Disbrow v. Mills
This text of 9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 132 (Disbrow v. Mills) 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.
Opinion
There seems to be no doubt of the propriety of the judgment in this case on the merits. The brief history of the case is this: Alfred Disbrow, from whom the plaintiff derives title, by the decease of her brother Stephen R. Disbrow, became entitled to the sum of $2,653.19, as his distributive share of that brother’s estate. A creditor of said Alfred Disbrow, seeking to set aside the assignment under which the plaintiff claims, had obtained an injunction against the plaintiff, Alfred Disbrow, and others, restraining them [133]*133from collecting and receiving this distributive share, and seeking to have it applied in payment of his debt. On a final settlement of the account of the administrator of Stephen R. Disbrow’s estate, the share of Alfred Disbrow, namely, the sum of $2,653.19, as adjudged by the decree of Surrogate Reuben H. Coles, then surrogate of Westchester, was, as ordered by the decree on such final accounting, paid over into the hands of Surrogate Coles, and left in his hands. Surrogate Coles invested the amount, by loaning the same to T. Davids & Co., in January, 1859. Surrogate Coles died in January, 1862, while the money thus loaned to T. Davids & Co. was still in their hands. S. D. Gifford was thereupon appointed surrogate of Westchester, and, while he held the office, the administrators of Coles passed over to Gifford, as funds belonging to the Surrogate’s Court, the note of Davids & Co., and Gifford collected the money of them, and held it in deposit in the Hew York Life Insurance and Trust Company, while he held the office, as funds belonging to the Surrogate’s Court. The defendant, on the 1st of January, 1863, succeeded to the office of surrogate of Westchester, and, on the 7th of January, 1863, Gifford paid over to the defendant the gross sum of $7,267.89, being a balance of funds in his hands as surrogate, and took the defendant’s official receipt for the gross amount, as funds which had been held by Gifford as surrogate, and delivered over to the defendant, as the successor of Gifford. It clearly appears, and is found by the referee, that this sum of $7,267.89, so paid over to the defendant in gross, by his predecessor in office, comprised, as a part thereof, the identical fund belonging to the plaintiff, to wit, the $2,653.19, the distributive share of Alfred Disbrow of his brother’s personal estate. The amount was transferred by Gifford to the defendant by a check on the blew York Life Insurance and Trust Company, where it was drawing interest, and the amount was -passed to the credit of the defendant, drawing interest as before. The sum paid over by Surrogate Gifford to the defendant, embraced sums due to various parties, by reason of the proceedings of the surrogate’s office during the time of Coles, but the defendant made no inquiry or attempt to ascertain to whom the several sums, comprised in the gross amount received from his predecessor in office, belonged, but went on paying out of that amount, as from a sum in gross, such [134]*134claims as were presented, until the amount so received from Gifford has become reduced to about $1,400. The fact is that the said sum, so received by Gifford of T. Davids & Oo., was ascertainable from the account of the Disbrow estate in the book in the surrogate’s office, which Coles, Gifford and the defendant used for keeping their official accounts; and, in fact, was indicated by an entry in that account, made by one Jenkins, who had his office with the defendant, and was by him permitted to make entries in the book, acting as the clerk of the defendant. Before the commencement of this suit, the defendant was notified of the plaintiff’s title, and of the dissolution of the injunction which had been issued restraining the collection of the money by the plaintiff, and payment was demanded. We think the plaintiff was entitled to recover the whole amount of the distributive share which came to the hands of the defendant. It is of no importance to inquire by what authority Surrogate Coles directed the money to be paid over to him, or whether the investment in the note of T. Davids & Co. was lawful. The precise fund was accounted for by the estate of Coles to Giffurd, and passed over bj him to the defendant as a trust fund with others. If the defendant paid out a portion of this money to some person not entitled to it, he paid it in his own wrong. The money, when it came to his hands, was affected with the specific trust. The deposit of the fund belonging to the plaintiff, indiscriminately with other funds, did not impair the title of the plaintiff to her property.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs of the appeal.
Present—Barnard, P. J., Tapper and Talcott, JJ.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.
Van Alen v. The Am. Bank, 52 N. Y., 1.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
9 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/disbrow-v-mills-nysupct-1874.