In re the Estate of Atychides

26 Misc. 2d 898, 203 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2798
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 21, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 Misc. 2d 898 (In re the Estate of Atychides) 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 Estate of Atychides, 26 Misc. 2d 898, 203 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2798 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1960).

Opinion

S. Samuel Di Falco, S.

The petitioner in this proceeding to revoke letters of administration is in the somewhat unusual status of a potential defendant in a lawsuit, and it seeks the revocation of letters of administration for the purpose of forestalling the lawsuit at its very inception. The decedent, a nonresident alien, was a shipowner. He died in France. The petitioner is a corporation organized under the laws of the Republic of Panama, with its office and place of business in the Dominion of Canada. It is conceded that in 1951 the decedent and the petitioner entered into a charter party agreement for a vessel owned by the decedent. One of the provisions of the agreement was for the arbitration in New York of any dispute between the parties. It is also conceded that a New York corporation, Isbrandtsen Company, Inc., which has its principal office in the County of New York, guaranteed in writing the petitioner’s performance of the agreement.

[899]*899The Public Administrator of the County of New York applied for and obtained letters of administration on the estate of the decedent. His petition alleged that the decedent was a nonresident alien who died outside the State, leaving property within the County of New York. The petition explicitly refers to a claim for approximately $35,000 against Isbrandtsen Company, Inc.

The petitioner urges several reasons for the revocation of letters. Counsel agreed to submit to the court preliminarily the question of law, whether this court had jurisdiction to issue letters of administration upon this estate. In connection with the submission of this question, all parties concede the making of the charter party agreement and the guarantee in the forms annexed to the petition herein as Exhibit A.

It is also conceded by the parties that the Public Administrator has asserted claims which allegedly arise out of the charter party agreement, that the petitioner has refused to arbitrate the dispute, and that the administrator instituted a proceeding in the United States District Court to compel the petitioner to arbitrate the claims. An attack was made upon the administrator’s status and the Federal court proceeding is being held pending the outcome of the proceedings in this court.

“ Jurisdiction is a matter of power ” (Holmes, J. in Lamar v. United States, 240 U. S. 60, 64), and when we speak of jurisdiction over a decedent’s estate as between one State or country and another we mean such power to deal with particular assets as that State or country is able to enforce or such authority as other States and nations generally are willing to concede as residing in the State which asserts jurisdiction. “ The existence and extent of jurisdiction thus depend rather on what the other states concede than on what the state in question claims.” (2 Page, Wills [Lifetime ed.], § 559.) The result is that States and nations have come to recognize certain principles of jurisdiction over decedent’s estates and to recognize the authority of one State or another to act in particular circumstances. With respect to appointment, the rule stated in the Eestatement of Conflict of Laws is that an administrator may be appointed by a competent court of a State where the decedent was domiciled at the time of his death or a State “ where there are assets of the decedent at the time of the death of the decedent or at the time of the appointment of the administrator ”, or a State where there is jurisdiction of the person or property of a person alleged to have killed the decedent by wrongful act (§ 467).

Section 45 of the Surrogate’s Court Act is not intended as an assertion by the State of New York of jurisdiction as against [900]*900other States or nations, nor is it intended as a limitation of authority which other States regard it as possessing. It represents rather a parceling of its recognized authority among its own courts so that some have power to act in certain circumstances and other courts in other circumstances. Section 45 states the instances in which one court has exclusive jurisdiction and section 46, those in which courts may initially have concurrent jurisdiction. Section 47 defines the situs of a debt for the purpose of determining jurisdiction as prescribed in the two preceding sections. It will be noted that the terms of these statutes follow the general rules governing jurisdiction and attempt to confer on the individual courts only the broad general jurisdiction generally regarded as possessed by the State itself. We may, therefore, in discussing the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court of New York County, consider the authorities which deal with jurisdiction over administrators in general.

Professor Beale’s treatise on the Conflict of Laws contains an excellent discussion of the question of jurisdiction to appoint an administrator in the State where the debtor resides. He says:

“A simple contract debt is ordinarily said to be assets at the domicil of the debtor; and if after the death of the creditor the debtor changes his domicil, the debt becomes assets at the new domicil of the debtor. This does not mean that in the eye of the law the title to the chose in action vests in the administrator at the domicil of the debtor; if so, it would give no ground for a new appointment after a change of domicil. What we mean by saying that a debt is assets at the domicil of the debtor is that the existence of the debt is sufficient cause for the appointment. The word assets, as early used by the courts of probate, is the Norman French ‘ assetz,’ the modern French 1 assez, ’ meaning sufficient, enough.
‘ ‘ Since a debtor to the estate can only be compelled to pay by some court which has jurisdiction over him, and since no administrator may sue except in a court of the state which appointed him, it is obvious that if the debt is to be collected it must be possible to have an administrator appointed in that state. The one state where a jurisdiction over a person may be obtained is the state of his domicil. An administrator may therefore always be appointed at the domicil of a debtor to the estate, even if the debtor moved into the state after the death of the creditor. All necessary for the appointment is the mere allegation of a debtor in the state; for the truth of the allegation can be tried only when the alleged debtor is a party. ’ ’ (Vol. 3, pp. 1452-1453.)

In a case where the debtor is not domiciled within the State where the appointment is sought but is merely temporarily [901]*901present there, the authorities are not in complete agreement on the matter of appointing an administrator. As Professor Beale points out, “it is not a question of jurisdiction in the international sense ”, for if such an appointment were made, other jurisdictions would recognize it and afford a defense to further suit on the claim prosecuted by that administrator (ibid, § 467.4). In the absence of a statutory provision, the common-law doctrines of conflict of laws apply, and would seem to call for a refusal to appoint an administrator where the debtor was only temporarily within that State (ibid, p. 1454). In New York, the General Term of the Supreme Court upheld the authority of a Surrogate to appoint an ancillary administrator of a nonresident intestate when the only apparent asset in the county was a cause of action against a North Carolina debtor who was temporarily in New York. (Fox v. Carr,

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Bluebook (online)
26 Misc. 2d 898, 203 N.Y.S.2d 677, 1960 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-atychides-nysurct-1960.