Hoyt v. . Bonnett

50 N.Y. 538, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 458
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 17, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 50 N.Y. 538 (Hoyt v. . Bonnett) 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
Hoyt v. . Bonnett, 50 N.Y. 538, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 458 (N.Y. 1872).

Opinion

ÁLLENj J.

To entitle an executor or administrator to the benefit of the short statute of limitations, by which one having a claim against the estate of a deceased person may be barred of his action and forfeit his claim, the representative of the estate must, in all essentials, comply with the statute creating the har. EÍeither the statute nor the acts of executors or administrators under it are to receive a liberal interpretation or to be extended by implication beyond their natural and ordinary import. With a single exception, courts and judges have regarded the act as penal in its character, and to be strictly construed. By the statute an executor or administrator at any time, at least six months after the granting of letters testamentary, or of administration, by notice published as prescribed by law, and as the surrogate may order, may require all persons having claims against the estate to exhibit the same, with the vouchers, at or before a day to be specified in the notice, at least six months from the day of the first publication. (2 R. S., 88, § 34.) Such notice was published by the executors in this case, and the present appellants exhibited their claim within the time limited by the notice. A subsequent se'ction of the statute (§ 38) provides that if a claim be *543 exhibited to the executor or administrator, and “ be disputed or rejected by him,” and the same shall not have been referred, the claimant shall, within six months after such “ dispute or rejection,” if the debt or any part thereof be then due, or within six months after some part thereof shall have become due, commence a suit for the recovery thereof, or “be forever barred from maintaining an action thereon.” Justice to the claimant, as well as the reasonable interpretation of the statute, requires that the act of the executor or administrator, in disputing or rejecting the claim which is to put the claimant to an action within the brief period prescribed, upon pain of forfeiting his claim, should not be ambiguous or equivocal, capable of two interpretations, but decided, unequivocal and absolute; such an act or declaration as will admit of no reasonable doubt that the claim is definitively disputed or rejected, so that the claimant will be without excuse for not resorting to his action within the time required to save his claim. To construe and apply the statute in a manner more liberal to the representatives of estates would make it a trap and a snare to claimants. They might be misled, and induced to remain passive until they had lost the right of action by a notice or a declaration so carefully drawn or made as to lull them to rest; while it might be claimed that an intention to dispute or reject the claim was clearly inferable from' the language used. The rule is as fairly deducible from the authorities and the statute, upon a reasonable interpretation, that whatever may be the language or declaration of the executor or administrator to the claimant, if in the same notice or declaration, or at the same time, he does or says anything from which the claimant may reasonably infer that the determination to dispute or reject the claim is not final, but that it will be further examined or considered, either upon the vouchers already exhibited or such as may be thereafter presented, the claim is not “ disputed or rejected,” within the statute, (Kidd v. Chapman, 2 Barb. Ch. R., 414; Reynolds v. Collins, 3 Hill, 36; Elliot v. Cronk's Administrators, 13 W. R., 35; Barsalou v. Wright, 4 Bradf. R., 164.) The *544 -notice of the executors to the present appellants does not advise the latter .that the claims .were either disputed or rejected. It merely advises them that, as at present advised, "they declined to pay them. The ground of such declension is not stated, and the term employed is not equivalent to a refusal to pay-; which the chancellor, in Kidd v. Chapman (supra), said, if upon any other ground than that the debt, or some part of it, is not legally or equitably due, is not a disputing or rejection of the debt within the statute.” From the nature of the claims, there may have been good reasons for declining to pay them, irrespective of their-justice. Another .paragraph -in the same notice conveys the idea very distinctly ‘that they decline to pay the claims at that time, not because they were deemed unjust, or. not legal or equitable charges against the estate,-and not to be paid at any time, but for some other reason. The executors say that, as they have no other means óf-information concerning the details of the claims, they will be obliged if the-claimants will "furnish .them a bill of particulars, containing the items of their accounts, the dates when contracted, and a list of "the notes with vouchers held for the same. This request is inconsistent and unreconcilable with the pretence that the claim was by the same notice rejected or disputed, and the claimants put to their action. To "furnish vouchers and particulars of claims that were definitively rejected or disputed, and which the executors did not propose to examine or re-examine, would have been a work of supererogation which the executors could not have reasonably asked, and such as sensible business men would not have •asked. The executors did not reject or dispute the claim so as-to put the statute in operation, and bar the claims upon a failure-to bring an action within the time prescribed by it.

Another insuperable objection to the bar set up by the respondents, and sustained by the-surrogate, arises out of the character of the claims. The estate of the decedent was not primarily chargeable-with them. The surviving members -of the copartnership and the assets of the respective firms were previously liable for them with the other firm debts, and *545 the estate of the deceased partner could not be resorted to or charged until the remedies against the survivors and the partnership property had been exhausted, or it should appear that an effort to collect the debt from either would be fruitless.

It is well settled in this State that a creditor of a firm cannot proceed against the estate of a deceased partner without showing either that the surviving partners have been proceeded against to execution at law, or that they are insolvent. (Lawrence v. Orphan House, 2 Denio, 577, affirming the decree of the chancellor in the same case, 11 Paige, 80.) The doctrine has been reaffirmed by this court since the enactment of the Code; and the personal representatives of a deceased partner- cannot be joined as a party defendant with the surviving partner in an action for a partnership debt when the complaint does not show the. plaintiff’s inability to procure satisfaction from the survivor. ( Voorhis v. Childs’ Executor, 17 N. Y., 354.)

There was no absolute or certain debt due, either at law or in equity, from the estate of the decedent, to the present appellants at the time they exhibited the claims. The liability was contingent; and while it was proper to present the claims, the statement as made, the truth of which is not controverted, fully disclosed the nature and character of the debts, and the conditions and extent of the liability of the estate. The claims were not, and, so far as appears, are not now an absolute charge upon the estate of Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.Y. 538, 1872 N.Y. LEXIS 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoyt-v-bonnett-ny-1872.