In re the Estate of Killough

148 Misc. 73, 265 N.Y.S. 301, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1610
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 13, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 148 Misc. 73 (In re the Estate of Killough) 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 Killough, 148 Misc. 73, 265 N.Y.S. 301, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1610 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1933).

Opinion

Wingate, S.

The Supreme Court of Wisconsin has aptly said: That field of law which goes by the name of the conflict of laws is one of the most thorny and difficult fields to traverse. It is full of conflicting decisions, refined reasoning, and unsatisfactory results.” (Northwestern Mut. L. Ins. Co. v. Adams, 155 Wis. 335, 337.)

The truth of this statement was never better illustrated than in the facts of the case at bar, in which this court is faced by the unpleasant necessity of refusing to follow a decision either of the Appellate Division for the Second or of that for the Fourth Department, since these illustrious tribunals have reached diametrically opposing results on states of fact legally indistinguishable from those of the case at bar.

The decision in this department is Clough v. Gardiner (111 Misc. 244), written by Mr. Justice Kapper, now a member of the Appellate Division, and unanimously affirmed (194 App. Div. 923) upon the opinion of the trial court. The diverse result was reached by the Fourth Department in Domres v. Storms (236 App. Div. 630) by a majority opinion, Mr. Justice Edgcomb registering a vigorous dissent.

The issue at bar arises upon a motion to dismiss, with the result, under the practice prevailing in this State, that the facts must be viewed as upon a demurrer. (Matter of Kirkman, 143 Misc. 342, 343; Matter of Duggan, 146 id. 596, 597.) Thus viewed, the pertinent considerations upon which decision must be based are as follows: The present testator, Walter H. D. Killough, and the claimant, Dr. Mary E. Potter, were domiciled citizens of the State of New York possessing no property or status in the State of Vermont. On July 31, 1929, they were driving in decedent’s automobile in the latter State. Dr. Potter was a passenger and Mr. Killough was driving. Through the gross negligence of the latter, the car was wrecked, he was killed, and Dr. Potter sustained physical injuries for which she has filed a claim against Mr. Killough’s estate in the sum of $100,000.

At the time of the occurrence the statutes of Vermont provided: The owner or operator of a motor vehicle shall not be liable in damages for injuries received by any occupant of the same occasioned by reason of the operation of said vehicle * * * causes such injuries are caused by the gross or willful negligence of the operator.” (Vermont Laws of 1929, chap. 78.)

Sections 3310 and 3311 (Vermont Laws of 1917), so far as presently pertinent, read :

“ Sec. 3310. Actions for bodily hurt surviving, when. If in an action for the recovery of damages for a bodily hurt or injury, [75]*75occasioned to the plaintiff by the act or default of the defendant or defendants, either party dies during the pendency of such action, the action shall survive and may be prosecuted to final judgment by or against the executors or administrators of such deceased party. * * *
“ Sec. 3311. Survival of causes of action. The causes of action mentioned in the two preceding sections shall survive; and the actions may be commenced and prosecuted, or, when commenced in the lifetime of the deceased, may be prosecuted by or against the executor or administrator, where by law that mode of prosecution is authorized.”

Although it is conceded that had the events hereinbefore recited occurred within the State of New York, the claimant would be without remedy, it will promote clarity in the consideration of the problem, if the basis and scope of the laws of this State in this regard be reviewed.

New York is a common-law State, article XXXY of the Constitution of 1777 continuing in force the portions of the law which were in existence on April 19, 1775. This constitutional enactment has been consistently maintained through the various subsequent constitutional revisions and is to be found in section 16 of article I of the present Constitution.

At common law, originally, all actions arising ex delicto died with the person by whom or to whom the wrong was done. Thus, when the action was founded on any malfeasance, or misfeasance, was a tort, or arose ex delicto, such as trespass for taking goods, etc., trover, false imprisonment, assault and battery, slander, deceit, diverting a watercourse, obstructing lights, escape, and many other cases of the like kind, where the declaration imputes a tort done either to the person or property of another, and the plea must be 1 not guilty/ the rule was ‘ actio personalis moritur cum persona.’ ” (Hegerich v. Keddie, 99 N. Y. 258, 259.)

The genesis of this rule of law is frequently attributed to a statute of Edward I. This conception, however, appears erroneous, since the only enactments during the reign of that monarch which even remotely relate to the question, are found in chapters XIX and XXIII of the statutes of 13 Edward I, enacted in 1285, the former reading: “ Whereas after the Death of a person dying intestate, which is bounden to some other for Debt, the goods come to the Ordinary to be disposed; the Ordinary from henceforth shall be bound to answer the Debts as far forth as the Goods of the Dead will extend, in such sort as the Executors of the same Party should have been bounden, if he had made a testament,” and the latter giving the right to sue on contracts.

[76]*76Furthermore, from the days of Magna Charta, there is only one previous statute dealing with decedents’ estates. This is chapter XVIII, 9 Henry III, enacted in 1225, which provides: If any that holdeth of us Lay-fee do die, and our Sheriff or Bailiff do shew our Letters Patents of our Summon for Debt, which the dead man did owe to us; it shall be lawful to our Sheriff or Bailiff to attach and inroll all the goods and chatties of the dead, being found in the said fee, to the Value of the same Debt, by the sight and testimony of lawful men, so that nothing thereof shall be taken away until we be clearly paid off the debt; (2) and the residue shall remain to the Executors to perform the testament of the dead; (3) and if nothing be owing unto us, all chattels shall go to the use of the dead (saving to his wife and children their reasonable parts).”

It seems apparent, therefore, that the rule of law that a personal action dies with the person, is of extremely ancient origin, and was based on the conception that death terminated the rights and responsibilities of the individual for all purposes, leaving merely his temporal possessions for disposal without any legal continuation of his individuality in the person of the representatives selected by him, or by operation of law, for the disposal of the assets, the ownership of which the death had terminated. This conception inevitably produced the result that if the decedent had, in his lifetime, committed an injury to the person or property of another which was capable of compensation in damages alone, the action died with the person by whom the wrong had been committed. (1 Saund. 216-a, note (1) to Wheatley v. Lane; Kirk v. Todd, L. R. 21 Ch. Div. 484, 489; Williams Exrs. 1600.) Where, however, the estate of the tort feasor could be shown to have been increased by identifiable property as a result of his act, this could be recovered in specie by the injured party. (Le Mason v. Dixon, W. Jones 173, 174; Hambly v. Trott, Cowp.

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Bluebook (online)
148 Misc. 73, 265 N.Y.S. 301, 1933 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-killough-nysurct-1933.