In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Ebenstein

116 Misc. 543
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 116 Misc. 543 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Ebenstein) 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 Judicial Settlement of the Account of Ebenstein, 116 Misc. 543 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Schulz, S.

Letters testamentary pursuant to the last will and testament of the decedent were issued to the respondent, the accounting executrix, on May 17, 1919. She did not file an inventory and did not advertise for claims against the. decedent.

On July 30, 1920, a summons and complaint were served upon her in an action in which the petitioner, a creditor of the decedent, was the plaintiff, for money loaned to the decedent during his lifetime and a judgment was thereafter and on October 11 o.r October 13, 1920, rendered against her as executrix in the sum of $1,010.60 with costs and prospective fees amounting to the total of $1,076.25.

By a petition filed January 18, 1921, a proceeding was brought by the petitioner to compel her to render her account as such executrix, which resulted in an order directing the filing of an account by her. She failed to file her account as ordered, and thereupon an order to show cause was made directing her to appear and show cause why she should not be punished for her misconduct in failing to file the same. Pending argument on the motion based on the order to show cause, she filed an account in which she showed a balance on hand amounting to $1,540, to be [545]*545distributed to those entitled thereto, subject to the deduction of commissions and the expenses of the accounting. Objections were filed to this account which among other relief prayed that the executrix be required to file a supplemental account setting forth certain details relating to the items of her account as filed. Upon the hearing of these objections, the respondent, the accounting executrix, defaulted, and an order was thereupon made sustaining the objections, directing the filing of an amended account and directing her to appear for examination on a day. therein stated. Thereupon she filed an amended account in which she shows a deficit of $747.78.

In this amended account she charges herself with the sum of $3,429.53, and among other items, credits herself in Schedule D with certain payments made to herself in the sum of $615, of which $415 are alleged to be for payments to herself for expenses incurred by her during the illness of the decedent and $200 is alleged to be for repairs to a coat. Under Schedule E she credits herself with various payments made to herself as sole legatee under the last will and testament of the decedent amounting to $2,735.72. All of the payments thus made and for which credit is claimed in Schedules D and E were made before the expiration of one year after the issuance of letters testamentary to her. The claim of the creditor who is the petitioner herein was not presented within one year of the date of the issuance of letters testamentary as aforesaid. A hearing was had, and at its conclusion, decision was reserved on a motion to dismiss upon the ground that the petitioner had no standing because he had failed to present his claim within one year after the issuance of letters.

The respondent did not file any accounting to which the petitioner was cited as a creditor, until the com[546]*546pulsory proceeding now pending was brought by the latter.

While section 2678 of the Code provides that if a claim against a decedent be not presented to the executrix, if no notice to creditors be published, within one year from the date of issuance of letters, she shall not be chargeable for moneys that she had paid in satisfaction of lawful claims or of any legacies, that section must be read in connection with section 2682 of the Code, which provides that an executor or administrator shall not satisfy his own debt or claim out of the property of the decedent until proved to and allowed by the surrogate. And while the surrogate may have the right to ratify payments thus made, they should not be ratified under the circumstances here present. Again section 2678 must be read in connection with section 2688 of the Code which provides that no legacy shall be paid by an executor or administrator where no notice to creditors is published, before the expiration of one year from the time of granting letters testamentary or of administration unless directed by the will or by a decree on an accounting to be sooner paid.

It is urged that here no notice of the claim was given to the executrix until she was served with the summons in the court action which was some time after the expiration of one year after the issuance of letters testamentary, and hence that as the payment of the legacies after the expiration of the year and! before notice of the claim would have protected her, the fact that she paid herself before the year was up, worked no hardship upon th-e petitioner and was a substantial compliance with the Code.

Whatever force there might be in that contention is destroyed by the fact that from the evidence it would appear that the respondent was aware that the [547]*547petitioner had or alleged that she had some claim against the decedent. Among the papers in the copy of the judgment roll in the Municipal Court action, which was received in evidence by consent in lieu of the original, is an affidavit of the respondent submitted upon an application to open a default in that action which contains the following: “ I know that my husband before his death made some payments to the plaintiff on account of the debt that he owed her. After my husband’s death, the plaintiff said that there was $300 due her. Now she asks for $800.”; This clearly shows that even before the decedent’s death, the respondent knew that the decedent owed the petitioner some money, and, assuming her statement to be true, she was advised after her husband’s death that the amount was $300.

Again it appears that the amount of $2,735.72 was made by her to herself in six payments as follows: May 26, 1919, $77.62; June 30, 1919, $1,000; October 22, 1919, $500; January 5, 1920, $500; April 22, 1920, $158.10; April 26, 1920, $500. She testified that the check from herself as executrix to herself as legatee in the sum of $1,000 was deposited by her in the Dry Dock Savings Bank, and that the account stayed in that bank until October 22, 1920, which it will be observed was after the date when the summons was served upon her as appears also from the fact that her answer in the action was verified by her on August 3, 1920. True she had already paid the amount to herself as legatee, but the reasonable exercise of good faith would have seemed to require that she should not have disposed of it until the claim of which she was then advised had been adjudicated. It also appears that she has since remarried and that she gave her husband the sum of $1,300, and that such payment was made after she had been served with the summons aforesaid. I cannot escape the conviction [548]*548that while she may not have known of the exact .amount of the claim of the petitioner, she did know that the latter claimed to be a creditor in some amount. This I think is strengthened somewhat by the fact that the petitioner is not a stranger to. her, but was the aunt of her husband.

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Bluebook (online)
116 Misc. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-ebenstein-nysurct-1921.