In re the Estate of Haight

5 Mills Surr. 376, 50 Misc. 238, 100 N.Y.S. 488
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1906
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Mills Surr. 376 (In re the Estate of Haight) 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 Haight, 5 Mills Surr. 376, 50 Misc. 238, 100 N.Y.S. 488 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Ostrander,

On September 14, 1898, letters of administration were issued out of the Saratoga Surrogate’s Court to Edward L. Haight, upon the estate of his father, Henry L. Haight. Petitioner was the surety upon the administrator’s bond, in the penal sum of $40,000. The heirs at law and next of kin of said deceased were his widow, Jane Haight, his daughter, Jennie E. Haight, now Jennie E. Murray, and his son, Edward J. Haight.

■Subsequently proceedings were taken by Jane Haight, on her petition filed March 18, 1901, to compel said administrator to render an account and to pay her distributive share of said estate, and such proceedings were had thereupon that an attachment was issued against said administrator, and he, having been fined for contempt, made his account, verified September 24, 1903, and filed the same October 14, 1903. From his account it appeared that the administrator had received $34,600.22 and that he had expended for proper charges against said estate, $3,433.94, leaving in his hands for distribution to those entitled [378]*378thereto, $31,166.28, being $10,388.76 to each of the next of kin.

November 9, 1903, Jane Haight made and acknowledged her release, under seal, to said administrator, admitting payment by the administrator to her of a balance of $2,000, and stating that such payment, together with previous payments, fully discharged said administrator from any further claims on her behalf and, on the same day, Jane Haight waived the issue and service of any citation to attend the final settlement of the ac■count of said- administrator, and consented that the same be allowed without notice to her. These papers were filed November 12, 1903.

No decree appears to have been made upon this account. The surety on the administrator’s official bond was not cited on this •proceeding.

On September 17, 1903, Jennie E. Haight signed, sealed, acknowledged and delivered to Edward L. Haight, as administrator of Henry L. Haight, a paper reading -as follows:

Received of Edward L. Haight, as administrator, &c., of the estate of Henry L. Haight, deceased, the sum of 1.00- in full payment, satisfaction and discharge of my share of the estate of said Henry L. Haight, deceased, and I hereby waive the service of any notice or citation "of the final judical settlement of the account of said Edward L. Haight as such administrator, and consent that the surrogate of Saratoga County, N. Y., proceed with the judicial settlement of the account of said administrator without the issuing or service upon me of any notice or citation.”

This paper was filed, with tht surrogate on November 12, 1903.

On Dtcember 1, 1904, Jennie- E. Murray filed a petition praying for a judicial settlement of the -account of the administrator and in which she alleges that she has received from said ■administrator payments in cash and real estate upon her dis[379]*379tributive share of said estate, about $5,200, and that there remains to be distributed to her of her said share about $4,000.

On this petition, citations were issued and served upon Jane Haight, upon the Fidelity & Deposit ’Company of Maryland, surety on the administrator’s bond, and upon the administrator.

On December 21, 1904, this proceeding was dismissed on application of the petitioner.

On January 21, 1905, Jennie E. Murray filed a verified petition referring to the account filed by said administrator on October 14, 1903, and reciting that she had received from said administrator payments upon her distributive share of said estate ■amounting to about $5,200, and that there remained to be distributed to her about $4,000, and praying for a decree directing the administrator to pay her claim.

The surety on the administrator’s bond was not cited on this proceeding.

The administrator did not file any answer to this petition, and on June 1, 1905, a decree was made by the surrogate reciting that it appears from the account filed October 14, 1903, and from the proofs taken on the proceeding in question that the administrator has received assets of said estate to the amount of $34,600.22, has expended for debts, funeral expenses and expenses of administration'$3,433.94, leaving still in the hands •of the administrator $31,166.28 to be distributed to those entitled thereto, and that petitioner is entitled to a one-third distributive share in said estate, Said decree further recited that it appears that the petitioner has received from the administrator, upon her distributive share, $3,300, and that a deed of certain realty executed March 12, 1900, by said Edward L. Haight to petitioner, recorded in Book of Deeds 250, page 330, for the expressed consideration of $4,000, was given by said Edward L. Haight and received by petitioner to secure the payment of her share or interest in the said estate and not as a payment on her distributive share. Said decree directed the administrator [380]*380to pay to said Jennie E. Murray $7,088.76, the balance of her distributive share.

This decree was docketed in Schenectady county, August 18, 1905.

An execution upon said decree was issued to the sheriff of Schenectady county on August 21, 1905. This execution was returned by said sheriff February 28, 1906, with the following indorsement thereon:

“ I have made the sum of four hundred fifty dollars part of the moneys directed to be made upon the within execution; and I find no goods or chattels, lands or tenements of the within Edward L. Haight in my county, whereof I can make the balance of the said execution.

“ Merritt Hammond,

" Sheriff”

About March 29, 1906, said Jennie E. Haight, now Jennie E. Murray, brought an action in the Supreme Court against the Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, the surety upon the official bond of the administrator, to recover $6,983.45, with interest thereon from February 26, 1906, being the amount claimed by her as the balance of her distributive share of the personal estate of said Henry L. Haight, deceased, after deducting the sum realized on the. said execution.

On April 20, 1906, said Fidelity & Deposit Company filed its petition in this court, in this proceeding, praying that said decree of June 1, 1905, be opened and set aside, and that petitioner be allowed to come in and be heard upon an accounting, and alleging that, unless said relief be granted, said petitioner will be compelled to pay large sums of money which are not honestly due and owing the plaintiff and for which said administrator should not be held liable.

Ho fraud or collusion between the administrator and the said Jennie E. Murray is alleged in the moving papers.

The petitioner, however, alleges the making and filing by [381]*381Jennie E. Murray of -the release which was filed November 12, 1903, above set forth; also the conveyance by said administrator to said Jennie E. Murray of the lands, for consideration expressed in said deed of $4,000, above referred to, and insists that these show payment, if not of the whole claim of said Jennie E. Murray for a distributive share of said estate, of at least $4,000 in excess of the amount with which the administrator was credited in the decree of June 1, 1905.

An answer to the proposition that the release discharged or was intended to discharge the administrator from any further payments to Mrs.

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Related

Townsend v. . Whitney
75 N.Y. 425 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)

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Bluebook (online)
5 Mills Surr. 376, 50 Misc. 238, 100 N.Y.S. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-haight-nysurct-1906.