Bostwick v. . Atkins

3 N.Y. 53
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 53 (Bostwick v. . Atkins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bostwick v. . Atkins, 3 N.Y. 53 (N.Y. 1849).

Opinion

Strong, J.

The defendants, John L. Tunison and Jane, the wife of James Atkins, are the devisees and sole heirs at law of James Tunison, who died in the state of New-Jersey in March, 1807, seized at the time of a lot of land in the town of Ovid, in the county of Seneca, in this state, which is the subject of the controversy in' this case. The original plaintiffs, David Kinnan and Andrew Bostwick, both of whom are now dead, and whose representatives are the present plaintiffs, claimed to hold the land mediately under a conveyance made to Philip Tunison by the executor of the will of James Tunison, pursuant to an order for the sale of such land for the payment of his debts made by the surrogate of the county of Seneca. Atkins and his wife and John L. Tunison instituted actions of ejectment for the land in controversy against Kinnan and Bostwick, alledging that the conveyance from the executor was insufficient to pass the title, inasmuch as it did not set forth at large the order of the surrogate directing the sale. Those cases came before the supreme court, (20 Wend. 241,) when it was decided that the conveyance was inoperative by reason of the omission. Kinnan and Bostwick then commenced this suit in the late court of chancery, asking for injunctions against the further prosecution of the actions of ejectment, and that the irregularity in the executor’s conveyance might be- rectified, and the sale under the surrogate’s order confirmed, pursuant to the statute. (2 R. S. 111, § 61.) The vice chancellor of the sixth circuit, before whom the suit .in chancery was instituted, made an order referring it to a master to make the examination and report required by *55 the statute; and on the reception and consideration of the report decreed perpetual injunctions against the further prosecution of the suits at law, and ordered that the sale and conveyance under the surrogate’s order should be confirmed. The defendants in this suit appealed to the supreme court, where the vice chancellor’s decree was reversed, and the matter now comes before us on an appeal from the judgment of the supreme court.'

The statute directs that if upon the hearing, if the application to rectify the irregularity and confirm the sale under such circumstances, it shall satisfactorily appear that the sale was made fairly and in good faith, an order shall be made confirming the sale and conveyance. (§ 65.) The defendants resist the application for a confirmation of the sale not only on the ground that it was made unfairly and in bad faith, but on the additional allegation that the surrogate who directed it had no jurisdiction in the matter. Although the statute makes no mention of the latter objection, yet it is competent for the defendants to raise it, and to avail themselves of it if well founded, as the want of jurisdiction would render the whole proceeding, sale as well as conveyance, void, and it is impossible to confirm a nullity.

The objection to the jurisdiction of the surrogate of Seneca county is based on the grounds, first, that James Tunison was an inhabitant of New-Jersey and not of this state at the time of his death; and second, that the executor had not made and. filed the inventory of the personal estate of the deceased required by the statute, when the application for the sale was made.

The statute under which the surrogate proceeded (1 R. L. of 1801, p. 319, § 3) authorizes the surrogate to take the proof of the last wills and testaments of all persons who may have been inhabitants of the same county at the time of their decease, and expressly excepts persons who may not at the time of their deaths have been inhabitants of this state, and directs (§ 20) that the application to sell the real estate of the deceased for the payment of his debts shall be made to the surrogate of the county *56 in which probate of the will was had. In this case the will was proved before the surrogate of Seneca county, and application for a sale of the testator’s real estate was made to the same officer. If the deceased was, at the time of his death, an inhabitant of this state, he was clearly an inhabitant of Seneca county, as that was his only place of residence while in this state. [The learned judge here discussed the question of residence upon the testimony,- and stated his conclusion to be that the decedent, at the time of his death, was an inhabitant of Seneca county, in this state, and consequently, that the surrogate, so far as related to that point, had the requisite jurisdiction. He then proceeded.]

- There is no evidence in this case to prove that the usual inventory had or had not been filed, previous to the application for a sale. It does not appear that the filing of such inventory was necessaty to confer jurisdiction upon the surrogate. All that the statute requires in the first instance is that when the executor shall 'discover or suspect that the personal estate of the testator is insufficient to pay his debts, that he shall thereupon make a just and true account of such personal estate and debts, and deliver it to the surrogate and request his aid in the premises. All these prerequisites existed in this case. The restriction by reason of the omission to file an inventory, applies only to the order for a sale, not to the acquisition of jurisdiction over the application. That is acquired upon the completion of the preliminaries prescribed by the statute. When the inferior officer has thus obtained jurisdiction of the case, and that appears upon his record, the presumption is in favor of the regularity and validity of his subsequent proceedings, and it is not necessary to state in his record that he has done every thing, or had all the evidence, which might have been essential to render his determination proper. If he has violated any provisions of the statute, or any rule of common law, which if shown would render his acts invalid, that should have been corrected on a direct appeal; or, if available on a collateral proceeding, should have been averred in the pleadings, and proved. In this case t) e objection is nowhere alluded to in the answer. Nor, if it *57 had been, is it supported by proof. I am satisfied it cannot prevail.

The chancellor was required by the statute to make such order for confirming the sale and conveyance as he should deem equitable, if it should appear to his satisfaction that the sale was made fairly and in good faith. (§ 65.) The learned judge who gave the opinion of the supreme court seems to suppose that on the investigation it is competent and proper to go into the inquiry as to the propriety of the surrogate’s order for a sale, and whether that was warranted by the facts of the case. And he is supported by what was said by the late chancellor in the case of Hemiup, (3 Paige, 305.) But with great deference, I do not so understand the statute. That says nothing about the proceedings before the surrogate anterior to the sale, and it can scarcely be presumed that the legislature intended to overrule in these cases the principle that where an inferior judicial officer has jurisdiction over the subject matter all shall be considered as rightly done, except on a direct appeal from his decision to a tribunal which has the power to review and correct it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bostwick-v-atkins-ny-1849.