In re Account of Manhardt

17 A.D. 1
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 17 A.D. 1 (In re Account of Manhardt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Account of Manhardt, 17 A.D. 1 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Follett, J.

But two questions are raised on this appeal: (1) Is Frank P. Manhardt entitled to retain in his possession, as administrator of the estate of Charles L. Mary with the will annexed, the choses in action which were in terms payable to- -Margaret Seitz and in her [5]*5possession at her death ? (2) Is Frank P. Manhardt, the donee of the bond and mortgage executed by him to Margaret Seitz, to secure the payment of $2,000 ?

It is conceded that all the property devised and bequeathed by Charles L. Mary will, on the settlement of the estate of Margaret Seitz, pass, under the will of her husband, two-thirds to his heirs and one-third to her heirs. Nevertheless, she Was, by the will, empowered to treat, in her lifetime, the estate left by her husband as her own, spend it, give it away, or save it. There was but one restriction; she could not devise or bequeath what was left at her death. During her lifetime, she reduced the property which her husband left to her possession, and held it in securities payable to herself individually. She could, in her lifetime, have maintained actions in her own name to recover on the choses in action in which the estate was invested. The estate is liable for her debts, which, so far as it appears, have not been ascertained nor even advertised for, pursuant to section 2718 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

In case specific property which belonged to an estate, or choses in action payable to the decedent, are in the hands of the representative at his death, they pass to the administrator de bonis non, and not to the representative of the deceased representative. So, property held in trust does not pass to the representative of the trustee, except that the representative is bound to care for it until a new trustee is appointed. These rules, however, have ho application to the case at bar. There was no trust estate, and Margaret Seitz was not a trustee, and no one could call on her to account.

As early as 1687, it was held that, in case an executor takes a note, for a debt due the estate, payable to himself, and dies, the note goes to his representative and not to the administrator, with the will annexed, of the first estate. (Barker v. Talcot, 1 Vern. 473; 3 Bacon’s Abridg. [7th ed.] Title Executor, B. 2.) The rule decided in the case cited has never been departed from in England. (2 Will. Ex. [7th Am. ed.] *792.)

As was held by the learned surrogate, the first question involved-in this case was settled by Caulkins v. Bolton (31 Hun, 458; affd., 98 N. Y. 511), which arose out of the following facts : Zara <Domstock died, bequeathing the use of all his property to his widow, Lucinda Comstock, for her support during her natural life, with the [6]*6right to use any part of the principal. Letters testamentary were granted to her. She loaned $1,000 of the money received from her husband to Ezra Caulkins, taking his bond and mortgage, payable to herself individually.. She died intestate, the bond and mortgage being then unpaid. October 31, 1881, letters of administration, with the will annexed cle bonis non, were granted to Danforth D. Bolton and Mary L. Scriber. November 14, 1881, the same surrogate granted letters of administration upon the estate of Lucinda Comstock to John F. Gray. Bolton and Scriber "got possession of the bond and mortgage. John F. Gray claimed that the bond-and mortgage were assets in his hands. The mortgagor, being willing to pay the mortgage and uncertain as to whom payment should be made, brought an action making the rival representatives parties. They defended, Bolton and Scriber claiming that the bond and mortgage belonged to them as representatives of the estate of Zara Comstock, the testator; John F. Gray claiming the bond and mortgage as administrator of Lucinda Comstock. It was held that the bond and mortgage belonged to John F. Gray, the administrator of Lucinda Comstock, and not to the administrators with the will annexed of Zara Comstock. This is decisive of the case at bar.

The same rule was decided in Beall v. New Mexico (16 Wall. 535). (See, also, 3 Redf. Wills [3d ed.], 103, § 10, par. 8; 2 Will. Ex. [7th Am. ed.] *794, note, *832, note.)

Is the evidence sufficient to establish a valid gift of. the bond and mortgage by Margaret Seitz to Frank P. Manhardt % The Surrogate’s Court determined this issue in favor of the administrator and against Manhardt. “ Where an appeal (from a decree of a Surro- - gate’s Court) is taken upon the facts, the appellate court has the - same power to decide the questions of fact which the surrogate had.” (Code Civ. Proc. § 2586.)

. The notice of appeal does not state whether the appeal is “ taken upon questions of law or upon the facts or upon both,” as authorized by section 2576 of the "Code of Civil Procedure, but it is assumed by the counsel of the litigants that the appeal is upon both questions, and the case will be considered on that theory.

Margaret Seitz became ill on Saturday, November 25, 1893, at her rooms on Walnut street in the city of Buffalo; at five o’clock her ease became critical and at eleven o’clock she was taken to the . [7]*7Buffalo General Hospital, where she died the next day, Sunday, November 26, 1893. Her age and the nature of her illness are not disclosed by the record. The appellant asserts that on Friday, two weeks before Mrs. Seitz died” (which would be November 10, 1893), she gave him the mortgage. The evidence does not show that she was ill at this time or that she was apprehensive that death: from any cause was likely soon to overtake her. The gift sought to-be established is a gift inter vivos, and is to be governed by the rules relating to that species of gift instead-of those relating to gifts causa mortis. The chief difference between the two is that a completed gift inter vivos is irrevocable, while a gift causa mortis may be revoked by the donor and is revoked by the recovery of the donor from the sickness during which the gift was made. To establish this gift the appellant first seeks to show a sufficient motive on the part of the alleged donor to make it. He was permitted to testify, over the objection of the administrator, that when three years of age his mother died, after which he lived with Margaret Mary for a year and a half; then lived in Connecticut for a while-(how long does not appear); then returned and lived with her until, he was fourteen years old. That after her marriage with Joseph Seitz, which'was in 1875, he learned the trade of a harnessmaker of him. How long he lived with Margaret Mary before her marriage: with Joseph Seitz, or how long he lived with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Seitz does not appear. Aftér serving his apprenticeship he went to Buffalo and worked at his trade, and about a year after he went to that city Mr. and Mrs. Seitz moved to Buffalo and he boarded with them until liis marriage, the date of which is not shown. It does not appear that the alleged donor and donee were in any wises-related.

Josejffiine Manhardt, the wife of the appellant, testified that Mr. Manhardt.always did her (Mrs. Seitz’) business, what business a woman, has who has a little money to look after, and I always did what little things I could for her and see to her cooking so far as I could during the week and brought her different things almost every day.”' Her attentions were on an occasion, as we understand the evidence, when Mrs. Seitz was confined to her bed for two weeks'from the effects of a fall.

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Bluebook (online)
17 A.D. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-account-of-manhardt-nyappdiv-1897.