In re Reed

177 A.D. 76, 164 N.Y.S. 37, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5699

This text of 177 A.D. 76 (In re Reed) 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 Reed, 177 A.D. 76, 164 N.Y.S. 37, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5699 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Kellogg, P. J.:

Most of the questions urged by the appellants have already been decided against them in this case by this court and the Court of Appeals. The proceeding was to sell the real estate [78]*78of the decedent for the payment of his debts. Mrs. Stoddard was the administratrix, and she and her sister were the only heirs at law and next of kin. She is the wife of the appellants’ attorney and the mother of the other appellant. Mrs. Stoddard personally, and as administratrix, and her sister contested upon the hearing the allegations of the petition. A full hearing was had before the surrogate, and he made a final decree directing the mortgaging of the real estate for the payment of the debt due to the petitioner. The record shows there were no other creditors.

Upon appeal to this court the decree was unanimously affirmed (159 App. Div. 931). Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals (214 N. Y. 383) the order was reversed upon the ground (not raised before) that a notice requiring creditors to present their claims not having been published, the citation must be issued generally to all other creditors of the deceased as well as to the creditors named. The decision was: The order should be reversed, and the matter remitted to the Surrogate’s Court, to the end that service of the citation may be made upon the creditors. The proceedings prior to the date of the surrogate’s decision may stand, however, in full force and effect as against all parties heretofore served with the citation; and the costs in the Appellate Division and in this court will abide the final' award of costs tobe made by the surrogate.”

Thereafter, upon the return of a citation issued to all of the creditors, Mrs. Stoddard, as administratrix, filed an answer substantially like their previous answer, and Blanche T. Bechoff, the daughter, appeared by her father as attorney and filed an answer and produced an unrecorded deed purporting to be made by her mother to her June 7,1910, acknowledged before the father on that day, with a certificate of the county clerk attached dated July 8, 1915, a few days prior to that hearing. She sought to put the deed in evidence and to contest again all the matters that had been decided by the previous decree and the decisions upon appeal. The surrogate refused to receive the deed and struck out her answer upon the theozy that her rights, if any, were subject to the decree, and that the hearing under the remittitzzr was limited to the creditors. The surrogate refused to retry the issues. Upon appeal to this court [79]*79(171 App. Div. 21) the decision of the surrogate was affirmed, and in the opinion we reviewed the history of the case and, among other things, said: “ The attorney did not explain why he appeared for the mother as heir at law, and a half owner of the real estate sought to be sold, when he knew that that interest belonged to the daughter by the deed acknowledged before him. There was no suggestion that the daughter did not know of the former trial, and of all the proceedings in the case. The surrogate had the right to infer that she did know when she came into court upon the arms of her father and mother who had deceived the court if the daughter’s position is true, and he was justified in striking out her answer and assuming that it was another step to protract unnecessarily the litigation. If she had kept silent, knowing that her mother was engaged in the trial before the surrogate and carrying on the appeal as an heir and the owner of a part of the real estate sought to be partitioned, justice required that she should not be heard. The surrogate had the right to assume that such was the fact until an explanation of the peculiar situation was offered.”

Upon appeal to the Court of Appeals (218 N. Y. 711) the decree was reversed upon the ground (then taken for the first time) that it did not appear that any order had been made for the service of the citation by publication, and, therefore, the service to the creditors directed by the former decision had not been made. We quote from the opinion, page 712: “The other objections to the order made by the appellants seem to us untenable and they do not require consideration. The order appealed from should be reversed and the matter again remitted to the Surrogate’s Court, to the end that service of the citation may be properly made upon the creditors. The proceedings prior to the date of the surrogate’s decision, reviewed on the former appeal, may stand, however, in full force and effect as against all parties heretofore served with the citation, and the costs in the Appellate Division and in this court will abide the final award of costs to be made by the surrogate.”

A motion for reargument was made in behalf of the appellants and denied by the Court of Appeals. We quote the decision (219 N. Y. 543): “ Motion for reargument denied. Nothing in our decision concludes the appellant Blanche T. Bechoff [80]*80from proving that a deed has been delivered to her, and thereby making herself a party to the proceeding.”

When the matter came before the surrogate after that decision the deed was again offered in evidence by Mrs. Bechoff and a similar answer interposed. The mother again interposed an answer similar to her former answer. The mother and daughter swore that the deed was delivered at about its date; the husband’s testimony as to the transaction with reference to the deed between the mother and daughter was excluded and the answer stricken out, the deed rejected and a final decree was again made for the mortgaging of the property.

As we interpret the decision of the Court of Appeals, it does not require that the surrogate reconsider his decision in rejecting the deed and striking out the answer of Blanche T. Bechoff. It means that the decision of the Court of Appeals shall not interfere with the right of the appellants to bring that matter before the surrogate for his consideration. It is left with the surrogate to determine in his discretion whether in the interests of justice he will reopen that matter and have a rehearing upon that subject, for the former decision in 218 New York holds that as to the objections made to the order by the appellants other than that upon which the reversal rested, they were untenable, and do not require consideration. It was a direct question before that court whether or not Mrs. Bechoff had been deprived of any legal right by the decision of the surrogate in rejecting her deed and striking out her answer. There was no attempt made by Mrs. Bechoff before the surrogate to show that she did not know of the first trial or that she did not purposely conceal her deed. She made no attempt to show her good faith or to excuse her default. It would naturally be inferred that she had some knowledge or information concerning the protracted litigation carried on by her father and mother with reference to her property. Holding under a secret deed, if she wanted to be heard, it was for her to show that she had acted promptly and that she did not suffer the proceedings to go on upon the assumption that the mother was the owner when she knew that she herself was. If the deed was valid, of course the father and the mother were guilty of an intentional fraud upon the court, and did not stand in good favor in [81]*81that respect. The surrogate has held that the mother was the owner of a half interest in the property, and we approve of that finding. The appellants’ attorney has not taken warning from Matter of Stoddard (165 App. Div. 902), but seems willing to resort to any practice to carry his ends.

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Related

Chautauqua County Bank v. . White
23 N.Y. 347 (New York Court of Appeals, 1861)
Matter of Reed
108 N.E. 565 (New York Court of Appeals, 1915)
Matter of Reed
113 N.E. 234 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)
In re Stoddard
165 A.D. 902 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1914)
Reed v. Stoddard
171 A.D. 21 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
177 A.D. 76, 164 N.Y.S. 37, 1917 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-reed-nyappdiv-1917.