Burt v. . Burt

41 N.Y. 46, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 225
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 41 N.Y. 46 (Burt v. . Burt) 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
Burt v. . Burt, 41 N.Y. 46, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 225 (N.Y. 1869).

Opinion

Woodruff, J.

This action and the proofs taken therein, show that an unhappy controversy exists between two brothers, made joint executors of the will of their deceased father. At the same time, the matters of com *48 plaint seem to me quite too trivial to warrant any appeal to a court of equity. So far as appears, both are men of good character, of competent business capacity, and of ample responsibility, to answer for their due administration of the estate committed to them, and both received from the testator that mark of high confidence evidenced by the trust reposed in them by the will; a confidence that a court of equity will not override, by withdrawing the powers thus conferred, except upon clear grounds of danger to the interests of those affected by the administration, of which danger the proofs in this case do not show a shadow of pretense.

The personal estate of the testator amounts to about $10,000; and this in part consisted of a bond and mortgage for about $2,700 made by the defendant, and of a balance of account against the plaintiff of upwards of $2,000.

The testator devised certain real estate to a third son; bequeathed his household furniture to his granddaughters; gave to the plaintiff and defendant each $1,000; to each of his ten grandchildren $200, to be paid as they respectively arrive at the age of twenty-one years; and, after some other gifts, devises and bequeaths all the rest, residue and remainder of his estate to his executors, “ upon trust for the use and benefit of” the plaintiff and defendant equally.

Shortly after the death of the testator, the tin trunk in which he kept his securities, vouchers and papers, was received and examined by the plaintiff and defendant, including the memorandum or statement of account which appears to be the voucher for the indebtedness of the plaintiff to the deceased; after which the defendant, with the knowledge of the plaintiff, and without objection from him, took the trunk to his store and placed it in a safe, which the referee finds was sufficiently secure for their safe keeping.

After probate of the will, the plaintiff demanded the possession of these securities aud papers. The defendant refused to permit them to be taken out of his possession.

Whatever debts have appeared, the defendant has -paid; *49 whatever legacies have become payable, he has paid. He has collected some money.

¡Neither plaintiff nor defendant appear to have taken any steps toward filing an inventory.

By the terms of an ante-nuptial settlement, an annuity, of $135 a year is payable to the widow of the testator, during her natural life.

The plaintiff appears to have insisted that, as he and the defendant were residuary legatees, the property not otherwise specifically bequeathed, should be equally divided and delivered to each, and that each should agree to furnish and pay one-half of the annuity, as from time to time it became due.; and that each should, in like manner, pay one-half of the legacies to the grandchildren when they became payable; or, at least, that so much of the estate as was to come to him and his children, should at once be paid over or delivered to him, without waiting for the possible presentation of claims against the estate, or other special provision for the annuity or the legacies to grandchildren. This the defendant declined. And being advised by counsel that the executors were each alike entitled to the possession of the securities and papers belonging to the estate, and that it was peculiarly proper that he should retain the vouchers for the indebtedness of the plaintiff, he refused the plaintiff’s repeated demands for the possession of the papers in the tin box, consenting that he might see and examine them, but should not take them away from the defendant’s possession.

That in this intercourse, between the two brothers, there has been some lack of courtesy and at times some exhibition of temper, the case pretty clearly indicates.

The plaintiff had undoubtedly, on general principles, an equal right with the defendant to the manual custody of the securities, and it is obvious that the defendant, in the assertion of his own equal right, has not manifested a becoming spirit. But the dispute, as to which should have that manual •custody, seems to me quite unimportant.

So long as they were in a safe deposit, in the. hands of a *50 responsible executor, with his consent to their inspection by the other, when any exigency or any convenience to the estate required it, there was no ground for application to any court; certainly not because the one brother did not treat the other with due and fraternal regard, and yield to his wishes.

Without taking any steps for the appointment of appraisers and the making of an inventory, within less than eight months after the probate of the will, without any proof that the defendant had misapplied any funds, or endangered the estate in any manner, and before there was any occasion to call for any account of his administration, the plaintiff filed the present complaint for the appointment of a receiver of the assets, securities, papers and personal property of the deceased; and that the plaintiff and defendant respectively account for then-receipts and payments, and pay over to him the residue, and that such receiver proceed to administer the estate.

I think this was properly characterized below as “ an original and bold experiment, an undertaking to supersede and displace a trustee and executor created by will upon grounds sanctioned by no precedent, and sustained by no authority.”

The judgment appealed from does not attempt to remove the defendant from his office, but it requires him to place the securities and papers in the custody of the president of the City Bank, in the city of Oswego, and to deposit all moneys in his hands or control in that bank ; and that both plaintiff and defendant deposit all moneys thereafter collected therein, tobe drawn out only on their joint check.

TTow assuming, what I presume is in nowise doubted, that this is a safe arrangement as to all parties interested in the estate, it is certainly not an unreasonable one; and if the parties had full confidence in the bank and in its president, it would have been altogether wise and suitable, if the parties, when their relations became such that they could not amicably conduct the administration without some such intermediary, had agreed to it of their own accord.

But the question here is, was there any sufficient ground *51 for decreeing such a special receivership and making it compulsory 1 I think not.

Both of the executors could not have the actual manual keeping of this hox of securities each in his own possession.

The defendant had the actual possession in the first instance without objection. He had as much right to retain that possession as the plaintiff had to demand it.

The claim that the plaintiff was entitled to take the possession because he was co-executor ex vi termini admits that the defendant would have been immediately entitled to take it again.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Miller v. Van Schaick
6 F. Supp. 633 (S.D. New York, 1934)
Smith v. Heyward
104 S.E. 473 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1920)
Coyle v. McCoy
6 Teiss. 84 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1908)
Kerrigan v. Backus
74 N.Y.S. 906 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1902)
Mannhardt v. Illinois Staats Zeitung Co.
90 Ill. App. 315 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1900)
People v. Kellogg
22 N.Y.S. 490 (New York Supreme Court, 1893)
Burrows v. Webster
21 N.Y.S. 828 (New York Supreme Court, 1893)
In re Adler's Estate
15 N.Y.S. 227 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)
Schwab v. Adler
67 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 481 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)
Matthews v. Hoagland
48 N.J. Eq. 455 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1891)
In re Delaplaine
19 Abb. N. Cas. 413 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1887)
Chambers v. Cruikshank
5 Dem. Sur. 414 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1887)
Bolman v. Overall
80 Ala. 451 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1886)
Brennan v. Lane
4 Dem. Sur. 322 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1886)
Thompson v. Mott
1 Dem. Sur. 32 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1882)
Sherman v. . Page
85 N.Y. 123 (New York Court of Appeals, 1881)
Price v. Brown
60 How. Pr. 511 (New York Supreme Court, 1881)
Haines v. Carpenter
11 F. Cas. 168 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Louisiana, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 N.Y. 46, 1869 N.Y. LEXIS 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burt-v-burt-ny-1869.