In re the Estate of Hammer

33 Misc. 2d 674
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 1962
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 Misc. 2d 674 (In re the Estate of Hammer) 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 Hammer, 33 Misc. 2d 674 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1962).

Opinion

Joseph A. Cox, S.

The testator bequeathed certain personalty to his widow and the residue of his estate to a trust company as trustee under a deed of trust which the testator had executed immediately prior to the execution of his will. Letters testamentary have issued to the widow and she has petitioned for the settlement of an intermediate account of her proceeding’s as executrix. Objections to such account have been interposed by the trust company, as residuary legatee, and hearings upon such objections have been conducted.

A judicial construction of the testator’s will has not been obtained and none now is requested. It is recognized in this proceeding that the trust company is entitled to receive the [675]*675residuary estate and that payment will he made to the trust company as trustee of the inter vivos trust. The direction in this will seems to be quite analagous to the testamentary provision considered in Matter of Ivie (4 N Y 2d 178) wherein the will provision was upheld and particular reliance was had upon Matter of Rausch (258 N. Y. 327). In the Rausch opinion the court said (p. 331): What is taken as trustee is taken subject to the trust, for it can be held no other way. A gift to a trust company as trustee of a trust created by a particular deed identifies the trust in describing the trustee, like a gift to a corporation for the uses stated in its charter. * * * The legacy when given was not the declaration of a trust, but the enlargement of the subject-matter of a trust declared already”.

On the date of the testator’s death, August 10, 1957, he was the owner of real property which has been referred to in this proceeding as the Montauk Chalet. There was a mortgage lien on such property in the amount of $190,000 upon which the testator had prepaid interest to October, 1960. In 1958 there was pending in the Supreme Court, New York County, an action which had been instituted by the executrix against an individual and a corporation for an accounting of the management of this real property. The individual defendant in that action was the person who held the $190,000 mortgage and, in December, 1958, an agreement was reached between the executrix and the individual defendant for the settlement of the action. One of the terms of this settlement provided that the $190,000 mortgag-e would be assigned to the testator’s widow at the discounted amount of $140,000. In March, 1959 the widow submitted to the Supreme Court an affidavit in which reference to the settlement was made and it was represented that the estate lacked funds to meet a principal payment of $50,000 which would become due on this mortgage on October 1, 1960, that the widow, using her personal funds, was talcing the assignment of mortgage in her individual capacity at the request of the children of the testator and with the full consent of .such children and that the benefits to the estate would be (1) relief from the obligation to pay $50,000 in reduction of mortgage principal (2) the preservation of the property from a foreclosure which could result from a default in making the $50,000 payment (3) a voluntary reduction by the widow of the principal amount of the mortgage from $190,000 to $165,000 (4) an extension of the mortgage for five years beyond its original due date (5) an arrangement for quarterly payments of $2,250 on account of interest and principal and (6) the placing of the estate in a liquid position to meet funeral expenses, cost of administration and creditors’ claims. [676]*676The affidavit did not represent that the plaintiff executrix had obtained any approval by the Surrogate of this proposal to rewrite the terms of the mortgage and to make it her personal asset, and in fact, such approval had not been obtained. The affidavit did list the names and addresses of the heirs and next of kin of the testator. Such persons, the children of the testator, are not mentioned in the testator’s will, although they may ultimately acquire benefits under the inter vivos trust which is mentioned in the will. The affidavit further stated that the trust company which is the residuary legatee under the will, although not described as such in the affidavit, renounced its right to appointment as executor and had not ‘ ‘ qualified under the Banking Law of New York as a Trustee ” but had asserted a claim against the estate for $10,000. A casual reading of this reference to the trust company could convey an implication that its only position in the estate was that of a creditor. On March 24, 1959 the Supreme Court made a short order which recited a stipulation of discontinuance and the affidavit of the widow and approved the settlement.

The settlement, insofar as the mortgage assignment was involved, was made by delivery to the mortgagee of an estate check in the amount of $40,000 (dated December 26, 1958 long prior to the request for court approval of the settlement), the delivery of another estate check in the amount of $25,000, the payment from estate funds of a further amount of $2,555.59 and the payment of $72,444.41 by the widow. Of the total payment of $140,000 required to place the mortgage in the name of the widow, the contribution by the estate was $67,555.59. Of the payment made by the widow, the sum of $20,000 was advanced by the attorney who represents the executrix in this proceeding.

The account of the executrix states that she is willing to grant the estate a voluntary reduction of the mortgage principal from $190,000 to $165,000. The residuary legatee contends that the estate’s liability on the mortgage is only $140,000, the amount for which it was assigned by the original mortgagee. The executrix meets this objection with the assertions that the order of the Supreme Court constituted a full approval of her purchase of the mortgage, that such approval is binding oh the residuary legatee, which was not a party to the Supreme Court action, and that the Supreme Court order is binding upon this court in this proceeding for the judicial settlement of the account of the executrix.

The order of the Supreme Court does not shield the executrix from an inquiry into her administration of this estate and this [677]*677mortgage. Assuming that an order obtained in the Supreme Court'would afford the protection which the executrix claims, the fact is that the order approved an arrangement under which, in conformity with the representation to the court, the mortgage assignment was to be procured by the use of the personal funds of the widow but the fact was that the assignment was accomplished by use of a substantial amount of estate assets and, for such reason alone, the settlement actually effectuated was not the settlement approved by the Supreme Court. It seems beyond argument that, having obtained court approval upon a representation that funds of the estate were not to be involved, the executrix, under the shield of court approval, was not privileged to alter the terms of the settlement and, lacking the financial ability to complete the deal, avail herself of estate funds for her personal benefit. The transaction as it ultimately evolved was not at all the transaction which had been approved by the Supreme Court and such completely different transaction cannot be said to have court approval.

The executrix could have obtained protection by an application pursuant to section 213 of the Surrogate’s Court Act and approval procured under that statute would be subject to attack only upon the ground that the debt had been fraudulently compromised.

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Related

In re the Estate of Murphy
70 Misc. 2d 516 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1972)

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Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 2d 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-hammer-nysurct-1962.