In re Hodgman's Estate

42 N.Y.S. 1004
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 2, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 N.Y.S. 1004 (In re Hodgman's Estate) 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 Hodgman's Estate, 42 N.Y.S. 1004 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

PUTNAM, J.

We think that the surrogate did not err in holding that Mary E. Yates was not a party to the proceeding then pending before him, and in refusing her application to file a supplemental account. She was not one of the petitioners, nor was she named in the petition. The prayer of the petition was that the respondent Wing, as executor of Philander C. Hitchcock, a deceased executor, and Alfred C. Hodgman, as executor of said Frederick D. Hodgman, deceased, show cause why the decree should not be opened, and petitioner’s default in filing objections to the account filed in behalf of said executors Hitchcock and Hodgman should not be opened. The order of the general term stated that, after hearing counsel for petitioners, and also counsel for Asahal R. Wing, as executor as aforesaid, and Alfred C. Hodgman, as executor, “the decree of the said surrogate’s court herein entered April 23, 1802, * 9 * be, and the same is hereby, opened and vacated, and the said petitioners permitted to file objections to the accounts of said executors as prayed for.” No application was made to disturb the former decision as far as it affected Mary E. Yates. She was neither a petitioner, nor was the order to show cause directed to her; hence, she was not a party to the proceeding. The surrogate, in his discretion; possibly, might have allowed her to file a supplemental account; but we cannot say that in refusing to do-so, under the circumstances, he committed an error.

We also are of the opinion that it was within the power of the surrogate to allow the respondents to file an amended account. Code Civ. Proc. § 2472, subd. 3; Id. § 2481, subds. 6-11. On the application of the petitioners, the former decree had been opened and vacated, and hence, as between them and the respondents, the [1007]*1007situation on this accounting was the same as it would have been if no proceedings had been taken since the filing of the original account. The judgment of the general term and the court of appeals did not settle any issues between the parties. It merely vacated the former decree, and the proceedings subsequent to the filing of the original petition and account, and gave the petitioners the same right to appear and file objections they would have had at that time. The surrogate then had the same power to allow an amendment to the account that he would have had before the first decree was entered. There was no estoppel by reason of the former decree or former proceeding. That decree, as between the respondents and appellants, was “wiped out” on the application of the latter.

We also think that the amendment, as far as it excluded from the account the proceeds of real estate received and disbursed by the executors, was properly allowed. The will did not provide for the conversion of the real estate into personal property, and gave the executors no power to sell lands. They had nothing to do with the real estate. What they did in reference to the real estate was done as agents of the owners, and not as executors. Hence the surrogate had no power whatever to pass on the transactions between the parties' on account of the proceeds of the real estate received by the executors. The receipts and disbursements of the executors in that regard formed no part of their account, and was properly omitted therefrom.

The surrogate did not err in denying the motion of the appellants for a commission, in consequence of the delay of the petitioners in making the application. The motion was made after the trial before the surrogate had proceeded for a considerable period, after a large amount of testimony had been taken, and was to obtain the testimony of a large number of witnesses in different states. At the time the motion was made the term of office of the surrogate before whom the proceeding was had was about to expire, and, if the commission should issue, it was doubtful if the* proceeding could be terminated before him. "Under the circumstances, it was a matter of discretion with the surrogate to grant or deny the application.

It is claimed by the appellants that the surrogate, in the decree from which this appeal is taken, committed grave errors in failing to charge the accountants with assets of the estate with which they were justly chargeable, and in crediting them with payments and disbursements which were not proved by any legal testimony, and in other regards. It is difficult for us to review the decree upon the merits in the absence of any certificate that the case contains all the evidence. Instead of any such certificate, the surrogate returns:

“That said case contains all the evidence and proceedings had herein material to the questions involved on the appeal herein, except so much as has been excluded from contestants’ proposed case by direction of the ex-surrogate, on the settlement thereof and of the proposed amendments.”

It would seem, therefore, that material evidence was given on the trial not embraced in the case. What the evidence was, or what [1008]*1008bearing it had upon the question submitted, of course, we are unable to determine. For reasons hereafter suggested, however, it will not he necessary for us to pass upon the question as to whether or not the conclusion reached by the surrogate in settling the accounts of the respondents was correct, or to consider the questions raised by the many exceptions to the rulings of the surrogate taken by the appellants upon the trial.

It was shown that each of the petitioners, or those from whom they derived an interest in the residuary estate, in 1880, 1881, or prior thereto, settled with the respondents for their share of the estate, executing a receipt in full, or an assignment of their interest therein. All of them executed a receipt in full except Lucy M. Keith and Susanna Williams, from the latter of whom the petitioners Frederick H. Edgerly, William F. Hall, and Carrie Carrigan claim to inherit an interest as her children and next of kin. The said Keith and Susanna Williams executed assignments of their interest in the estate to the executor Hodgman,—the former on March 20, 1877, and the latter on the 18th day of October, 1877. At the time of the execution of the above-mentioned releases and assignments, as the surrogate found on sufficient evidence, the estate was unsettled. The value and amount thereof was uncertain and could not be determined. Hence, when this proceeding was initiated in 1894, a settlement of the estate out of court had been made between the executors Hitchcock and Hodgman and the residuary legatees, which had existed for from 13 to 15 years, and which, during all those years, and until after the death of Hitchcock, had been acquiesced in by all the parties interested in the estate. The settlements so made by the said parties were evidenced by receipts like the following:

“Received from P. O. Hitchcock, one of the executors of B\ D. Hodgman, deed., five hundred dollars, in full of any or all claims 1 have or may hereafter have, upon said executors, by virtue of the will of said B\ D. Hodgman, except the claim I have, or may 'hereafter have, on a farm in the state of Michigan on which my father now resides.
“Dec. 31, 1880. Ida H. Hodgman.”
“Reed., January, 1881, from the executors of F. D. Hodgman, dec’d., four hundred dollars, in full of any or all claims I have, or may hereafter have, upon said executors, by virtue of the .will of said F. D. Hodgman, except the claim I have, or may hereafter have, on a farm in the state of Michigan on which my father now resides. Harriet Blagan.

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Bluebook (online)
42 N.Y.S. 1004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hodgmans-estate-nyappdiv-1896.