In Re the Inventory of the Estate of Butler

38 N.Y. 397
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1868
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 38 N.Y. 397 (In Re the Inventory of the Estate of Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Inventory of the Estate of Butler, 38 N.Y. 397 (N.Y. 1868).

Opinion

Hunt, Ch. J.

The case presents but a single question,— Can an executor of a deceased resident of this State, to whom letters testamentary have been hete issued, be required to include in' his inventory assets belonging to the deceased which are situate in another State ? The return shows that' “ claims and credits against persons resident in other States,” and “ other personal property situated in other States,” form ■ a portion of the property of the estate. From the order of the surrogate that these assets should be included in his’ inventory, the executor brings an appeal. The appellant’s argument goes to this extent, that if the deceased left ten thousand dollars in bank bills in the' State of Massachusetts, or the same amount in coin in California, which is now subject to the executor’s order, or which may have been actually delivered to him, that the executor is not bound to notice it in his inventory returned to the surrogate of Hew York.

In my opinion, this view of the executor’s duty is not correct. The Eevised Statutes provide, that with the aid of appraisers to be appointed, the executor “ shall make a true and perfect inventory of all the goods, chattels and credits of such testator, and where the same shall be in different and distant places, two or more such inventories, as may be necessary.” (2 R. S., 82, § 2.) The sixth section describes the property which shall be deemed assets, and which shall be included in the inventory, among which are the following : “ 8. Debts'secured by mortgages, bonds, notes' or bills, *399 accounts, money or bank bills, or other circulating medium, things in action, and stock in any company, whether incorporated or not. 9. Goods, wares, merchandise, utensils, furniture, cattle, provisions, and every other species of personal property and effects not hereinafter excepted.” By section eleven it is enacted that, “ The inventory shall contain a particular statement of all bonds, mortgages, notes and other securities for the payment of money belonging to the deceased, which was known to such executor or administrator, specifying the name of the debtor in each security, the date, the sum orginally payable, the endowment therein, etc.;” and by section twelve, “ The inventory shall also contain an account' of all monies, whether in specie or bank bills, or other circulating medium, belonging to the deceased, which shall have come to the hands of the executor, and if none shall have come to his hands, the fact shall be so stated in such inventory.” Upon returning this inventory to the surrogate, the executor is required to make oath that such inventory contains a true statement of all the personal property of the deceased which has come to the knowledge of such executor, and particularly of all money, bánk bills, etc., (§16.)

The executor is thus required to make an inventory of all the goods, chattels and credits of the testator, and no suggestion is to be found that those goods or credits not within the territory of this State, are excepted. All the goods and all the credits of the testator, without qualification or omission, are to be embraced in the. inventory. It is further provided with particularity, that every debt secured by mortgage, note or bill, and every account, and all money and all bank bills, shall be retained, and then, in general language, that all goods, wares and merchandise, and every other species of personal property. This language is used with the apparent intention of embracing any thing that might possibly have been omitted in the particular enumera-' tion. The only qualification of the statute is, that the property should have belonged to the deceased and that it should have come to the hands or to the knowledge of the executor; *400 the executor is therefore required to make oath, that the inventory contains a true statement of all the personal' property of the deceased which has come to his knowledge, and particularly of all monies "and bank bills. Upon the case before us this oath could not be truly taken by the executor, as there would be other property not thus included, to wit, in California and Massachusetts, and his inventory is not, therefore, a satisfaction of the requirements of the statute. Upon general principles the result would be the same. Upon the death of a testator his personal property rests in his executor immediately, and the whole of it. Before he can act, the will must'be proved and the executor must qualify. It is, however, the will itself, and not its probate or his qualification, that transfers the title. (Schutlz v. Pulver, 11 Wend. 362.)

This is the rule as to personal property, whatever be its amount or wherever it be situated, with certain qualifications as to the rights of local creditors not necessary to be here considered. Upon the death of A. J. Butler, he having previously made a valid will appointing Gen. Butler his' executor, the latter became at once invested with the title to all the personal property belonging to the former at his death, whether it was situate in Massachusetts, where he had formerly lived, in Louisiana, where he had more recently resided, or in Hew York, where he died. While the executor might not have been permitted officially to sue in the courts of another State which had not given him letters of administration, yet he could lawfully receive all personal property there situated, would be liable as for neglect of duty if he did not use due diligence to collect debts there due to the testator, and could transfer a title which would authorize his assignee to recover by action any personal property situate in either of those States. (Schultz v. Pulver, supra ; Paterson v. Chemical Bank, 32 N. Y. 21; Parsons v. Lyman, 20 N. Y. 103.) Personal property has no status - or locality, except as it follows the owner’s person. As to its transmission inter vimos, or by testamentary authority, it follows the law appertaining to the person of its owner. (Supra and *401 Black v. Zachay, 3 How. N. S. 514.) The executor is the proper person to collect and receive all the testator’s property, wherever situate, and to distribute it according to the laws of this State, subject to any specific claims that there may be upon it, in the State where it is actually found. (Authorities supra)

The appellant objects to this construction, upon the argument, that the statute requires the appraisers to appraise the . personal property “ which shall be exhibited to them ” by the executor; that the assets in question are situate in a foreign State, and cannot be here exhibited, while the appraisers are local officers, without power to travel into or to perform duties in a foreign State. This is an acute criticism upon the language of the statute, which, if other parts of the statute did not qualify it, would hardly prevail. The idea of the statute, no doubt, is, that, generally, the property referred to could and would be exhibited to the appraisers for their personal examination. This is not, however, made a condition of the exercise of their power; nor is there an - intimation, that, unless actually produced, they may not appraise the property.

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Bluebook (online)
38 N.Y. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-inventory-of-the-estate-of-butler-ny-1868.