In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Watson

12 Mills Surr. 354, 86 Misc. 588, 148 N.Y.S. 902
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 12 Mills Surr. 354 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Watson) 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 Watson, 12 Mills Surr. 354, 86 Misc. 588, 148 N.Y.S. 902 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This is a motion to confirm in part the report of a referee appointed by this court to take and state the accounts of the executors or, as it is phrased, to hear and determine all questions arising upon the settlement of the account. The present motion is to confirm the report and findings in part only and next to reject them in part. Counter objections and exceptions bringing up for review the validity of the balance of the findings and report have been duly taken in conformity with the practice in such cases made and provided. Thus the entire report and findings of the referee are now here for review on objections and exceptions.

Mrs. Hoffman, the testatrix, whose estate is involved in the accounting, as it appears, was the widow of the Very Reverend Dean Hoffman, in his lifetime an Episcopalian clergyman of this city. Mrs. Hoffman, in addition to her private means, received during her widowhood a large income derived from her husband’s estate, so that her mode of life after his death con-[356]*356tinned on a more "liberal ‘scale than her own separate estate of itself justified. Mrs. Hoffman died seized of her residence in Gramercy Park, this city, and possessed in her own right of its valuable contents, and also inter alia of jewels accounted for at a valuation of $38,605. The account of the jewels does not, however, include a pearl necklace and a ruby ring of great value, which are now the subject of contention between the daughter and the granddaughter of testatrix. Whether the testatrix in fact died possessed of the necklace and the ruby ring is attempted to be put at issue in the proceeding to settle the account of Mrs. Hoffman’s executors. It is apparent that the necklace and the ruby ring were not inventoried or brought into the account by the executors because Mrs. Watson, the daughter of Mrs. Hoffman, and incidentally one of the executors under thé will, was possessed of them under a claim of title.

Mr. Harris, the other acting executor under the will of the late Mrs. Hoffman, and incidentally long the family adviser generally of Dean Hoffman’s family, certainly never was possessed of the necklace or the ruby ring in queston, nor is there any proof that he ever had any dominion or control of them. How Mr. Harris could be expected to bring them at this stage into his acount under the circumstances disclosed it is difficult to perceive. Yet the referee has surcharged Mr. Harris as executor with these very valuable jewels. It is quite true in law that for some purposes a college of executors is regarded as one person (Bacon’s Abr. Exrs. D., 1), and in some instances the possession of one executor is in law the possession of all. But this is not, I think, such an instance. It should be remembered that a proceeding for a final or administrative accounting and distribution in this court is a resort to the jurisdiction conferred on the surrogates by statute. An accounting of this character is not an incident of the surrogate’s probate jurisdiction. An accounting is in theory often an equit[357]*357able suit, more or less elaborate, in which equitable considerations are controlling. There is a difference between an account and an inventory exhibited in a court of this character and a statutory proceeding in such a court to settle the accounting and for distribution and administration of the assets of an estate. But I shall have occasion to refer to this distribution later.

If we assume, for the sake of argument only, that the surrogate has jurisdiction of this matter, it is well settled that where an inventory or schedule of an account of executors docs not contain property alleged by the parties in interest cited to be a part of the estate of a testatrix, the burden of proof is very strongly on the objectants alleging the omission (Marre v. Ginochio, 2 Bradf. 165; Matter of Baker, 42 App. Div. 370), as the inventory or account presumably contains all personal property for which the executors are chargeable. Matter of Mullon, 74 Hun, 358, 363, reversed on another point, 145 N. Y. 98. I have always proceeded on this theory since coming into this court. The referee seems to have proceeded on the opposite theory, for such little evidence as there was before him disclosed that Mrs. Watson, the daughter of the testatrix, was possessed of the pearl necklace and the ruby ring under a claim of title by gifts before the death of the testatrix. As the objectants did not sustain the burden resting upon them, for this reason alone the referee’s finding and report must be set aside for error in surcharging the executors with the necklace and the ruby ring.

But there is another profounder question demanding our consideration. Has the surrogate jurisdiction to determine the better title to the pearl necklace and the ruby ring in the proceeding now here and under the circumstances clearly disclosed by the evidence? Of this I am not fully persuaded. The adjudications cited in support of jurisdiction when subjected to critical analysis are, I fear, not so conclusive as to preclude [358]*358the necessity of a further consideration of my jurisdiction in this proceeding, if it should become essential. Before examining that grave point let me give a summary, not in such detail as I should wish, of the sources of the various jurisdictions committed to the surrogates of this state, and incidentally the general legal and constitutional theory upon which the entire judicial establishment of this great state was founded and is continued in our own day.

The first constitution of the state government (Arts. XXV, XXVII, XXXV) and the “ Act to Organize the Government of the State ” (Laws of 1778, chap. 12), contemplated the continuation of the common law and the judicial establishment existing in New York under the prior government (see Graham’s Courts of Law & Equity in New York, and Streets’ Council of Revision, passim). This was fully understood by those who erected and set on foot the state government and who had lived under the former government. Whenever this fact has been lost sight of it has led to erroneous conceptions, sometimes to the prejudice of the rights of the citizens of the state. The new chancellor of the state was given in full the ordinary equity jurisdiction, but not the extraordinary jurisdiction of the chancellor known to the common law. The general courts of law were continued, with the jurisdictions of the King’s Bench, Common Pleas and Court of Exchequer vested in the former Supreme Court of New York. The lesser courts known to the common law were confirmed or reestablished on the old basis, while the former jurisdiction of the Ecclesiastical Courts, in so far as exercised in New York before Independence and then recognized by the common law, was intended to be invested in the Court of Probate and its surrogates. Laws of 1778, chap. 12; Laws of 1787, chap. 38; Laws of 1801, chap. 77. That this intention of the founders of the state government was subsequently executed in full in respect of the Probate Courts cannot be claimed; nor need the subtle social and political reasons [359]*359why the original probate jurisdiction of the Probate Courts was at a later day more restricted by construction than should have been the case be now examined, as the discussion of that branch of the surrogate’s jurisdiction is not precisely germane at the moment to the point under consideration. The probate or ordinary branch of the surrogates’ jurisdiction is not now under review.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Mills Surr. 354, 86 Misc. 588, 148 N.Y.S. 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-watson-nysurct-1914.