In re Bushnell

4 N.Y.S. 472, 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 813, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1131
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 N.Y.S. 472 (In re Bushnell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bushnell, 4 N.Y.S. 472, 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 813, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1131 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

Kennedy, S.

Zina Bushnell was a resident of the town of Sullivan, in this county, and died October 29,1869, leaving him surviving his widow, Harriet L. Bushnell; two children, May and Belle Bushnell, by his last wife; and Horatio H. Bushnell, Almanzo Bushnell, and Armenia Tuttle, children by a former wife. At the time of his death he was the owner of several hundred acres of land, and personal property to such an amount that upon the final judicial settlement of his estate the widow received $1,828.38, and the share to which May and Belle were severally entitled was the sum of $1,131.36. Mrs. Bushnell was the administratrix of her husband, and was appointed general guardian of her two children on the 22d day of January, 1870. Upon the final settlement of the estate the amount due her as widow, and to the two children May and Belie, was set off in stocks, mortgages, money in savings-banks, and other satisfactory securities, and possibly some money which she then, as widow and as guardian, accepted in full settlement and satisfaction of the amount due to all of them. As guardian she did not, upon the receipt of these trust funds, separate the securities and money for the purpose of setting apart to each of her children the amount which she held for them as guardian, nor did she ever set apart this fund or invest-it, but, as fast as the money was realized on the securities set off to her and her children, it was expended by her for her own private use in carrying on her farm and in improvements upon her property; and she has continued to hold and have the use of May’s share, thus mixed with her own funds and used by her, up to the present time. The evidence shows that Mrs. Bushnell, at the time of her husband’s death, owned in her own right a farm of 50 acres in the town of Sullivan; that after the partition of Zina Bushnell’s land she purchased so much of the land as her two daughters were entitled to in her husband’s real estate, amounting to 217 acres, and as security for the purchase price gave a mortgage on the land so purchased to the county treasurer of this county for the sum of $8,772.37, this sum being the value of her children’s interest in their father’s real estate. Mrs. Bushnell, since her husband’s death, has continued to own and occupy all the land above specified, except so much thereof as she deeded to Belle a few years since in payment of the amount due her from Mrs. Bushnell as her guardian. We also understand Mrs. Bushnell has managed her farm, hiring a little help occasionally, but taking care of her [473]*473stock generally during the winter herself, with the assistance of her two daughters, until they married and left home. May remained at iiome till her marriage, at 17 years of age, growing up a strong, healthy woman. Aside from four terms at Tates Union School, at Chittenango, and three terms of ■music lessons, no money was spent in giving her an education. She had no advantages, save those of the district school. During the years she lived at home she assisted her mother in doing house work and various kinds of farm work, such as driving the horse to take the milk to the cheese factory, assisting in planting, working in the hay field, driving horse to drag in grain, driving the cows to and from the pasture, and, from the time she was 10 years old, assisting in milking the cows, taking care of the horse and cows and other stock during the winter time, by feeding them from the mows of hay, by cleaning the horse and cow stables, either by shoveling or wheeling the manure from such stables to the barn-yard; doing, generally, aside from house work, such farm work as no girl of her age ought to have been required to do, and which no woman ought to do, except as a matter of necessity. We are surprised that persons who knew the class of farm work May did from the time she was 10 years old till her marriage did not inform the surrogate of the facts, and request him to cause an investigation to be made to ascertain whether Mrs. Bushnell was a suitable person to be a guardian of her child. The daughter of Zina Bushnell, a man respected and honored by all who knew him, with ample property to support and educate his children, ought to have received a better education than she did; ought to have been surrounded by no influences demoralizing to a young girl; ought to have been permitted to spend her winter nights and mornings by the fireside or in the school-room, rather than in the cow stable or horse barn; ought to have enjoyed those advantages of education and society which the daughters of men as wealthy as Mr. Bushnell are entitled to receive. But Mrs. Bushnell, from the death of her husband, had accustomed herself to doing the class of outdoor work to which we have referred, and hence saw no impropriety in requiring her daughters to do likewise. And yet we have no doubt that in managing the farm as she did, paying as little to hired men as possible, doing all that it was possible for her and her daughters to do of farm work, she was actuated by no unkind motive towards her children; from her stand-point she thought it right to make and save money in doing as she did for the benefit of her children; that she was desirous of managing her estate with the least possible expenditure, to benefit them in the future rather than herself; was trying in her way to accumulate property for her daughters. ' She did not appreciate the fact that she was guardian of her children, and so might at some time be called to account for her stewardship. She had become the owner of their lands, paying nothing therefor; she had their personal property in her possession, and both funds have been used as one by her as if they were her own, only to be parted with at death. Whether she lias made or lost money in conducting business as she has, we have no evidence in this proceeding upon which to base any knowledge. She claims she owes her daughter nothing, and has filed an account against her amounting to $2,715.42, which the court is asked to approve and allow.

One item of this account is for 12 years’ board, at $2 per week, amounting to $1,248. This item we disallow, because we think May, from the time she was 10 years old till she left home, at 17 years of age, more than earned her board by the outdoor work she did for her mother upon the farm. We disallow it also for the reason that Mrs. Bushnell misappropriated the $1,131.36 belonging to May; converted it to her own use, instead of investing it and keeping it invested; thereby producing an income which could have been used, if necessary, for her support. Were she not her mother, and had not acted in good faith, as she supposed, towards her child, we should not hesitate to charge her with compound interest upon the sum she received, but, under [474]*474the circumstances of this case, we shall hold that the benefits she has derived from the use of her ward’s money are more than an equivalent to the trifling sum which she might otherwise be entitled to for the board of her child between the ages of four and ten years.

Another item of the account is the sum of $284.12 for clothing, $200 of which is charged in a gross sum without giving items or the cost of them» but it is claimed to be for hats, shoes, underclothing, and dresses; simply a. guess at what Mrs. Bushnell supposed she might have expended during 12 years of her guardianship. Even were we disposed to allow the $84.12 for wearing apparel, we should decline the $200, because she has kept no account of the items, nor of their cost. It is an imaginary sum for imaginary wearing apparel for a period of 12 years; whether she lias furnished this amount of clothing we do not know, and therefore have no reason to believe.

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Bluebook (online)
4 N.Y.S. 472, 17 N.Y. St. Rep. 813, 1888 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bushnell-nysurct-1888.