In re the Estate of Martin

165 Misc. 597, 1 N.Y.S.2d 80, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1048
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 165 Misc. 597 (In re the Estate of Martin) 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 Martin, 165 Misc. 597, 1 N.Y.S.2d 80, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1048 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1937).

Opinion

Delehanty, S.

Before commenting on the substantial question which is presented by this accounting and the objections thereto, the court can summarily dispose of practically all of the objections, leaving for extended consideration only objections second and third.

Objection first is overruled. It relates only to matter of form and not of substance. Objection fourth was marked withdrawn during the hearing because the taxes there referred to were in fact, paid by the life tenant. Objection fifth was marked withdrawn during the hearing, it having been shown that the transaction there criticized had been closed out by a collection of the money involved. Objection sixth is overruled. Objection seventh will be disposed of by maldng an appropriate reservation in the decree to be entered, leaving open any question that might need determination when a distribution must be made. Objection eighth was disposed of prior to the hearing by the appointment of the successor trustees, and needs no further ruling. Objection ninth is disposed of by the ruling on objection sixth. Objection tenth is overruled. The amount proposed to be charged to principal is not in excess of a fair charge for an accounting covering so lengthy a period as is here1 involved for a sum so substantial as is the trust principal here. The petition seeks allowance of a fee of $1,000 for legal services. The court has taken proof respecting the services and considers the amount requested as reasonable, especially in view of the fact that half of the sum will be charged to income account. The allowance made excludes the allowance of any bill of costs. Only necessary disbursements in the proceeding will be taxed.

There remain for consideration objections second and third. These relate to the handling by the trustees of a mortgage of $12,000 which was originally received by them in 1902 from the executors. No question is raised respecting the original investment. The mortgage was a lien upon premises at Sea Gate, Coney Island, consisting of an improved parcel and adjacent unimproved parcels. Presently the trustees have on hand the real property which was the security for the original mortgage debt. In the thirty-five years since the trustees received the mortgage there was a foreclosure of the original mortgage, a rehabilitation of the property, a resale of it on terms hereafter stated, and a second acquisition of it in lieu of the foreclosure of a mortgage taken back on the resale. While the trustees held the land after the foreclosure of the original mortgage, they incurred a very substantial expense in restoring the property after a severe storm had washed away much of the land and had undermined the foundations of the house. Consideration must be given (a) to the proper allocation of the expenses in rela[599]*599tion to the property which are scheduled on page 8 of the account, (b) to the apportionment of the proceeds of the resale of the premises made in 1919 by the trustees after they had acquired the premises in foreclosure in 1918, and (c) to the ratio now to be fixed of income and capital participation in the proceeds of the resale and also in the real property which is now on hand.

Taldng up the expenses scheduled on page 8 of the account, the first is an item of $3,591.31 listed as payment to the referee in the foreclosure proceeding. These payments are capital charges subject to the rule laid down in Matter of Chapal (269 N. Y. 464). The next item is one of $250 representing an amount paid to Sea Gate Association for dues. This payment was made by the trustees when they sold the improved portion of the premises acquired by them in foreclosure. In the contract for the sale of this parcel the trustees agreed to pay one-half of the accrued and unpaid assessments thereon due to the Sea Gate Association, but in no event more than half of a total of $500. The $250 payment of February 15, 1919, is exactly half of this $500 limit set in the contract for resale of the improved parcel. It was a principal outlay necessary in the making of the sale, and is subject to the Chapal rule. The next item is one of $91.87 paid to the receiver of taxes for the second half tax accrued in 1918 on this same parcel. It must also be treated as a capital charge subject to the Chapal rule. The next item is a payment for revenue stamps on the deed. This is an expense of the sale, is a capital charge, and is to be dealt with under the Chapal rule. The next item is the brokerage commission of $262.50 paid on the sale of the improved parcel. This is a capital charge and is to be dealt with under the Chapal rule. The next item is one of $28.60 for an insurance premium; $27.80 of this amount was refunded when the purchaser took over the insurance on the sale. The net difference of eighty cents is a capital charge and is to be dealt with under the Chapal rule. The next two items are $1,606.50 and $720, respectively, paid for rehabilitating the foreclosed property after a storm had undermined the house foundations and had excavated a very substantial amount of soil from the lawn. It is obvious that premises in such condition could be sold, if at all, only at a sacrifice. It was entirely legitimate for the trustees to refill the lots, restore the foundations, replace the house on them and make such internal repairs to the building as the threatened collapse had caused. Such repairs are not in any sense current repairs chargeable to income. They are extraordinary capital costs made necessary by the injury to the building and the land from the storm. Each and all of the expenditures are held by the court to have been justifiable capital expenditures to be dealt with under [600]*600the rule in Matter of Chapal. The next item is one of $737.13 paid on November 24, 1919, to the Sea Gate Association as a balance of unpaid assessments. It has already been noted that the original sale by the trustees was of the improved parcel only. The trustees at that time retained the vacant lots which were part of the realty covered by the foreclosed mortgage. The dues paid on February 15, 1919, related only to the improved parcel. The item of $737.13 accrued in relation to the unimproved lots. Since the property was located at Sea Gate and was subject to the rules of the Sea Gate Association the payment of such charges was necessary in order to effectuate a sale. While the assessments may not have constituted a hen in a legal sense they were a burden on the property in a practical sense and the removal of that burden was essential to a sale. Accordingly this payment constitutes a capital outlay to be dealt with under the Chapal rule. The final item of outlay is one of $11.50 for revenue stamps on the second deed given to the purchaser of the vacant lots. This is a capital charge to be dealt with under the Chapal rule. The trustees show that they collected from the purchaser the unearned insurance premiums and that they also obtained some cash for wreckage. The account of the trustees shows a net capital invested in the property of $19,267.86. Of this sum $12,000 represents the original mortgage principal and $7,267.86 represents proper net advances from capital account for the purpose of the salvage of the mortgage investment.

The decisions in Matter of Chapal (supra) and Matter of Otis (276 N. Y. 101) established certain rules to be followed in allocating moneys received out of property sold in a salvage operation. Under these authorities the advances out of capital account for the purpose of salvage are to be kept separate from the original principal account. Here, these advances aggregate net, $7,267.86.

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Bluebook (online)
165 Misc. 597, 1 N.Y.S.2d 80, 1937 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1048, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-martin-nysurct-1937.