In re the Estate of Michelbacher

137 Misc. 89, 241 N.Y.S. 179, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1352
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 137 Misc. 89 (In re the Estate of Michelbacher) 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 Michelbacher, 137 Misc. 89, 241 N.Y.S. 179, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1352 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Edward B. Schulkind,

Referee. On the judicial settlement of the final account of the executor, various objections were filed by Cora Guiterman, daughter of the decedent, and Doris Sloss, a granddaughter. The executor, Abraham J. Michelbacher, is a son of the decedent. The persons named were the only next of kin of decedent.

The issue, in the main, before me is the quite usual one of determining whether or not the executor has failed to schedule property of the decedent in his account, which be claims as. his own. In this instance, the question involves the stock of the Ruella Realty Corporation which acquired the title to the premises known as 227-229-231 East Seventy-second street, Nos. 306-308 West One Hundred and Twelfth street, No. 100 West One Hundred and Eighteenth street, and 153 Lenox avenue, all in the borough of Manhattan, New York city, and a certain mortgage for $10,000. An issue with reference to a $10,000 note made by the executor to the decedent has been eliminated by the admission of liability made during the hearings.

Solomon Michelbacher, the husband of the decedent, during his lifetime, owned the aforementioned real estate. He had been speculating for some period of time, with the result that at the time of his death he owed considerable sums of money to members of his family, the banks and others. Within six months prior to his death [91]*91in 1916, he conveyed the real estate to Ella Michelbacher, the decedent. Mrs. Michelbacher, at the time, was a woman of about sixty-seven years of age, quite deaf and entirely inexperienced in business matters of any kind.

In 1916 real estate was in one of its periodic slumps, when mortgage loans and tenants were difficult to get, and upkeep expenses high. In fact, the condition of Mr. Michelbacher’s properties was bad. With these conditions existent, the mother, immediately after the death of the father, naturally turned to her son for guidance and direction. She requested Mm to look after her affairs. He testified that he made an investigation of the properties during the months of August, September and October, 1916, for which he charged her $200 per month. At the conclusion of his investigation, he told her that the properties were in poor condition, and that it would require substantial moneys to rehabilitate them. She was further told by him that there was grave danger of losing all the properties unless something was done immediately. In response to her question as to what she should do, he advised her, in substance, to turn the property over to a corporation he proposed to organize, of which he was to own all of the stock, as he would not undertake the management of the properties unless they belonged to him. His testimony is as follows on tMs point (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 5): I thought I could attend to her affairs and my own at the same time, but I could not, and at her request, I gave my entire time and attention to her matters and I devoted three months, August, September and October, to doing it, and when the renting season was over in October and I hadn’t been able to get tenants, I saw that it was futile to try to operate that way and I told my mother so. I showed her the amount of yearly rentals she would derive based on monthly rentals and expense, which would show considerable deficit, and I told her the only way this property ever will turn out to be profitable is to spend a lot of money on it. I told her I couldn’t afford to work for nothing and you cannot afford to throw money away— what’s going to be done, and she asked me what do you suggest, and I suggested that I form a corporation and take over this property, but I will only do it in case it belongs to me, because if I put my time and attention to tMs tMng and it ever pans out to be worth something, I want the profit. Of course, I will take care of you during your lifetime, and she agreed readily.”

Again he testified (Stenographer’s Minutes, p. 13): “ Q. Was it necessary as an inducement for you to take this property that your mother and brother-in-law each advance $10,000 to you? A. Positively. Q. You would not have taken it otherwise? A. Positively.”

[92]*92This further condition for his taking over the properties was that a loan of $20,000 be made on a blanket mortgage on all the properties with which the needed repairs could be made. Before following out this plan, but after her full consent was obtained, the son suggested that he take her down to see the lawyer with whom he had discussed this matter for some time, which was done. The final result was that the Ruella Realty Corporation, with a capital stock of $5,000, was organized, the properties conveyed to it, and the stock issued to Abraham J. Michelbacher. A letter was also prepared containing a provision that the son was to pay the mother $5,000 and fifty per cent of the net rentals during her life. At the time of the conveyance or immediately thereafter, she paid all the charges against the buildings. At the same time, the son borrowed $10,000 from the mother, one-half of which he used to pay for the stock of the Ruella Realty Corporation and the other $5,000 he banked in his own account. This loan is evidenced by the note on which.liability has been admitted. The loan of $20,000 as requested for repairs and improvements was made on a blanket mortgage on the properties. Of this loan, $10,000 was made by the mother • and $10,000 by Mr. Rudolph Guiterman, a son-in-law of the decedent. The mother was required to guarantee the payment of the $10,000 loaned by Guiterman.

The executor spent $25,000 during 1917 on repairs and improvements, of which $20,000 was the proceeds of the loan from the mother and brother-in-law, and he states the other $5,000 was from rents and a loan from the bank. He claims that a deficit occurred in 1917 of $20,782 and in 1918 of $16,268. This appears more striking than true. In 1917 be charged against the rents as operating expenses the entire $25,000 expended for improvements, of which at least $20,000 came from his mother and brother-in-law. Against this year he also charged a $5,200 payment made in reduction of a mortgage, and unpaid salary to himself of $5,750. To arrive at the 1918 deficit, he deducts as operating expense $5,400 representing an amount used in reduction of a mortgage, $7,300 salary voted to himself, and an item of $10,000 for an alleged loan, of which no details are mentioned in his statements, although all. items of interest, taxes, operating cost, repairs and improvements are itemized and deducted as operating expenses. (Petitioner’s Exhibit U.) He admits in his testimony that, in 1918, items of improvement were made that were not usual and might not be necessary for some years to come. It is on figures such as these that the deplorable condition of things was, no doubt, pictured to the mother during the years 1917 and 1918.

.However, during 1918 and 1919, the real estate pendulum began [93]*93to swing upward again, and with it the properties rose in value and the rentals increased, with the result that the first half of 1919 showed a substantial profit. In the interval between 1916 and 1919 the executor drew "small sums of money on account of his salary of $5,200 a year voted him by the corporation, but managed to clean up all back compensation by 1921. The mother, however, had not received any moneys during these intervening years.

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Bluebook (online)
137 Misc. 89, 241 N.Y.S. 179, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-michelbacher-nysurct-1927.