In re the Compulsory Accounting of Irvin

87 A.D. 466
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 87 A.D. 466 (In re the Compulsory Accounting of Irvin) 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 the Compulsory Accounting of Irvin, 87 A.D. 466 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

Patterson, J.:

This appeal is from a decree of the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Hew York settling the accounts of MaryM. Irvin, surviving executrix of the last will and testament of Richard Irvin, Jr. and adjudging that the said Mary M. Irvin, as such' surviving executrix, and the estate of the said Richard Irvin, Jr., “ be and the same are hereby discharged and freed of and from all responsibility, liability or accountability to the said- Mary I. Smith, the contestant herein, on account of the acts and doings of the said Richard Irvin, Junior, as executor of the said Alexander P. Irvin, deceased, as to all matters embraced in the account filed herein; ” and it was further adjudged that Mary M. Irvin, as surviving executrix, recover costs against Mary I. Smith.

The account was filed pursuant to the requirement of an order made by the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Hew York, affirmed on appeal by this court. (Matter of Irvin, 68 App. Div. 158.) The proceeding was instituted under section 2606 of the Code of Civil Procedure by Mary I. Smith, the daughter of Alexander P. Irvin, to compel the executrix of Richard Irvin, Jr., the executor of the will of Alexander P. Irvin, deceased, to render an account of the acts and proceedings of the said Richard Irvin, Jr., during [468]*468his executorship, he having died without having ever rendered an account of such proceedings. The following material facts, among others, appear in the record:

Alexander P. Irvin died on the 25th day of November, 1884. His will was admitted to probate in January, 1885. Letters testamentary were issued in that month to Richard Irvin, Jr., one of the persons named in the will as executor. Richard Irvin, Jr., died in March, 1896, leaving a last will and testament. He appointed Daniel Lord, since deceased, and Mary M. Irvin the executor and ■executrix of his will. In August, 1900, Mary I. Smith presented her petition to the surrogate of the county of New York, praying that Mary M. Irvin, executrix, file account of the executorship of Richard Irvin, Jr., which was done, and is the account now under ■consideration. Objections were filed to that account by the petitioner, and such account and objections were referred by the Surrogate’s Court to a referee 'to pass upon the same. Some of the ■objections were abandoned and others were overruled by the referee, who made a report containing specific findings of fact and his conclusions of law thereupon. Hpon motion the report of the referee was confirmed by the Surrogate’s Court, except as to two technical matters which do not require, consideration. The appeal taken by the petitioner is from the whole of the surrogate’s decree, with the exception of so much of it as relates to the technical matters. The account as rendered by the accounting party contains only a statement of receipts and disbursements made by Richard Irvin, Jr.., executor, and it does not appear that as to specific items it was in any respect falsified; but the petitioner sought to surcharge the account and to impose upon Richard Irvin, Jr., executor, a liability for an asset of the estate of Alexander P. Irvin, consisting of an uncollected interest of the testator in a copartnership firm of which he was a member, and it was insisted that the executor not having accounted therefor the liability to account rested upon the executrix of the executor. The question was- raised by an objection to the account in the following words: “ For a further and separate objection to said account, this petitioner, by her attorney, A. Coleman Smith, alleges, upon information and belief that the testator, Alexander P. Irvin, was, in his lifetime, a member of the firm of Richard Irvin & Company, of which his executor, Richard Irvin, was also a [469]*469member, and as such member, said testator was entitled to a share in the said firm’s assets, and it does not appear by said account that he ever was a member of said firm or that his interests in said firm, of Richard Irvin & Company has ever been liquidated.”

The substance of this objection is that the executrix of the will of Richard Irvin, Jr., had omitted from the account an asset of the estate of Alexander P. Irvin, for which his executor was accountable. In this connection these facts appeared before the referee, namely : Alexander P. Irvin was a member of a firm transacting business in the city of Hew York. That firm was composed of Richard Irvin, Sr., Alexander P. Irvin and Richard Irvin, Jr. Shortly after the death of Alexander P. Irvin the books of the copartnership were written up by the surviving partners, who stated the account of the deceased partner with the firm; and it appeared before the referee that Alexander P. Irvin was credited on-the books with a balance of profits of some $80,000, but at the same time he was charged with an alleged loss on “profit & loss” account of something over $170,000. The contestant offered, in substance, to prove, from the books of account of the copartnership, that this credit charge was arbitrarily made; that the surviving partners, one of whom was Richard Irvin, Jr. (executor), had written off, at merely nominal rates, securities belonging to the firm ; that they retained such securities, which subsequently rose greatly in value, and that the surviving partners have realized large sums of money from the sale thereof. The learned referee refused to take this evidence, placing his ruling upon the ground, not that it was an improper subject of inquiry on the accounting, but that by the copartnership articles it was left to Mr. Richard Irvin, Sr., to liquidate the affairs of the copartnership upon the death of any one of its members; and that there being no proof of fraud in connection with the matter, the transaction could not be inquired into.

The copartnership articles were in evidence, and by the 5th paragraph thereof it is provided that in case of the death of either of the partners, other than Richard Irvin, Sr.,, the firm should continue, “ and the interest or balance belonging to the deceased at the time of his death shall be stated by the surviving partners and paid .over to the representatives of the deceased as it shall be realized.” We do not find in this provision, nor in any of the terms of the contract [470]*470of copartnership, that it was left absolutely to'Richard Irvin, Sr., to determine or state what-interest in the firm assets should belong to Alexander P. Irvin. That was to be determined, in the event of the' death of one partner, by the surviving partners, and the interest of the deceased partner was to be paid over to his representatives as it should be realized; and the same provisions wére to apply if a partner withdrew at the end of any year. By the contract it was only in case of the dissolution of the partnership in some other way that the business should remain in the hands and under the control of Richard Irvin, Sr., to settle the affairs of the concern. It is not to be questioned that if. Richard Irvin, Jr., had been the sole surviving partner, his action in arbitrarily taking over to himself, as surviving partner, the securities- of the firm at prices fixed by himself, could be the subject of judicial Inquiry in a properly constituted proceeding. (Matter of Myers, 131 N. Y. 414.)

Richard Irvin, Jr., became a trustee of the interest of his deceased brother in the firm-. (Hooley v. Gieve, 9 Daly, 104; affd., 82 N. Y. 625.) After the.

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