In Re the Accounting of Segall

38 N.E.2d 126, 287 N.Y. 52, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1390
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 38 N.E.2d 126 (In Re the Accounting of Segall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Accounting of Segall, 38 N.E.2d 126, 287 N.Y. 52, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1390 (N.Y. 1941).

Opinion

Finch, J.

This litigation arises upon an objection by a claimant to the disallowance of his claim upon an accounting demanded by him and filed by the executors of the decedent’s estate.

The claimant loaned the decedent $2,500 in 1928. The loan was secured by a $2,500 bond and mortgage on real property. This debt had been reduced to $2,200 at the time of decedent’s death, and subsequent payments of *55 principal and interest made by the executors further reduced the amount to $1,850. It is for this that the claimant now claims against the estate.

The decedent died in February, 1930. Letters testamentary were issued in March, 1930, to the executors, namely, the widow, Clara Segall, and to the decedent’s son, Bernard Segall. The Surrogate has found that the executors settled the estate in December, 1930. The estate contained insufficient cash for the payment of debts and instead of selling the personalty and the real estate, the executors used money belonging to the widow, largely the proceeds of insurance policies, .and loaned by her to the estate to pay claims against the estate. For this purpose, the widow advanced $31,218.63 to the estate. Of this amount $16,291.80 has been returned to her from the personalty of the estate. The widow is the residuary legatee under the will and the decedent’s real property, valued at $16,489.83 by the Surrogate and the Appellate Division, passed to her.

In December, 1933, the executors and claimant arranged to transfer the lien of the second mortgage held by claimant to a different property. At' that time (three years after the assets had been distributed to the other creditors) claimant for the first time filed a notice of claim against the estate, based upon the new bond and mortgage. In 1937 the hen of the mortgage which had been taken in exchange was extinguished by foreclosure of a prior mortgage.

In May, 1938, the claimant commenced this proceeding to compel the executors to account. In answer the executors urged, inter alia, that an involved accounting was demanded and that an accounting might subsequently prove a needless expense to the estate if the creditor’s claim was ultimately disallowed upon the merits. Accordingly, it was stipulated between the parties that the claimant’s claim be tried upon the merits before the accounting was ordered. Pursuant to this stipulation a hearing was had at which the executors urged various defenses to the inherent validity *56 of the claim, such as usury, novation, discharge, and that the substitution of new security had discharged the debt since the executors cannot bind the estate by their executory contracts. After this hearing the Surrogate decided only that the claimant had made a sufficient showing as to the inherent validity of his claim entitling him to call upon the executors for an accounting. Such accounting was ordered. The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed this order upon appeal. (Matter of Segall, 257 App. Div. 965.)

In July, 1939, the executors filed their account. Claimant’s claim was rejected. .Accordingly claimant has filed objections. The Surrogate has determined that the decree in the preliminary hearing which adjudged that the petitioner has made a sufficient showing entitling him to call upon the executors for an accounting ” was res judicata as to the claimant’s claim against the estate. The Surrogate further found that “ when the widow-executrix undertook to pay decedent’s debts, she put herself in the place of creditors, and by ignoring Gottlieb’s claim made preference ” and that in accordance with such finding, claimant was entitled to share pro rata with the widow (as subrogee of the other creditors) in the distribution of the assets of the estate. The Surrogate also allowed the executors commissions and counsel fees. Claimant has taken no appeal to the Appellate Division from this order. Upon' appeal by the executors, the Appellate Division modified the order of the Surrogate by striking out the Surrogate’s direction for the payment of a pro rata dividend to the claimant and substituted a direction that the executors pay his claim in full and struck out the items of executors’ commissions and counsel fees which the Surrogate had allowed. The executors have appealed from this modification.

The first question to be decided upon this appeal is whether the decree in the preliminary proceeding was res judicata as to the establishment of the claim of respondent against the estate. The way the matter came before the Surrogate in this preliminary proceeding is important *57 as bearing on what the Surrogate did. The position of the executors was that an accounting would be expensive and that they should be saved this expense until the petitioner had shown that. he had a valid claim. The Surrogate adopted this view of the executors, and at the outset of the preliminary proceeding the parties stipulated that the merits of the claim be passed upon by the court and that if the claim was established it would follow that the claimant had a good and valid claim as a creditor against the estate and that at this stage of the proceeding an accounting will not be ordered. However, when the Surrogate came to make his decision, all that he decided was that the petitioner has made a sufficient showing entitling him to call upon the executors for an accounting.” This was the only question which was appealed to the Appellate Division rnd upon which they made their decision. Certainly in the consideration of that question the Appellate Division had to affirm the decision of the Surrogate as it would seem clear from the record that the claimant had made a sufficient showing on the preliminary hearing to call upon the executors for an accounting. The decision of the Surrogate, therefore, on this preliminary hearing was not res judicata as to the validity of the claim.

The second question involves the defenses upon which these executors now rely, namely, that the claimant having failed to file a timely notice of claim as required by sections 207 and 208 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, and the executors having completely distributed the estate, the claimant cannot recover upon his claim. (Surrogate’s Court Act, §§ 207, 208.) Section 207 of the Surrogate’s Court Act provides that whenever at death there is a contingent or unliquidated claim against the estate, or an outstanding bond upon which thé deceased shall have been principal, and on which at the time of his death the liability is still contingent or unliquidated, a claimant shall have the right to file with the executors on or before the day named in the notice an affidavit setting forth the facts upon which the unliquidated liability is based and the probable amount *58 thereof. If such notice is filed, then there shall be no distribution of the assets of the estate without the reservation of sufficient moneys to pay such unliquidated claim when the amount is finally determined. .

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.E.2d 126, 287 N.Y. 52, 1941 N.Y. LEXIS 1390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-segall-ny-1941.