In re the Estate of Miller

2 Connoly 134, 9 N.Y.S. 60, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 784
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Connoly 134 (In re the Estate of Miller) 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 Miller, 2 Connoly 134, 9 N.Y.S. 60, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 784 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1889).

Opinion

The Surrogate.

It appears that the deceased made his will dated July 17, 1883, which was probated April 27, 1885, and appointed his son, Charles A. Miller, sole executor. ...

■ The deceased left him surviving three children, said Charles A. Miller, Ann Eliza Banks and Esther E. Reed, and his widow, Eliza Miller. He gave his en-: tire estate, valued at about $5,000 to his said three children, share and share alike, giving nothing to his widow. By a written agreement between the widow and his three children,” the widow is to have one fourth of his estate and the. children each one fourth..

A petition was presented by said Ann Eliza Banks to compel the executor to account and pay her legacy, in which proceeding the question arose and was litir gated as to whether the claim of about $1,000 of E. M. Spink, a creditor, had been allowed or rejected by the executor.

It appeared that on March 27, 1882, W. H. and Frank Baldwin borrowed of Spink $1,484 for which' they gave him their note payable in the September following, which was signed by John Miller and said Adam Miller, the testator, as sureties, and the Baldwins gave to the two Millers a chattel mortgage on farm property for their indemnity; that the Millers refiled the mortgage during two or three years only; that a portion of the mortgaged property was burned' about the year 1887, when covered by an insurance, from which a part of the $350 was paid and endorsed' [136]*136on the note, March 26,1887, being the last of the several payments made thereon; that a part of the mortgaged property was sold from time to time, and the proceeds of a part of same paid upon the note, and a part of the property of little value remained unsold and in the possession of the Baldwins at the time of the trial herein, and a portion of the same property was worn out and used by the Baldwins on their farm. The note or obligation so given was joint in form, not negotiable.

The claim of the creditor, Spink, duly verified was presented by him to the. executor at the former residence of the testator, in the presence of his widow and the two daughters named, on May 31,1887. Mr. Spink, the creditor, the executor, and two daughters testified as to what occurred on that occasion as to whether the claim was then rejected or allowed; and the substance of the evidence of each is as follows :

E. M. Spink, creditor, testified that he personally handed the claim to the executor, Charles. A. Miller, who read it, and that he told him it was a claim Judge Warren had made out against the estate. That the executor at no time said anything about not paying the claim; that he had before asked the executor to see the Baldwins and get security from them; that, the executor did not tell him to look to the Baldwins for his pay. The "payments on the note were made to Judge Warren, his attorney, by the Baldwins.

Ann E. Banks, the legatee, testified: “ I recollect Spink coming to our house only once. I heard my brother Charles tell him that our estate was not holden for that claim, that he must look to the Baldwins. [137]*137My mother, Charles, Mr. Spink, and Esther E. Reed were present. I was not there all the time Charles was. I was not in when Spink came in. Nothing more was said. I never heard him, Charles, verbally reject the claim. Early in February, 1889, when Charles came back from Ohio, we talked about this claim.”

Esther E. Reed, legatee, testified: “ Mr. Spink came to my mother’s in the latter part of May, 1887. I heard talk between him and Charles in the sitting-room. I heard Charles say that father’s estate wa’n’t holden for that claim; that he wa’n’t holden for it, and that he referred it to the Baldwins. I don’t recollect anything else. I did not hear it all.”

On her cross-examination, the witness testified:

“I was there sewing, helping mother to go West with Charles. We talked of this in our family when she went West. It had been talked at our house in our family, in February, 1889. Mrs. Banks was there, and we talked it over, and.agreed what was said. We were talking of our business. I did not hear much what Spink said when he presented the claim; he talked very low. I heard Baldwin’s name mentioned several times. I was across the room, not very near to them when they were in the house. I was busy sewing. They were close together, quite a few steps from me. My brother Charles said father’s estate wa’n’t holden for that claim; that Mr. Spink would have to look to the Baldwins for the claim; 1 could not hear and don’t know what Spink said. I am a legatee under the will. I did not see Charles until February, 1889.”

[138]*138Charles A. Miller, executor and legatee, testified “ Spink came to the house, and presented his claim to me. I looked at it and saw what it was. I told him it did not belong to the estate to pay. He said he had waited a good while and did not want to make-me any trouble, but he should have to proceed to collect it. This is the substance. Then I said I .could' not do anything about it, as executor; that- I could hot -pay it; that I had no right to pay it; that he would have to go and see the Baldwin brothers or those" on the note before my father’s name.' As ■ he; went out of the door, I stepped out on the stoop, and he wanted to know if I couldn’t, as I had the property: in my hands, pay him and fix it up with the Baldwin brothers and my uncle, John Miller, that I could do better with them than he could, and he talked there several minutes, and begged of me to .go and see them and see if I could not get them to fix it up, that I could get security from them better than he could. ‘ I told • him that I did not think I could. I do not .re-member that anything else was said. I did not tell him I had been advised about the claim. I had before this taken advice of Judge Lambert, and of an attorney in Akron, Ohio, as to my liability on this note. My home was at this time in Akron.” , .

On his cross-examination, the witness testified: “ Spink spoke of my having property of estate in my hands as executor, not of Baldwins, given to Miller as security for signing. 1 said it belonged to the Baldwins to pay, and not to the estate to pay. I don’t remember that I did; and am not positive I told him I [139]*139had taken counsel about the claim. I am positive I did either in the house or out-of-doors on the stoop.”

E. M. Spink, recalled, testified: “ Charles A. Miller did not state that his father’s estate was not holden for that claim. He did not state that he had taken counsel on the claim, nor that he could not pay the claim, nor that it did not belong to the estate to pay, nor that I must look to the Baldwins for it.”

It appeared in evidence that E. F. Warren had the note in his possession as attorney for Spink from about the time it was given, March' 27, 1882,' until after the last payment was made in February, 1888, during which time ten payments, were made on the claim to Warren as attorney for Spink by the Baldwins.

It appeared that about September 1, 1888, the note was about to outlaw as to John Miller, he not having made any payment on it, and that Spink was about to commence an action in the Supreme Court, and papers were prepared by Warren'for service upon the Baldwins and John Miller, when an arrangement was made under the advice of Warren as attorney for Spink, by which the note of which the following is a copy, signed by the Baldwins and John Miller was given for the amount due to Spink on his claim.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Van Zandt v. Van Zandt
10 N.Y.S. 200 (New York Supreme Court, 1889)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 Connoly 134, 9 N.Y.S. 60, 27 N.Y. St. Rep. 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-miller-nysurct-1889.