Dunford v. Weaver

28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 349
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1880
StatusPublished

This text of 28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 349 (Dunford v. Weaver) 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
Dunford v. Weaver, 28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 349 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1880).

Opinion

Talcott, P. J.:

This appeal is from a judgment rendered on a verdict at the Oneida Circuit.

The defendant is sued, as sheriff of Oneida county, for the escape of one John Tillinghast, who had been received into0 his custody under four several final precepts or mandates issued by the surrogate of Oneida in a proceeding originally commenced by John Boyle as a creditor of Ross Taylor, deceased, and of whose estate the said John Tilling-]) ast had been appointed administrator with the will annexed. One Mathew M. Parker, one of the sureties of the said John Tillinghast as such administrator, had presented his application to the surrogate, setting forth that he desired to be relieved from the responsibility for the further acts or defaults of the said Tillinghast as such administrator, and the said Tillinghast had been cited to appear before the said surrogate and give new sureties. Tillinghast appeared in pursuance of the citation, but neglected to give new sureties, whereupon the letters of administration to the said Tillinghast were revoked by the said surrogate on March 17, 1875. The application of Boyle was made for the purpose of compelling the said Tillinghast to render his accounts as such administrator. Pending this proceeding Tillinghast filed before the surrogate a petition for a general accounting, and the same was referred to an auditor to examine and report upon. The auditor made and filed his report, which was confirmed by the surrogate, and a final decree made, whereby the said John Tillinghast, as such administrator, was personally charged with certain moneys shown to be in his hands as such administrator, and not paid out. On the foot of this decree the four several precepts were issued to the Sheriff of Oneida in favor of four certain creditors of the said Ross Taylor, deceased, for the several sums found to be due to them, recitir g the said final decree, and that the said sums had been personally demanded of Tillinghast, and that he neglected and refused to pay the same, and respectively commanding the said sheriff that he take the body of the said Tillinghast, if found in his bailiwick, and commit him to the common jail of his county, and detain him in custody until he should pay ■ the several sums named in the several precepts. These amounts were indorsed on the precepts respect[351]*351ively, with directions to collect the same, with interest and costs. They were issued and delivered to the sheriff, and by virtue thereof he had arrested the said Tiilinghast, and taken from him bail for the jail limits. On August 23, 1879, the said Tiilinghast went beyond the jail limits, and while he was so absent a suit was commenced against him by the plaintiff, to whom the several claims had been assigned, for an escape. The sheriff arrested Tiilinghast upon the four several precepts, and returned the same to that effect.

On the trial the plaintiff, after proving the decree made by the said surrogate on September 27, 1876, and also'the four precepts, with fhe return of the sheriff thereon, and proving the extent of the jail limits for Utica, gave proof tending to show that on August 23, 1879, the said Tiilinghast was beyond the jail limits, and that this suit was commenced before his return to the said limits. It would have be'en a good defense to the action that the escape was without the consent of the sheriff, if he had the prisoner within the liberties at the time of the commencement of the action against the sheriff, either by voluntary return or recapture. (Code Civil Procedr ure, § 171.) So that if it became important for the plaintiff to show (in case the law is held to be that the sheriff had a right under the precepts issued by the surrogate to let the prisoner to the jail limits) that the action for the escape was commenced before the prisoner had returned within the limits. The plaintiff had commenced this action by delivery of the summons to the sheriff’s clerk, in the office of the sheriff, under subdivision 3 of section 426 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1879 ; and the defendant now objects that there was no evidence that the room where the summons was left was the “ designated ” office of the sheriff. The sheriff was called by the plaintiff as a witness, and testified that the place where the service was made was his official office; we think this was sufficient' to establish the fact prima facie at least. But, in addition, the plaintiff, upon the argument of this appeal, produced a duly certified copy of the certificate, filed in the county clerk’s office, designating the same locality as his office. If such proof of the actual designation was requisite it might, if omitted on the trial, be proved on the appeal for the purpose of sustaining the judgment. The specific ques[352]*352tion was left to the jury whether Tillinghast was off the limits at the time when the summons was served, and they must be deemed to have found in the affirmative.

The defendant objected to the proof of the several precepts, on the ground that the plaintiff must show the proceedings before the surrogate upon which they were issued. The decree on which they were issued was introduced in evidence by the plaintiff, and fully recites all the facts which gave the surrogate jurisdiction to issue the said precepts, and the fact that the said Tillinghast was remoVed from his office of administrator with the will annexed was proved by the introduction of the surrogate’s order to that effect. By article 3 of title 3, chapter 6, of the second part of the Revised Statutes, sections 63 and 64 (3 R. S., 6 ed., pp.' 99, 100), an administrator may be cited to account or may voluntarily render his final account; and by chapter 460 of the Laws of 1837, as amended by chapter 229 of the Laws of 1862, the surrogate was given the same jurisdiction to require any executor or administrator, whose letters have been revoked, to render an account of his proceedings, as is conferred by article 3 of title 3, chajffer 6, of the second part of the Revised Statutes. That is, the same power is conferred upon the surrogate to require a removed administrator to account, as was conferred on him by the statute last cited, to require an unremoved administrator .to account. Chapter 733 of the Laws of 1865 provides that when an administrator shall have been removed or suspended, or his letters of administration shall have been revoked, he shall be liable to account on the application of his successor, and the surrogate shall have power to decree the payment and delivery to such successor of all assets, etc., and to compel the performance of such' decree in the same manner as of decrees made in other cases 'of accounting. But this was not intended to and did not repeal the statute which authorized the surrogate to call such administrator to account on the application of a creditor, or to take a final account on the application of the removed administrator. In this case it does not appear that any successor of Tillinghast was appointed to succeed him in the administration from which he was removed; and, in the case of Annett v. Kerr (28 How. Pr., 324), the court, in discussing the effect of the act of 1865, holds that “ all parties [353]*353interested in the estate as creditors, legatees or next of Mn have a right to summon a removed administrator to account, and procure a decree against him.” (And see Redfield’s Surrogate Practice, 364.)

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Bluebook (online)
28 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunford-v-weaver-nysupct-1880.