In re the Estate of Tonkonogoff

177 Misc. 1015, 32 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2569
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 177 Misc. 1015 (In re the Estate of Tonkonogoff) 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 Tonkonogoff, 177 Misc. 1015, 32 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2569 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1941).

Opinion

Foley, S.

The ancillary administrator has accounted for his transactions in the pending proceeding and seeks a judicial settlement.

The questions presented for determination in this decision were raised by objections filed to the account by Michael Kosolapoff, an alleged creditor of the estate whose claim was rejected by the ancillary administrator. The claim had been the subject of an action brought by Kosolapoff against the representative of the estate in the Supreme Court, New York County. By the requisite formal orders that action was transferred from the Supreme Court to this- court and was consolidated with the pending accounting proceeding.

The claim is extraordinary in character and even sinister in many of its phases. It is based upon an instrument alleged to have been signed by the decedent in Vladivostok, Siberia, on November 23, 1919, in which it is asserted he promised to pay the sum of $175,000 to the claimant Kosolapoff in London, England. It is exceptional that the instrument fixed not a specific date for payment, but set forth that the moneys were to be paid, not later than the year of 1930.” The total recovery demanded here with interest for twenty-two years aggregates the sum of approximately $413,0Q0. It was further stated in it that as a guaranty for the indicated s.um, the promisee was given a mortgage on the properties of the decedent Tonkonogoff, then in London, consisting of goods and immovables belonging to the decedent. The assets in the ancillary jurisdiction here aggregate approximately $370,000. The [1017]*1017amount of decedent’s estate in England has not been disclosed. There is another extraordinary circumstance. The original instrument claimed to have been signed by the decedent has not been produced. Reliance is placed by the claimant upon an alleged photostat of it. The original, it is asserted by him, may be in Russia, or somewhere in Asia. The claimant contends that the instrument was based upon a sale of furs between himself and the decedent. The representative of the estate,, on the other hand, vigorously asserts that the photostatic copy of the instrument was fabricated and the original never existed. He also contends that the claim was purposely delayed and asserted for the first time over one year after’ the death of the decedent and that it was designed to interfere with the distribution of the assets in this, the ancillary jurisdiction, in order to enforce an unjustified settlement.

However, we are not presently concerned with the truth or falsity of these general contentions of the opposing parties or the actual facts surrounding the execution of the instrument or whether it is a forgery because of the necessity of disposing of preliminary issues which go to the defeat of the claim. A determination of the claim upon its merits would not be presently possible because of the alleged necessity of issuing letters rogatory on behalf of claimant to courts in Warsaw, Poland, and Shanghai, China. It is apparent that the issuance of letters rogatory to these war-ridden cities would result in a long period of delay in the settlement of this estate; If the affirmative defenses bar this claim irrespective of whether it is a genuine and honest one, the account of the ancillary administrator can be judicially settled at once.

At the time of the transfer of the action there was pending in the Supreme Court a motion brought by the plaintiff to strike out the affirmative defenses contained in the answer upon the ground that they failed to state facts sufficient in law to constitute defenses and upon the further ground that they were sham, frivolous and tended to delay the trial of the action. That motion was also transferred by the Supreme Court for decision by the surrogate. The trial and determination of the sufficiency of the Statute of Limitations was thereupon directed by the surrogate and with it there was set for hearing the motion above referred to directed to the sufficiency of the affirmative defenses. The scope of the hearing was enlarged after amendments made to the answer so as to include the question as to whether the instrument was invalid upon its face as a matter of law. Otherwise stated the surrogate was required to determine the sufficiency of two of the affirmative defenses raised by the representative of the estate.

[1018]*1018(1) That regardless of its authenticity, the instrument was void in its inception and in its form under the pertinent law of Russia at the time of its alleged execution because it failed to recite the consideration for the promise of payment.

(2) Even if the instrument was authentic and valid in its inception under the law of Russia that a recovery was barred because of the failure of the claimant to commence an action or to serve proof of claim upon the representative of the estate within ten years after the right to sue accrued. Upon the latter question the estate argues that the ten-year statute of Russia was a prescriptive period; that it was made an inherent part of the original agreement; that it was a matter of right and substance; that it was a condition precedent to the maintenance of an action upon .the instrument; that the New York Statute of Limitations has no application here and, finally, that at the expiration of the period when no suit has been brought, the agreement or promise was forever extinguished and all rights under it lost to the alleged promisee.

The claimant, on the other hand, contends that the statutes of Russia were procedural only and affected the remedy and not the right; that the time prescribed within which action must be commenced was a mere limitation similar to our Statute of Limitations; that the law applicable is that of the State of New York because the claimant was a resident of our State at the time of the accrual; that sections 13, 19 and 55 of the Civil Practice Act apply and, finally, that the proof of claim was served within the time required because our Statute of Limitations was tolled by the absence of the decedent from this State.

It is undisputed that both claimant and decedent were residents of Vladivostok at the date of the alleged instrument and were members of a class of Russians which, before and at the time of the Revolution in 1917, were described as anti-Soviet. Both were in Vladivostok in 1919. Within two or three years after that the decedent moved to London where he resided from approximately 1922 until the date of his death on October 18, 1939. The claimant also left Vladivostok about the year 1922. He appears to have spent some time thereafter in China. He lived in London over a period between 1922 and 1924. In the latter year he came to New York where he has lived ever since. It is undisputed that the decedent never lived in New York.

Extensive testimony was submitted to the surrogate upon the two questions. It involved principally the presentation by the opposing parties of the opinions of experts who were former Russian lawyers as to the pre-Soviet law as it existed at the time of the alleged execution of the instrument on November 23,1919. These opinions [1019]*1019were based upon the contemporaneous statutes of Russia and the decisions of its highest court, the Ruling Senate. The statutes and decisions, together with translations, were received in evidence. All of the statutes and cases involved are those of the Russian Empire and both sides concede that the law of the Soviet regime does not apply.

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Bluebook (online)
177 Misc. 1015, 32 N.Y.S.2d 661, 1941 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 2569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-tonkonogoff-nysurct-1941.