In re the Application for Letters of Administration Upon the Estate of McGinness

13 Misc. 714, 35 N.Y.S. 820, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 241
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 13 Misc. 714 (In re the Application for Letters of Administration Upon the Estate of McGinness) 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 the Application for Letters of Administration Upon the Estate of McGinness, 13 Misc. 714, 35 N.Y.S. 820, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 241 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Silkman, S.

On May 11, 1895, one Amelia Sullivan filed a petition showing that she was a creditor of the decedent, Patrick J. McGHnness, late of the town of Westchester, in the county "of Westchester, and praying for a citation directed to all persons having a prior or equal right with the petitioner to show cause why a decree should not be made granting letters of administration to her. On that petition a citation was issued returnable on the 8th day of July, 1895. On the 10th [715]*715day of June, 1895, a petition was filed by Margrete Jane Fifer, a sister of decedent, praying for letters of administration.

Upon the return of the citation issued upon the creditor’s application, it was ordered that letters of administration issue to Margrete Jane Fifer upon the payment of the costs of Amelia Sullivan within ten days, and upon default letters of administration were directed to issue to said Amelia Sullivan. The costs were paid according to the terms of the order, and Margrete Jane Fifer now asks that letters of administration be issued to her.

The attention of the surrogate is now called to chapter 984 of the Laws of 1895, which became a law on June 6, 1895, and which purports to set off that part of the county of Westchester to the city of New York winch includes the town of Westchester, where the decedent resided and died.

It is provided by section 2479 of the Code of Civil Procedure that “ Where a new county has been heretofore or is hereafter erected or territory has been heretofore or is hereafter transferred from one county to another, the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court of each of the counties affected thereby to take the proof of a will or to grant letters depends upon the locality, when the petition is presented, of the place where the property of the decedent is situated, or where the event occurred, as the case may be, which determines jurisdiction.”

The section further provides that If before the erection of the new eounty, or the transfer of the territory, letters have been granted upon the ground that the decedent died or resided within the county, the Surrogate’s Court from which they Were issued has exclusive jurisdiction of the estate and of all matters incidental thereto.”

The section then provided for the certification of any paper filed, entered or recorded in the Surrogate’s Court where the decedent died or resided in a place embraced within another county, and for the filing, entering and recording of such certified copies in such other county with like effect as the originals.

[716]*716It is clear that the event referred to in the section is the event of death, and the death here occurred in the town of Westchester, which has been set off under the annexation act.

The language of the section is not well chosen, and there is some doubt as to the meaning of the words when the petition is presented,” whether the word “ when ” therein used ■refers to the date when a petition is filed, or the date when it is acted upon by the surrogate by the issuance of letters. The date of the filing would naturally be considered the meaning were it not for the sentence following the one in which such language is used, which is if before the erection of the new county, or the transfer of the territory, letters have been granted,” etc. This latter language compels us to assume that what the legislature meant by the use of the word “ when ” was the time the petition came before the surrogate upon the return of the citation and was acted upon by him by the issuance of letters.

Adopting this construction, the entire section is intelligent. It was evidently framed to fit such a case as the present one.

The original petition in this case was filed on May eleventh, before the passage of the act of the legislature referred to, and upon the return of the citation letters of administration could have been issued to any one having priority over the creditor without the ■ necessity of filing a new petition; the petition filed by Margrete Jane Fifer, therefore, may be disregarded.

The petition filed May eleventh was not, however, presented to the* surrogate for determination until the eighth day of July, when the citation was returnable, which date was after the passage of the annexation act. I am, therefore, of the opinion that this court is ousted of its jurisdiction unless it is found that the legislature clearly exceeded its constitutional power in transferring a part of the county of Westchester to the county of Mew York. The consideration of this constitutional question is fraught with embarrassment at .the very threshold. The issue has been tried in the Supreme Court by Justice Dvkmak, who has upheld the constitu- • [717]*717tionality of the law, and his decision has been affirmed by the General Term of this department. Under ordinary circumstances it would be incumbent upon this court to follow the decision of the General Term without, further consideration, were it not for the fact that the affirmance of the General Term was pro forma and without argument or consideration, and for the avowed purpose of hastening a determination by the court of last resort. The issue, therefore, stands substantially as if determined by Justice Dykhan alone, for whose opinion this court has great respect, but by whose judgment its conscience is not necessarily bound.

The consideration of the question is also embarrassed by the fact that in 1873 the legislature passed a somewhat similar act, annexing a part of Westchester county to Hew York county, the constitutionality of which does not seem ever to have been challenged. It was subsequently put beyond question by the amendments to the Constitution in 1874. However, bearing in mind the language of Owen, J., in State v. Pugh, 43 Ohio St. 98, where he says: “ When the unconstitutionality of an act is very clear to this court, it is clothed with no higher function — it is invested with no more exalted duty — than to say so with promptness. To surrender our convictions to a mere sentiment, or to an apprehension that it may seem an arrogant assumption of superior wisdom to declare a legislative enactment invalid, would be a weak disregard of a plain duty, as dangerous to the state as the void enactment itself,” and also the words of Justice Andrews in People ex rel. Carter v. Rice, 135 N. Y. 473: “ The legislature and the courts are alike bound to obey the Constitution, and if the legislature transgresses the fundamental law and oversteps in legislation the barriers of the Constitution, it is part of the liberties of the people that the judicial department shall have and exercise the power of protecting the Constitution itself against infringement,” I am bound to declare my conclusion that the legislature exceeded its power in changing the boundaries of the counties of Hew

[718]*718York and Westchester, and that it is sufficiently plain to warrant my doing so.

Counties as territorial divisions antedated the first Constitution of the state of ¡New York, adopted in 1777, and by that document were recognized and the legislature therein provided for was chosen from the several counties and districts (districts made up of different counties). The people through its patriotic representatives, the framers, surrendered to such legislature “ the supreme legislative power within this state.” This supreme power was subject to such restrictions as may be found in direct terms or by implication.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Misc. 714, 35 N.Y.S. 820, 70 N.Y. St. Rep. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-application-for-letters-of-administration-upon-the-estate-of-nysurct-1895.