In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Miller

7 Mills Surr. 254, 64 Misc. 232, 119 N.Y.S. 52
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 7 Mills Surr. 254 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account 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 Judicial Settlement of the Account of Miller, 7 Mills Surr. 254, 64 Misc. 232, 119 N.Y.S. 52 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Ketcham, S.

This is an accounting by executors of a deceased executrix. The will of the original decedent, after providing for cerain annuities, proceeds in part as follows:

“ Third. All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Mary Frances Farnham, for and during her natural life, to possess, use and occupy the same, or any portion thereof, and to receive to her own use and benefit all of the rents, profits and income therefrom. The provisions of this will in favor of my said wife are to be accepted by her in lieu of all dower or claim •of dower upon my estate.”

The wife was appointed executrix and as such she qualified and remained in office until her death. The husband (testator) [257]*257at his death was in partnership with 0. S'. Bowers in certain ventures which were conducted through the firm of Ropes & Oo. The capital of the decedent’s firm, as well as any profits accrued at the time of his death, was in the hands of Ropes & Ob.

First. It is claimed by a residuary legatee under the will of Mrs. Farnham that Mr. Farnham’s will, in its provision that she should have the rents, profits and income ” of the residue gave to her the mercantile profits from the business conducted through Ropes & Oo., which accrued between his death and the time when the transactions were finally liquidated. This claim is stated by counsel as follows: Mr. Famham’s will gave his wife the profits on the Ropes business during the period of liquidation.”

At the death of Mr. Farnham no right or interest in the firm assets passed to his representatives, nor was there any such right or interest which could be disposed of by his will. B[e had no such right touching the property of his partnership that he could bequeath its profits. He did not have them to give. Upon his death his firm was dissolved, the surviving partner became the legal owner of all the firm assets, necessarily including profits to accrue during the period of liquidation, and the estate of the deceased partner had nothing but the right to an account and to such sum as might be found upon the account to be due from the survivor. This was merely an equitable chose in action against the surviving partner, and any sum which might be paid in solution thereof would pass without brand or earmark to distinguish profits from principal. It was in the hands of the estate nothing but principal.

The profits upon the residue which the will contemplated could only be such profits as might result after its receipt by the executrix and its delivery to herself as life tenant. The will speaks only of the profits of the residue, and the fund in [258]*258question could not reach the residue until the liquidating partner paid his equitable indebtedness to the estate.

True, there is a rule under which interest from the time of the death of the testator is sometimes held to be payable, where the beneficiary is the primary object of the testator’s consideration or the provision is for maintenance, and this case was-within the rule, even if the fund was not reduced to the possession of the executrix for some time; but the benign fiction that the estate as such has been yielding a profit, artificially fixed at the ordinary rate of interest, before it has actually become-the subject of administration, is no warrant for passing over to the life tenant the commercial profit which accrued during liquidation of the decedent’s partnership affairs. The sums-received in settlement of the partnership accounts must be regarded as principal, either for the purpose of administration or for the purpose of investment and enjoyment as life tenant.

Second. The claim is made that forty United States bonds-were given by Mr. Farnham to his wife during his lifetime. Testimony is given of Mr. Farnham’s declaration that he had given $40,000 worth of bonds to his wife, and this declaration doubtless related to the bonds in question. Against this is the unquestionable fact that the wife received and long treated the bonds as part of the assets of her husband’s estate, though she later asserted her individual ownership and deposited and registered them as hers.

If it were necessary to resolve this conflict of evidence, her conduct as to the securities would be held to overcome the testimony of testator’s declaration. But the trouble with the theory of a gift is that Mr. Farnham did not own the bonds. They belonged to the firm of Farnham & Bowers and were not the subject of his donation. They came into the hands of the executrix at the sum of $48,650, in settlement with Mr. Bbwers and the firm of Ropes & Co-, and must be regarded as part of the sum received from Mr. Bowers as surviving partner.

[259]*259Third. There was an account in the Seamen’s Savings Bank "which stood in the name of Mr. Farnham from a time prior to June 29, 1880, until his death. The executrix received the amount remaining on deposit in this account and gave her receipt therefor as executrix. Her residuary legatee insists that this account was given to Mrs. Farnham by her husband in his lifetime and in this regard relies upon a letter from Mr. Farnham to his wife, which is as follows:

“ Hew York, June 29, I860.
My Dear Wife:
“As I am going yachting for a few days, it may be well to make a brief statement of my affairs.
“ A tin box in the ‘ Burglar ’ of B. W. Hopes & Co.’s safe at office contains your Haumkeag Stock ctfce, also two $1,000 coupon Republic Valley R. R. bonds, also two $1,000 or one $2,000 Redg. H. S. 4% B'ond ctfce; in my Small Ledger, in drawer of safe as above, you will find my Seamen’s Bank Bbok, also ctfce for 100 Sharon Spring Valley Hydraulic Gold Company. The Republic Valley bonds and the H. S'. 4% Bonds, above, are your personal property, although in my name. The Savings Bank Book as above is wholly yours although in my name. j
“ My will is in the ‘ Burglar ’—above—leaving you my entire property.
I wish to make one request of you, viz. to immediately execute proper legal documents bestowing property obtained from me to my heirs at law—at your decease. And during your life to assist my sisters Mary and Lucy should they become needy.
“ Your husband,
“ S, H. FajwhamT •

There is no proof of the delivery of the supposed gift, unless it be contained in the letter quoted. If a gift causa mortis was made in view of the impending dangers of a yachting trip, the gift failed upon the donor’s safe return. There" is no evi[260]*260den.ce of delivery, and delivery was necessary to effect a gift, either causa mortis or inter vivos.

The letter bespeaks either an intention that the account shall belong to the wife or an assurance that it already belongs to her. In neither case can it be taken to evidence or effectuate a delivery.

A statement by a depositor that an account standing in his name, represented by a book remaining in his possession, is the property of another, does not tend to show a previous delivery or assignment of the subject of the alleged gift.

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In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Miller
138 A.D. 885 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
7 Mills Surr. 254, 64 Misc. 232, 119 N.Y.S. 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-miller-nysurct-1909.