Davis v. Seaward

85 Misc. 210, 146 N.Y.S. 981
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 85 Misc. 210 (Davis v. Seaward) 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
Davis v. Seaward, 85 Misc. 210, 146 N.Y.S. 981 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Crane, J.

Two questions are presented for my decision. First, was Mr. Justice Joseph A. Burr disqualified from sitting in the Appellate Division upon the appeal in the case of Seaward v. Davis. Second, if he were disqualified, what effect does it have, or can it have, upon the judgments in this case.

This controversy arises out of the following facts: William Z. King died in February of 1899 leaving.a will containing the following provisions:

“ Third. I give and bequeath all my personal property of every name and kind to my wife excepting my piano which I give to Lilly Corwin aforesaid.
“ Whatever personal estate may remain at the decease of my wife I give and bequeath to Buell Davis and Abaigail Davis, the parents of my wife, or if they are not living then to my sisters aforesaid and Lilly Corwin, share and share alike.”

[212]*212The law firm of Burr, Coombs & Wilson, employed by Mary E. King, the widow of William Z. King, probated the will and thereafter conducted proceedings leading up to her accounting as executrix and final discharge. The will was probated April 27, 1899. The personal estate left by William Z. King amounted to approximately $17,000. In June of 1899 the said firm conducted for Mrs. King proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court in Kings county “ In the Matter of Appraisal under the Transfer Tax Act of the Property of William Z. King, Deceased,” and in connection therewith prepared -an affidavit for Mrs. King wherein she stated as follows:

The personal property bequeathed to me by Paragraph Third of said Will is an absolute bequest. The qualifications following that bequest are void, and I claim all the personal property absolutely under the provisions of the Will. ’ ’

Upon the accounting of Mrs. King as executrix a decree was entered May 18,1900. It was prepared by Burr, Coombs & Wilson and provided that Mrs. King:

‘ ‘ Be permitted and allowed to sell the G-ovemment bonds referred to in Schedule A. of her account remaining unsold, and of the face value of Twelve thousand dollars and inventoried at Thirteen thousand five hundred and sixty dollars and turn over the proceeds of such sale to herself as sole legatee under the said will, or if she so elect, to have the title of such bonds transferred to her. * * *
“ It is further ordered that the said executrix upon making the payments and turning over the property hereinbefore described, be discharged from all liability-on account of her acts as such executrix as to the items embraced in this accounting. ’ ’

The only property which Mary E. King had came to her upon this accounting and through her husband ’swill, [213]*213with the exception of her meager dower obtained upon the settlement of an action brought therefor by the same firm of lawyers. This property amounting approximately to $17,000, as before stated, consisted of United States government bonds appraised at $15,828, money in bank and other personal property. Prior to the accounting Mrs. King had sold $2,000 par value of the bonds and after the accounting and on May 29, 1900, the office of Burr, Coombs & Wilson had the remaining bonds transferred at the treasury department to Mrs. King individually.

Certain wills were prepared by Burr, Coombs & Wilson for Mrs. King, one antedating November 20, 1899, and another drawn on May 8, 1901, in which she made bequests aggregating $12,100.

For all of these services rendered to Mary E. Bing, either individually or as executrix of the estate of William Z. King, deceased, the firm of Burr, Coombs & Wilson were paid and their relations as attorneys to the estate ended with the accounting in May of 1900 and to Mary E. King individually in May of 1901. Thereafter no legal services were performed by these attorneys for Mary E. King. She subsequently consulted a lawyer of Greenport, L. I., Frederick.H. Tasker, who drew another will for her which after her death, in May, 1905, was admitted to probate. By this will Mrs. King attempted to dispose of the property which she possessed by making certain bequests, one in the sum of $1,000 to Jennie F. Douglass. Buell G. Davis was made the sole executor. All this personal estate remaining at the decease of his said wife William Z. King had given to his sisters and Lilly Corwin.

Thereafter, Cynthia A. Tuthill, as administratrix with the will annexed of the goods and chattels of William Z. King, deceased, commenced an action [214]*214against Buell Gf. Davis as executor of the last will of Mary E. King to recover the property remaining at her decease, under the third clause of the husband’s will. This action came on for trial at a Special Term of this court in December of 1905 and was dismissed, but the judgment of dismissal was reversed by the Appellate Division in July of 1907. 121 App. Div. 290. Upon a retrial interlocutory judgment was entered in July of 1908 directing Buell G. Davis as executor to account for the property which Mary E. King had received from the estate of her husband, charging him with the full amount of the inventory of William Z. King’s estate as filed by Mary E. King. Final judgment being entered, an appeal was taken to the Appellate Division, where the judgment was modified in so far as it charged the executor with the amount of the inventory, holding that he should only account for the amount remaining at the time of Mrs. King’s death and which had come into his possession as executor. This appeal was decided in June of 1909 and is reported in 133 Appellate Division, 191. Cynthia A. Tuthill having died, George W. Seaward on February 5, 1908, was substituted as plaintiff. In December, 1904, Joseph A. Burr of the firm of Burr, Coombs & Wilson had become a justice of the Supreme Court and was a member of the Appellate Division which heard and decided this appeal, writing a dissenting opinion therein. The case was carried to the Court of Appeals where the decision, reported in 198 New York, 415, affirmed the Appellate Division in modifying the judgment of the lower court and directed the accounting to proceed.

Thereafter the accounting proceeded before a referee and it was found that Mrs. King left at her decease personal property amounting to $15,861.92 which had come into the hands of her executor, and [215]*215by final judgment entered on- the 4th day of April, 1911, he was directed to turn it over to the plaintiff. Another appeal was taken to the Appellate Division where the final judgment was affirmed with opinion to be found in 148 Appellate Division, 805. Mr. Justice Burr again sat in the Appellate Division but did not vote. After contempt proceedings had been started Buell Gr. Davis as executor complied with this final judgment to the extent of turning over to the plaintiff property to the value of $14,536.37, leaving a balance unpaid of $1,325.55.

It is now claimed in this action that all proceedings after and including the second appeal to the Appellate Division wherein Justice Burr .sat as a member of the court are void for the reason that he was disqualified under section 15 of the Judiciary Law. The claim is two-fold: First, that he was disqualified because he had been attorney or counsel in the cause or matter before him. Second, because he was related by affinity to a party to the controversy within the sixth degree, to wit, that his wife was a first cousin to Benajah H. Douglass, husband of Jennie F.

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Bluebook (online)
85 Misc. 210, 146 N.Y.S. 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-seaward-nysupct-1914.