In re the Estate of Humpfner

166 Misc. 672, 3 N.Y.S.2d 143, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1399
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1938
StatusPublished

This text of 166 Misc. 672 (In re the Estate of Humpfner) 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 Humpfner, 166 Misc. 672, 3 N.Y.S.2d 143, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1399 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Aulisi, S.

This is an application to make the American Surety Company a party to certain proceedings relating to the opening of the decree of this court entered on February 6, 1935, which judicially settled the accounts of the administrator.

Adolph Humpfner died intestate on October 12, 1932, and Harry V. Berry was duly appointed administrator on December 30, 1932. The American Surety Company of New York executed and filed two separate official bonds for said administrator, one in the sum of $40,000 and one in the sum of $35,000. On June 20, 1934, the administrator filed a petition for a voluntary judicial settlement of his accounts. All necessary parties including the surety were duly cited. Subsequent to the filing of said account and on February 4, 1935, the administrator filed a supplemental account crediting the estate with additional savings accounts, not included in the original account, amounting to about $25,000.

On February 6, 1935, a decree was made and entered adjudicating the accounts of the administrator and among other things, provided:

“ Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed, that the said administrator Harry V. Berry pay out to the said Anna Nusser and Theresa Mueller the said balance remaining on hand, to wit: The sum of $6,112.94, as follows:
To Anna Nusser the sum of........................ $3,061.47
To Theresa Mueller the sum of..................... $3,061.47
“ And it further is Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed, that the said administrator H. V. Berry also deliver over to the said Anna Nusser and Theresa Mueller, the property remaining undisposed of and mentioned and decreed in Schedule B of the account of proceedings and Supplemental Account of Proceedings herein in the amount of $31,759.08, decreed as follows: ”

There follows a schedule of the property and assets above referred to and directed to be turned over in kind to the sister distributees. The decree then recited:

“ And it is further Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed, that upon making the payments aforesaid and filing with this court also receipts showing payment thereof and upon complying with the foregoing provisions of this decree that the said Harry V. Berry as such administrator and the American Surety Company of New York as surety upon his bond, be and they are hereby released and discharged from all responsibility herein.”

[675]*675Anna Nusser and Theresa Mueller were sisters of the decedent and the only known distributees when the aforesaid decree was entered. They resided in Germany and on a trip there in April, 1933, the administrator obtained a power of attorney from them. Mr. Berry, the administrator, on April 8, 1935, filed with this court a receipt and release from himself as attorney in fact for the sisters to himself as administrator.

Thereafter and on May 20, 1935, said two sisters of the decedent presented to this court their petition charging misconduct a :d fraud on the part of the administrator. Said petition set forth that the administrator had purchased the interest of the sisters in the estate on November 26, 1934, for the sum of $25,750.80. A substantial portion of this amount had been advanced to the sisters and the administrator credited himself with the payment thereof in his account. The estate was valued at more than $100,000. The fact that the administrator had purchased the interest of the sisters was not disclosed to this court prior to May 20, 1935.

The sisters asked ihat the decree of February 6, 1935, be vacated and set aside. An order to show cause was granted and on July 11, 1935, and subsequent to the return date of said order, on stipulation of the attorneys for the administrator and the attorneys for the said sisters, an order was made and entered opening the said decree, declaring the same inoperative and ineffective against the said sisters and not binding upon them. The order also directed the administrator to make and file on or before July 29, 1935, a new, full, complete and correct account of his proceedings and providing that the attorneys for the petitioners have twenty days after receipt of such account within which to file objections thereto. No notice was given to the American Surety Company upon the petition of the sisters to vacate and set aside the decree above mentioned nor was any notice given it of the order of July 11, 1935.

Helen Haas Humpfner, who had been judicially declared dead, was found by the administrator during the first week of August, 1935, presented to this court her petition on August 7, 1935, asking that she be declared the lawful widow of the decedent and entitled to take and share in his estate, and vacating and setting aside as to her the said decree of February 6, 1935, and all other proceedings, adjudications and judicial determinations made prior thereto. Of this application the American Surety Company had due notice and this court made and entered an order on October 21, 1935, granting the petitioner the relief asked.

[676]*676On September 25, 1935, the administrator filed a new account to which objections were filed by the sisters of the decedent on November 14, 1935. The issues raised were duly referred to a referee on November 14,1935, and said referee after taking nearly one thousand pages of testimony made his report on November 20, 1936, sustaining many of the objections and recommended that the administrator be surcharged with certain items amounting in excess of $10,000. The matter of confirmation of the referee’s report and of the vacating of certain ex parte orders came before this court on order to show cause dated February 11, 1937, and this court rendered its decision on May 24, 1937 (Matter of Humpfner, 163 Misc. 91), confirming said report and opening the ex parte orders referred to therein. No notice of the application for the confirmation of the referee’s report was given to the American Surety Company and no decree has been entered upon aforesaid decision of this court.'

In view of the importance of the question involved, the facts have been stated somewhat in detail.

The American Surety Company contends that it was released from the obligations of its suretyship by the decree of February 6, 1935, and that not having had any notice of the application of the sisters to open and vacate said decree, it cannot now be brought in and made a party to the pending proceedings.

With this contention I am not in accord.

The statute provides that every administrator shall, before receiving letters of administration, execute a bond with sureties, to be approved by the surrogate, conditioned that he will faithfully discharge the trust reposed in him as such and obey all lawful decrees and orders of the Surrogate’s Court touching the administration of the estate committed to him. (Surr. Ct. Act, § 121.) The bond here was voluntarily executed by the administrator and the American Surety Company and the surety having been duly cited upon the administrator’s account of June 20, 1934, it was bound by the decree of February 6, 1935. The administrator did not carry out the terms of the decree as directed by this court. He never paid any money or turned over any property to the sisters distributees;

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Bluebook (online)
166 Misc. 672, 3 N.Y.S.2d 143, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1399, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-humpfner-nysurct-1938.