In re the Estate of Haigh

125 Misc. 365, 211 N.Y.S. 521, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 956
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 3, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 125 Misc. 365 (In re the Estate of Haigh) 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 Haigh, 125 Misc. 365, 211 N.Y.S. 521, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 956 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Foley, S.:

This is a motion to remit the' referee’s report for the purpose of taking additional testimony and making additional findings on issues raised by the objections to the account. The motion is granted. The referee has held that the Surrogate’s Court is without jurisdiction to pass on the issues raised.

Hartley Haigh, 2d, died leaving a will which was probated. His wife, Annie Haigh, was sole executrix and legatee thereunder. About four years, later Annie Haigh died testate. After making certain bequests of jewelry she bequeathed to Hartley Haigh, Fourth, all such property, real and personal, as may come to me from the estate of Hartley Haigh, First, through the Will of my late husband, Hartley Haigh, Second, together with all my household effects and consumable stores.” The remainder of her estate she gave to her brother and sisters. She had never accounted as executrix of her husband’s estate.

The Irving Bank-Columbia Trust Company qualified as her executor, and shortly thereafter it was appointed administrator c. t. a. under the will of Hartley Haigh, 2d. The contestants objected to the account on the ground that all the debts having been paid, there were no unadministered assets, and that the property accounted for was not. the property of the estate of Hartley Haigh, 2d.

The referee has refused to pass on the objections raised because (1) the objectors (the beneficiaries of Annie |Iaigh’s estate) are not necessary or proper parties, and (2) because this court is without jurisdiction to determine as between the accounting administrator c. t. a. and the objectors, the ownership of the disputed assets.

These conclusions of the learned referee are incorrect. As to the first ground, the accounting party is the representative of both Hartley’s and Annie’s estates, and all the legatees under Annie’s will are necessary parties to this accounting proceeding. Since the accounting administrator c. t. a. and the executor of the deceased sole beneficiary (who was also the executrix of the estate) is the same person, the decree herein would not be binding upon the persons interested in Annie Haigh’s estate unless they were cited. (Fisher v. Banta, 66 N. Y. 468.) The opinion in Fisher [367]*367v. Banta (supra) distinctly held that the representative of an estate cannot account to himself alone as the representative of the estate of a deceased beneficiary. In such cases it has been the rule since the rendition of that decision that the persons interested in the deceased beneficiary’s estate must be cited, otherwise the decree is not conclusive upon them. Such has been the established procedure of this court followed without exception by the various surrogates. The point has seldom been raised on the trial of the issues of an accounting because the directions of the surrogates have been complied with at the very beginning of the proceeding and a citation has been required to be issued to such persons at that time. It has, however, been the subject of several decisions. (Matter of Wetmore, N. Y. L. J. July 15, 1919; Jessup-Redfield Surr. [1925 ed.], 162; Matter of Zimmerman, 104 Mise. 516.) The eleventh conclusion of the referee’s report is, therefore, improper.

As to the second ground, the referee undoubtedly had power to pass on the objections as to what property the administrator c. t. a. was chargeable with. The referee should determine the specific assets and funds which constituted part of the Hartley Haigh, 2d, estate in the administrator’s possession. He should likewise determine as between the two estates what property belonged to the estate of Annie Haigh. Complete jurisdiction both legal and equitable is vested under the provisions of section 40 of the Surrogate’s Court Act in the surrogate on accounting proceedings. The provisions of that section were further broadened by the amendment made in 1921. That statutory change overcame the effect of such decisions as Matter of Mondshain (186 App. Div. 528) and Matter of Holzworth (166 id. 150; affd., 215 N. Y. 700), which limited the grant of power contained in the opening paragraph of section 40 to the specific proceedings enumerated thereafter in that section. The cases cited in support of the referee’s conclusions that this court lacked jurisdiction have no application to the question here. They may be grouped into two classes: First, those relating to discovery proceedings, such as Matter of Mondshain (supra) or Matter of Heinze (224 N. Y. 1). In discovery proceedings the jurisdiction of this court has never been as broad as in accountings. Second, the class of cases which arose under the obsolete sections of the Code of Civil Procedure. Without exception the more recent cases have sustained the general jurisdiction of this court upon accountings. Thus in Matter of Coombs (185 App. Div. 312) it was held that the surrogate had jurisdiction upon the judicial settlement of an estate to hear and determine a rejected claim that the testator at his death had property which [368]*368he was obligated to transmit by his will to the claimant. In Matter of Aldrich (194 App. Div. 815) it was held that the surrogate had jurisdiction under former section 2510 of the Code of Civil Procedure, now section 40 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, on an accounting of an executor to determine the title to certain moneys realized from the sale of corporate stock which testator had borrowed from his mother, converted to his own use, and the proceeds of which were returned to his executors. Again in Matter of Miller (208 App. Div. 481) the jurisdiction of the surrogate to determine whether certain shares of stock belonged to the executors or to the individual beneficiaries by transfer from the testator in his lifetime appears to have been conceded. Concentration of jurisdiction as to decedents’ estates has been the purpose and result of successive legislation and judicial decisions. (See, also, Matter of Malcomson, 188 App. Div. 600; Matter of Van Buren v. Estate of Decker, 204 id. 138; Matter of Mount. Vernon Trust Co., 175 id. 353; Matter of Hoffman, 108 Misc. 612; Matter of Brady, 111 id. 492; Matter of Watson, 215 N. Y. 209.)

Fribourg v. Emigrants Industrial Savings Bank (168 App. Div. 816), relied upon by the referee, has no application to the facts of this case. The action there was between the claimant to the bank account, the bank and the estate. The Appellate Division simply held that the action brought by the claimant against the bank and the representative of the estate was maintainable and that the prior decree on accounting was not conclusive. The weight of that decision, as an authority, has been greatly weakened, if not nullified, by the subsequent decisions cited above by me and by the amendments to the Code of Civil Procedure embodied in the Surrogate’s Court Act.

The dispute in the present accounting does not arise between a third party and a claimant who asserts title to certain estate property, but the real contention is between two estates, in which letters have been issued out of this court. The surrogate has express jurisdiction under the provisions of section 40, Surrogate’s Court Act, to direct and control the conduct and settle the accounts of executors and administrators. It became necessary in the present proceeding to determine what assets were actually included in the estate of Hartley Haigh, 2d, the testator here.

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Bluebook (online)
125 Misc. 365, 211 N.Y.S. 521, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-haigh-nysurct-1925.