In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Mulligan

11 Mills Surr. 94, 82 Misc. 336, 143 N.Y.S. 686
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 11 Mills Surr. 94 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Mulligan) 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 Mulligan, 11 Mills Surr. 94, 82 Misc. 336, 143 N.Y.S. 686 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

Judgment has been long delayed in this matter, in which objections were filed to the account of the executrix and the hearings on the objections brought on before the surrogate. The hearings were very prolonged, the evidence is voluminous and the matter has already occupied too much time, to the prejudice of important matters pending in this court. It is only in much poorer estates than this that the surrogate can be expected to hear in person such matters as those here involved. Such matters are referrable properly to referees designated for the purpose.

The executrix in her account charges herself with property in the sum of $18,653.50. This is the dead man’s estate. She credits herself with the payment to her husband of $250 counsel fee and expenses of administration. Mr. Mulligan is an attorney and counselor at law, and as it happens the husband of the executrix herself. She also credits herself with $315 paid to William A. Keating for the collection of a $3,000 note with interest, and with the large sum of $7,075.33 paid to the said William G. Mulligan for disbursements, money claimed to have been loaned by him to John Hartmann, the deceased, during his lifetime and for professional services said to have been rendered by Mr. Mulligan to the late Mr. Hartmann during the lat[96]*96ter’s life. The widow of the deceased, who is in law entitled to all the surplus over the debts, has filed objections to these three items just noticed. The objection to the item of $315, paid to William A. Keating for the collection of the $3,000 note, was, however, withdrawn upon the hearing, and is out of the case.

The testimony given in on the disputed items discloses that the deceased had considerable domestic trouble of no very seriious kind. He and his wife in later life disagreed about money and they were at times not on the best of terms, and it is claimed that Mr. Hartmann was fearful that Mrs. Hartmann would obtain possession of some of his property, of which he was very careful, and he was desirous of placing the estate that he possessed so as to prevent his wife from gaining control of any of it. It is conceded that Mr. Hartmann had been arrested in New Jersey for an assault on his wife. This was hardly due to his wife’s action. The public authorities were responsible for this prosecution. In any event, then it was that a friend of Mr. Hartmann and Mr. Mulligan told Mr. Hartmann that Mr. William G. Mulligan, an attorney and counselor at law at. No. 461 East Tremont avenue, in the borough of the Bronx, was a good man and that he had better go to call on this lawyer, who would probably be able to advise him in his difficulties. The deceased accordingly called on Mr. Mulligan professionally and had many conferences with him. Mr. Mulligan about this time drew a will for the deceased, in which Agnes K. Mulligan, the present executrix, Mr. Mulligan’s wife and associate with him in business, was named sole executrix. In time Mr. Hartmann came to die, and Mrs. Mulligan as the sole executrix named in the will took charge of his estate, and almost immediately proceeded to pay out of it to her husband, as she states in her account, the relatively large items which are now objected to by Mrs. Hartmann, the testator’s widow, and which are the subject of this judicial investigation before me. It may be that the close relationship existing [97]*97between Mr. Mulligan and the executrix did not influence her action in the premises; but certainly this relationship and the circumstances hereafter indicated are quite sufflcient to place upon her the burden of showing the propriety of payments by her to her own husband most clearly and by good and preponderating proofs. I am surprised that educated persons of delicate sensibilities should have allowed themselves even to drift into the position disclosed on the hearing in this matter and by the account of the executrix. The executrix herself was trained in the law. As persons trained in the elevated and most responsible profession of the law, both Mr. and Mrs. Mulligan ought willingly to bear the burden if they are unable fully to discharge the obligation cast upon them by even unfortunate, or unfavorable, circumstances. In respect of the execution of trusts by lawyers, I am inclined to be very strict in my inferences, as lawyers particularly are bound by professional obligations, in addition to the obligations ordinarily imposed by conscience and good faith on trustees. The dignity of the profession of the law and the welfare of society are not promoted by any indulgence to lawyers in respect of their dealings with their clients; In such matters the lawyers’ proofs should be always high, in order to. prevail in this court.

In a proceeding of this character, the accountant executrix, who has paid bills of the kind objected to, is, in law, held incompetent to testify to a conversation between the payee and the deceased, if she seek to be allowed the payment of such bills. Code Civ. Pro., § 829; Matter of Smith, 153 N. Y. 124; Matter of Knibbs, 108 App. Div. 134. But it has been held that the party whose claim is paid is competent to testify, as he is not a party to the proceeding or interested in the event, nor does the executrix derive title through or under such creditor. Code Civ. Pro. § 829; Glennan v. Rochester Trust, Etc., Co., 136 N. Y. Supp. 737; Matter of Fraser, 92 N. Y. 239. I was at some pains to follow these precedents on the hearing, although to [98]*98my mind both Mr. and Mrs. Mulligan would have been incompetent as witnesses at common law, which seems to me to afford the more just rule. The Code and the rulings of our courts thereon have, however, rendered Mr. Mulligan competent to give evidence of these transactions with the late Mr. Hartmann, and these rulings I obeyed. 'But Mr. Mulligan’s testimony is insufficient of itself. He is virtually the claimant against the dead man’s estate, and the unsupported testimony of claimants is generally regarded as insufficient in such cases. Beckett v. Ramsdale, L. R. (7 Ch. Div.) 177.

The principal issues concern the validity of the claims for professional services rendered by William G. Mulligan during the lifetime of the deceased, amounting to $4,655.33, and the amounts paid William G. Mulligan for moneys loaned to John Hartmann during his lifetime, amounting to $2,380, both of which large items were paid by the executrix, she then being the wife of the alleged creditor. These she paid quickly, though the account discloses she contests the funeral bill for the burial of Mr. Hartmann. The claims in question are supported solely by the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Mulligan and Edward Mulligan, a brother and employee of Mr. Mulligan. No written contract between Mr. Mulligan and Mr. Hartmann, as to amounts to be charged by Mr. Mulligan for his alleged professional services, was produced, and I do not think that there ever was such a written contract. These professional services are set forth in the bill of particulars and are as follows: For the collection of $14,303.35 from Pratt & McAlpin, former attorneys for Mr Hartmann, $1,430.33. It appears that this particular sum was out on bond and mortgage; that Pratt & McAlpin, attorneys for John Hartmann, really collected this money from the mortgagor, and that Mr. Hartmann desired only to take possession of this money, and almost all that Mr. Mulligan did was to make an oral demand on Messrs. Pratt & McAlpin by calling them upon the telephone and telling them [99]*99that he wanted the money paid over on behalf of Mr. Hartmann. The money was speedily paid over, but not, I think, through Mr. Mulligan’s professional activities. Yet for this, Mr.

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11 Mills Surr. 94, 82 Misc. 336, 143 N.Y.S. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-mulligan-nysurct-1913.