasonable value of the services and abilities of said idiot in giving musical exhibitions during the time she has used his said abilities as aforesaid; that she be held accountable and chargeable with the amount of the judgment demanded in favor of the idiot’s estate; and that it be determined whether she had faithfully discharged her duties as committee by the use by her of the abilities and services of said idiot as aforesaid, and that she be directed to pay to plaintiff from the property of the idiot’s estate in her hands the amount of the judgment in favor of the plaintiff, as aforesaid ; and that on her failure or neglect to personally attend in this action, it be then found or determined why such an. accounting cannot be had.

[129]*129There is nothing in the proofs to justify the maintenance of this action. Although it seems to have been brought by permission of the court, it is so well established as not to require the citation of authorities, that the committee of an incompetent person is merely the agent of the court; and, while under some circumstances the rights of creditors would be fully protected, there is nothing in this case whatever, disclosed in the proofs, that would justify a decree in favor of the plaintiff. By the exhibits which have been put in evidence by the plaintiff, it appears that there were two orders made; one of which distinctly directs the committee to pay out of the lunatic’s estate, the amount of the judgment recovered in favor of the plaintiff’s testator. That order is one enforceable under the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, and by it everything which is involved in this action was virtually disposed of. The committee was directed to pay a certain sum of money, and the order operates as distinctively and clearly as an adjudication to compel the payment of the money as anything that might be decreed on a determination of this action. It is plainly stated that the committee must pay a certain sum out of the estate of the idiot, and all that is required or could be required to make that order effectual would be process issued on it; and if an accounting were necessary, it could be had in that proceeding. There cannot, it seems to me, be any basis for an accounting here. There is an outstanding order of the court requiring a certain thing to be done. On an application to enforce the order, the only matter open for consideration would be whether or not the committee had funds sufficient to pay, in accordance with that order, the amount directed to be paid thereby. Under such circumstances a suit for an accounting cannot be of any utility. The order directs the payment of a specific sum, and the committee could discharge herself from the payment of the sum only by showing that there was nothing in her hands applicable to the payment of the amount so directed to be paid by the court. Hence, a suit for an accounting is not only unnecessary, but everything that the plaintiff could require [130]*130has been determined already by the court, except the mere ascertainment of what could be or should be applicable by the committee to the payment of the amount directed to be- paid by that order.

If the case were presented as an original one, without reference to any prior proceedings, I should not be inclined to order the plaintiff to account.

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Related

In re the Estate of Horton
18 Misc. 406 (New York Supreme Court, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Misc. 126, 23 N.Y.S. 805, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ackerman-v-bethune-nysupct-1893.