In re the Estate of Moran

9 Mills Surr. 1, 75 Misc. 90, 134 N.Y.S. 968
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 1 (In re the Estate of Moran) 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 Moran, 9 Mills Surr. 1, 75 Misc. 90, 134 N.Y.S. 968 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This matter now comes before the surrogate on an application by the brother of the deceased, to compel the administratrix, who is the widow of the deceased, to pay to him the balance of a bill incurred by him for the funeral of his deceased brother.

The estate now in the court is a very poor one, and if the widow is compelled to discharge the balance here demanded, she will have nothing left for herself after the expenses of administration are discharged. The deceased died in Texas, and his body was improperly, under the circumstances of his estate, sent here for burial. It appeared on the hearing before me, that the brother who now petitions had received from Texas, out of the effects of the deceased, $145.93, and that the funeral in New York alone cost $243, although the deceased had died and been prepared for burial in Texas. The expense in Texas was defrayed there by some one unknown to the surrogate, but out of assets found on the person of the deceased. The widow has received in all from her husband’s estate the sum of $108.53, and this, if the demand of the petitioner is now granted by me, she will lose. This is a hard situation, and demands more than common consideration from the surrogate.

[3]*3The duty of burying the dead is by the law of this State, in the first instance, that of the executors or administrators of the deceased. Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 583. The right of one who is not an administrator or executor to be reimbursed out of the estate of a deceased person, or to recover over against his personal representatives, for the expense such stranger has been at for the funeral of such deceased, has occasioned great perplexity at common law when there was no express contract. It has been found most difficult to formulate a theory of contract which would stand the tests of both the substantive common law and its rules of procedure. As great a judge as Lord Holt said in substance in the year 1698, that there could be no recovery. 12 Mod. 256. But this ruling, if ever true, in practice was ultimately overruled. Yet as late as 1838 Sir Edward Vaughan Williams, a great authority, admitted that the law of England was very unsettled on this, point. The decisions of the courts of this State bearing on this point are surprisingly few, and with one or two exceptions, far from exhaustive.

Without reviewing the cases in detail, it may be stated that it finally came to be the law of England and of New York, that there was implied promise (assumpsit) on the part of the representative of the deceased to repay the reasonable expense necessarily incurred by a stranger (Rogers v. Price, 3 Younge & J. 28; Brice v. Wilson, 3 Nev. & M. 512; Camp. 298. See Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 585, 586), although there was also some talk in the books about “ the estate of the deceased being itself chargeable with such expenses.” As at common law there was no recognized conception, that an estate of a deceased person, until vested in some one else, was to be regarded as a kind of artificial person, liable in itself to creditors, such speech as that “ the estate itself was chargeable ” was at common law oftentimes extremely inexact. The fact that an administrator is, at common law, liable de bonis pro[4]*4priis did not imply it. In the Roman Law “ her edit as jacens ” or the conception of an intermediate juridical person, supplied on the other hand a deficiency, very apparent in the law of England. The Civil Law, in fact, furnishes a very complete apparatus when applied to such a case as this, but not so the common law.

The difference in this and other respects between the two systems of law concerning the devolution of an intestate’s estate has attracted great attention from those who deal more particularly with legal science and legal theory. But it is unnecessary to refer to such subtleties further than they are illustrative of the legal doctrine, recognized in this State, because the surrogate must apply the law of this State as he finds it laid down either expressly or by implication. All legal liability not raised by statute is due to the common law of the land.

It has been already stated, that by the existing law, binding on the surrogate, a stranger, or one not an executor or administrator can recover the burial expense incurred of necessity, if reasonable, over against the personal representatives of the deceased (in the absence of an express contract) only on an assumpsit, or implied promise, and that the estate is not, as it would be by the Roman Law, liable independently as a juristic entity. It was only because of a fear of interference by the Chancery, that assumpsit was in the year 1557 finally applied by the courts of law to executors. Plowden v. Reid, Plowden, 180; Pinchon’s Case, 9 Co. Rep. 86b. This simple statement of the authorities will, I think, be found to be accurate, if the long series of cases is examined in detail.

With this preliminary statement of principles, let us proceed to apply the law of this forum to this particular case. The brother, seeking to recover for the expense of the burial in question, may recover against the widow, who is the administratrix, if at all, only on an implied promise on her part (as[5]*5sumpsit). The theory, underlying such liability and the rule of law indicated, is, of course, immediately referable to the great and historic action of assumpsit, which in the course of its development at common law incidentally came near to turning courts of law into courts of equity, as it would be iniquitous to hold a man liable on the theory of assumpsit or implied contract, if it was contrary to justice and equity to assume that he did so promise or contract. The theory of assumpsit indicates only one process of development, and is a necessity of a historic system of law which first offered redress by means of established formulse. Such formulas still furnish the substantive law of rights of action, even since the Codes of Procedure. The surrogate is, of course, obliged to take up any such formula prescribed for redress precisely as he finds it established by the system of law in force, and this he ought to do, as every established system of law will be found to be not only obligatory on its courts, but wiser than any single departure from it. Therefore, under the few cases decided in this State on this subject, it is incumbent on the surrogate to adhere strictly to the theory of assumpsit, if he would charge the administratrix in this cause with the liability sought to be established by the brother of the deceased. Now at common law, the theory of assumpsit or implied contract is never applied, when it is unjust, or when the facts found forbid an implication of contract. Buller’s Nisi Prius, 130; Mumford v. Brown, 6 Cow. 475, 477. And see Stephens on Pleading (ed. of 1871), 175, 176. In other words the law vigorously repels the implication of contract in such a case. This synopsis of the existing law permits us to proceed to its application in this particular cause.

The testimony in this matter discloses, that the conduct of the brother, now petitioning for repayment, was inconsistent with an intention to seek repayment for the burial. When the body of the deceased arrived in New York, the brother told [6]*6the widow, now

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Bluebook (online)
9 Mills Surr. 1, 75 Misc. 90, 134 N.Y.S. 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-moran-nysurct-1911.