Davis v. . Crandall

4 N.E. 721, 101 N.Y. 311, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 64, 56 Sickels 311, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 633
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 19, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 4 N.E. 721 (Davis v. . Crandall) 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
Davis v. . Crandall, 4 N.E. 721, 101 N.Y. 311, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 64, 56 Sickels 311, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 633 (N.Y. 1886).

Opinion

Earl, J.

In October, 1861, Elbertia Yan Allen made her will in which she gave to Christina Amelia Davis a certain bond and mortgage made and executed by her husband, James Davis; to Helen Stephenson, a certain bond and mortgage executed by John Stephenson; to J. Elbert Davis “the sum of $243.92, a portion of the debt due me from the said J ames Davis secured by his notes ;” to. James Yan Allen Davis “ the sum of $243.92, another portion of the debt due me from the said James Davis and secured by his notes.” At the time of making the will the testatrix held a single note against James Davis for the amount of the two sums thus bequeathed. Thereafter, in 1863, she died, leaving the note among her assets unpaid. The defendant was named executor in her will and took upon him *318 self the execution thereof. James Yan Allen Davis, the plaintiff, and J. Elbert Davis were minor sons of the maker of the note, and at the time of the death of the testatrix the plaintiff was about five years old. About four years after her death, the defendant surrendered to J ames Davis the note left by her, and took in lieu thereof, from him, a note for one-half the amount thereof, payable to the plaintiff or bearer on demand, with interest, and for the other half thereof, a note payable to J. Elbert Davis on demand with interest. A few days after taking these notes, he applied to the surrogate of Wayne county for a settlement of his accounts, and in his petition, among other things, stated that the plaintiff, one of the legatees named in the will, was an infant under the age of twenty-one years, having no guardian. Mo citation for the accounting was served upon the plaintiff who was then about nine years old, but it was served upon his mother who, as a legatee, was also interested in the accounting. Upon the return day of the citation, an attorney was appointed his special guardian for the accounting, and the defendant presented his account to the surrogate, in which he charged himself with having received May 5, 1865, upon the note of James Davis, two items of $203.87 each, and under the same date he credited himself with having paid to J. Elbert Davis and to the plaintiff each the sum of $203.87. Mo mention was made in the account of the surrender of the note of James Davis left by the testatrix, or of the taking of the two notes in the place of it; nor was any mention made in the-account, or in the decree of the surrogate thereon, of the two notes, and there was no adjudication in reference to such notes. Upon the accounting, no action whatever was had in reference to the note which had been taken for the plaintiff. Thereafter the defendant tendered the note to the plaintiff’s mother, but she ref used to receive it, and requested him to keep it until the plaintiff shouldbome of age, and the defendant thereafter retained the note in his possession until after the plaintiff became of age and commenced this action. During many years after the defendant took the note from Davis, he was perfectly responsible and the note could have been collected. But two or three years before the plaintiff arrived at his majority, Davis became wholly *319 irresponsible and insolvent and unable to pay the note. The plaintiff, having become of age, brought this action against the defendant to recover of him the amount of the note with interest thereon.

At the Special Term it was held that the decree of the surrogate was final and conclusive against the plaintiff and protected the defendant against any claim in this action. Upon appeal by the plaintiff to the General Term, the judgment of the Special Term was reversed, and then the defendant appealed to this court.

We are of opinion that the legacy of the plaintiff was a specific legacy of one-half of the note which the testatrix held against his father. Whether a legacy shall be considered specific depends upon the intention of the testator or testatrix, to be derived from the language used in the bequest, construed in the light thrown upon it by all the other provisions of the will. Here there were specific bequests of the two bonds and mortgages to Mrs. Davis and to Mrs. Stephenson, and it is entirely clear that the precise bonds and mortgages named were to go to the legatees. So in the bequests immediately following to the plaintiff and to J. Elbert Davis, it was clearly the intention that the one-half of the note held by the testatrix should go to each of the legatees named. If that note had been paid during the life-time of the testatrix or otherwise canceled or destroyed, so that no obligation at her death rested upon James Davis to pay it, the two legatees would have taken nothing.

As this was a specificlegacy and not needed for the payment of debts or any other purpose of administration, it was the duty of the defendant, after the expiration of one year from the granting of letters testamentary, to discharge it by delivery to the legatee. If the two legatees of this note had been adults, the executor would have discharged his duty by delivering it to them jointly, if they were willing to take it in that way. If they had refused to take it, or for any reason could not take it in that way, it would undoubtedly have been proper for him to do as he did — divide the note by taking two notes each for one-half — payable to each of the legatees upon demand, with *320 interest. In this case the defendant so far discharged his duty by taking the two notes, and that act imposed no new or additional obligation upon him.

As the plaintiff was a minor, the defendant could not discharge himself by delivering the note to him, nor by delivering it to his mother, Mrs. Davis. She was not his legal, nor while his father lived, his natural guardian. A delivery to her would not have been an effectual delivery to the plaintiff so as to discharge the defendant.

As the plaintiff was a minor, the note should have been delivered to his guardian; It furnishes the defendant no defense that the plaintiff did not have a guardian at the time, for it was in his power to procure the appointment of one, as it is provided by section o of title 3, chapter 8, part 2 of the Revised Statutes, as amended by section 44 of chapter 460 of the Laws of 1837, that if a minor be under the age of fourteen years, the application for the appointment of a guardian may be made by any relative or other person in his behalf. Therefore, in this ease, if the defendant desired to discharge himself from responsibility as to this specific legacy, he should have procured the appointment of a guardian, and then have delivered the note to such guardian. He could not hold the note for more than fifteen years, until the maker thereof became wholly insolvent and the note wholly worthless, and escape liability by then tendering the note to the legatee. It does not avail the defendant to say that the relatives of the plaintiff could have procured the appointment of a guardian. They had no duty to discharge which required the appointment of a guardian. But if the defendant desired to be relieved of responsibility in reference to the note, the duty rested upon him to make a valid delivery thereof to the legatee, and for that purpose it was incumbent upon him to have a guardian appointed.

But if we should assume that the defendant was under no obligation to have a guardian appointed for the plaintiff, and that after the accounting, he owed him no duty as executor in reference to the note, the same result would still follow.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.E. 721, 101 N.Y. 311, 1 N.Y. St. Rep. 64, 56 Sickels 311, 1886 N.Y. LEXIS 633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-crandall-ny-1886.