In re Snyder

41 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 302
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 41 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 302 (In re Snyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Snyder, 41 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 302 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1884).

Opinions

Fish, J.:

The appellant was executor of Jabez Olmstead, deceased, and, as such, received the moneys and property belonging to the deceased and assumed the general burden of the trust. In due time he was called to account and rendered an account before the Surrogate’s Court; and the Surrogate’s Court, in such proceedings, on the 29th March, 1882, made a decree in which it charged the appellant, as such executor, with divers moneys received by him as such, credited him with divers sums properly paid and expended, and adjudged; that there remained a balance in his hands, for which he was' accountable, of $2,915./70, which sum the decree directed the appellant to pay to divers persons therein named. The decree was soon thereafter properly served on appellant and a demand made upon him for payment of several of the sums decreed to be paid. He refused to pay and has continued since to neglect and refuse payment. A transcript of said decree was filed in the office of the clerk' of Rensselaer county, being the county where appellant [304]*304resided, and the same was docketed and execution issued to the sheriff against the property of appellant, which has since been returned wholly unsatisfied. Thereupon application was made to the surrogate of Rensselaer county for an order that appellant show cause before the Surrogate’s Court, on a day named, why he should not bo punished for contempt in disobeying the directions of the decree in refusing to pay the money. The affidavit on which the order to show cause was granted, states, in terms, that appellant willfully neglects to obey said order and decree.” On the return day of said order the appellant appeared and filed an affidavit stating, in substance, that his only reason for not complying with said decree was his inability to procure the money with which to make payment; and alleging that he has made diligent effort to obtain the money, but has failed; that if he had the means to pay with he would promptly pay, and pleads the impaired health of both himself and wife, and his necessary duty to her as her medical adviser, against the impending action of the Surrogate’s Court. The appellant also, in an additional affidavit, undertakes to explain why he is unable to pay, which is to the effect that the funds and money, which came into his hands as such executor, were lost by him in his private business in the year 1876. The appellant offered no proofs on the subject, relying alone upon his own uncorroborated affidavits to acquit himself of the charge of willful neglect to pay. Affidavits were also filed on the part of the relators, which tend to show that subsequent to the time when appellant claims to have lost the trust fund, and ou or about January 14, 1878, the appellant, through Emily S. Willis, his daughter, who served as the conduit, conveyed to his wife real estate of the value of over $15,000 for a consideration expressed of $3,800; that said real estate covered the business stand where appellant had for a long time been doing business in his own name, and where he has continued in possession, ostensibly carrying on the business the same as before said transfer, and under circumstances tending to show that the transfer of the real estate was a cover intended to protect the same against his creditors.

To this the appellant filed a further affidavit, in which he does not deny the transfer of the property to his wife, but insists that he is in possession as employe and servant of his wife, Catharine Snyder, and that said Catharine Snyder resides upon said premises [305]*305and has charge of and carries on the business in person, and has done so since she purchased the same in 1878; and by his said addi-’ tional affidavit, generally denies that the transfer to his wife was a fraud or cover, but alleges that he was indebted to his wife in the ■sum of '$3,300, to the Troy Savings Bank $2,500, which was a mortgage on the property, and $1,721.28 to one Henry Snyder, which his wife was to secure, making the total consideration of said transfer the sum of $7,521.28.

The appellant offered no proofs of the indebtedness to his wife or to Henry Snyder, nor any proof as to the value of the real estate conveyed to his wife, but chose to rely solely on his own affidavit. Thereupon, the surrogate made the order which is the subject of this appeal.

The said order, after reciting, among other things, that it appeared before him that the appellant willfully neglected to obey said decree or to pay the sum decreed to be paid, and that said William H. Snyder, executor as aforesaid, had committed the contempt with which he was charged, and this court now adjudging him to be guilty of the misconduct alleged, and that such misconduct was calculated to and did defeat, impair and impede the rights and remedies,” etc., provided that a fine of $1,525.20 be imposed upon "the appellant, and that he pay the same, together with the sum of twenty-five dollars costs, and stand committed to jail until he shall have paid said fine, etc., the sum of the fine being just the aggregate of the sums which he neglected to pay as in the decree directed. Hpon this state of facts I think the Surrogate’s Court was fully justified in making the order committing the appellant for contempt. 'The surrogate was not bound to accept the uncorroborated statements of the defaulting executor to the effest that he had no money at his command, or as to what had become of the trust funds. The fact that the funds came into his hands is undisputed. He is presumed to have them in his possession or under his control, and that presumption will continue until he satisfies the court that by some cause over which he has no control he has become unable to produce them or replace them.

The Code (§ 2552) makes a decree of the surrogate, directing •payment by an executor to a person interested in the estate, conclu.since evidence that there are sufficient assets in his hands to satisfy [306]*306the sum directed to be paid. (And see Seaman v. Duryea, 11 N. Y., 330, opinion of court.) The onus is upon him to show why it is that he cannot obey the decree. "When a trustee proposes to exonerate himself from the performance of a plain duty, he ought at least to make a plain showing of the reason why. Such is not the case here. The affidavits of appellant in answer to the order to show cause are vague and uncertain.

The first in order, while manifesting great respect for the court, and a willingness to make payment, simply protests his inability to pay. It states no facts showing how he came to the situation, or what became of his property; but simply that he has none. In the second affidavit he states that the money which came to his hands as executor wa.s lost in 1876 by bad results in his private business, without giving any detail of facts that would admit of any other person making a successful inquiry into the business to see how far he told the truth.

In the fifst two affidavits he lays stress upon the feeble health of his wife, who is so badly off that it would probably shorten her life if deprived of his society and medical attendance. Then, when an explanation seems pressing, in answer to affidavits filed by relators, his wife at once becomes capable of active personal attention to the grocery business; and his affidavit states “ that his wife has charge of, and carries on, the business in person, and has done so since she purchased the same in 1878.” The affidavit of the wife is not produced in corroboration of his statement, not even to corroborate the bona fides of the real estate transaction with her.

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Seaman v. . Duryea
11 N.Y. 324 (New York Court of Appeals, 1854)
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69 N.Y. 536 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
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89 N.Y. 1 (New York Court of Appeals, 1882)
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Bluebook (online)
41 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-snyder-nysupct-1884.