In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Weber

118 Misc. 653
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMay 15, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 118 Misc. 653 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Weber) 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 Weber, 118 Misc. 653 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

Schulz, S.

The respondent, as executor of the last will and testament of the decedent, took possession of all of her personal property, removed it from her residence but did not account. There[654]*654upon, the petitioner, as the guardian of her three minor children, legatees under her last will and testament, brought this proceeding to compel such accounting. After the service of the citation and pending the determination of the application, the said executor filed an account showing no surplus for distribution. Thereupon, the petitioner filed objections. Subsequently, and pending the hearing of such objections, he consented to be charged with the sale price of certain personal property belonging to the decedent. At the conclusion of the hearings it appeared from the admissions of the respondent that there would be a surplus distributable to persons interested, and supplemental citations were thereupon issued directed to the persons who must be cited on a petition for a judicial settlement. Surrogate’s Court Act, § 260. None of these persons appeared, but the special guardian appointed for some oi the interested infant parties filed objections and stipulated to submit these upon the evidence adduced in support of the objections filed by the petitioner. As the items objected to by the special guardian are all embraced in the petitioner’s objections a determination of the latter will also dispose of the special guardian’s objections. In the following, therefore, I am referring to the objections filed by the petitioner.

The first objection requires no action as the facts stated are not controverted and present no question for determination. The second objection embraces the property also set forth in objections nine and ten and is disposed of by their determination. The third objection is dismissed, the fourth and seventh objections were withdrawn upon the hearing, and the fifth, sixth and eighth objections are sustained, and the respondent, the accounting executor,' is surcharged with the sum of $236, being the aggregate amount of the items referred to in such objections.

Objection ten alleges the respondent’s failure to account for some furniture which it was claimed the decedent owned at the time of her death. As to the latter, and some jewelry, an itemized • list was submitted, and it was stipulated that the property therein set forth be sold and the respondent be surcharged with the proceeds thereof. Subsequently, and by a stipulation to that effect duly filed, it was agreed that the net amount of $608.25 was realized on such sale and that respondent be surcharged therewith. The tenth objection is, therefore, sustained and the surcharge made accordingly.

■* The remaining and main question to be determined is that raised by the ninth objection. It refers to the proceeds of the sale of certain real property of which the decedent had given a deed to the respondent, and which the latter subsequently sold; it being [655]*655e contended that the evidence establishes that the respondent is chargeable therewith in this proceeding.

It is urged by the respondent that the petitioner and the special guardian have no standing to interpose this objection because their wards are entitled to money legacies which are payable out of the personalty and are not charges upon the decedent’s real estate. With that contention I am not in accord. Unless the intent of the testatrix was that the legacies which she provided for in her will with definiteness and certainty were to be charged upon her real estate, we must assume that she did not intend that they should be paid. The amount of her personal estate when the will was made, so far as the evidence discloses, reveals a great deficiency in view of the legacies and this and the fact that the will contains a power of sale and mingles the decedent’s realty and personalty in the residuary clause, warrant the conclusion that it was her intention that these legacies were to be charged upon the realty. Carley v. Harper, 219 N. Y. 295; Ely v. Megie, Id. 112; Briggs v. Carroll, 117 id. 288; Kalbfleisch v. Kalbfleisch, 67 id. 354.

Upon the record in this matter, a solution of the question whether or not the respondent is chargeable with the proceeds of the sale of the real estate; depends upon who has the burden of proof.

It is not disputed that the decedent made and delivered a deed of the real property in question to the respondent. In general, proof of the execution of a deed and its delivery raise the presumption of its validity, and the burden of proving its invalidity or of impressing a trust thereon, or upon the proceeds of its sale, is upon the person attacking the same. Jones v. Jones, 137 N. Y. 610; Piuntkosky v. Harrington’s Sons Co., 167 App. Div. 117. This general proposition is subject, however, to some exceptions where, under the authorities, the grantee cannot rest secure by simply showing the execution and delivery of the deed to him.

The latter cases may be divided into two classes: The one, where, from the relations between the parties, the law will presume that one exercises a controlling influence over the other, and the other, where the proof of the fact that a fiduciary relation exists must first be established before the one deriving an advantage is required to show the good faith of the transaction.

In Doheny v. Lacy, 168 N. Y. 213, 222, the Court of Appeals, in speaking of the rule which under certain conditions makes it incumbent upon the beneficiary of a transaction to prove that no undue advantage was taken of the other party thereto, sums the matter up as follows: That rule, within the cases, requires as a basis for its application that a fiduciary relation exist between the [656]*656parties, which will give to the one, in legal presumption, a controlling influence over the other. Such would be the relation of parent and child, guardian and ward, trustee and cestui que trust, physician and patient and attorney and client. In these confidential relations, the situation of the parties is regarded as unequal and as conferring upon one a certain control, or domination, over the will, conduct, and interests of the other. Transactions between them are, therefore, scrutinized closely and presumptions arise of their impropriety, which must be met where an advantage is derived by the presumably dominant party. (Sears v. Shafer, 6 N. Y. 268; Nesbit v. Lockman, 34 id. 167; Cowee v. Cornell, 75 id. 91; Matter of Smith, 95 id. 516, 522.) The presumption is' one born of a relation of parties, which would create a situation of more or less dependence by one upon the other. (Smith v. Kay, 7 H. L. Cas. 771.) While in the relations instanced this rule is generally applied, it is, also, extended to other relations of trust, confidence, or inequality; but its application will then demand some previous proof of the trust and confidence, or of the superiority on one side and of the weakness on the other. The law will not presume it from the ordinary relations between persons, in the business world, or in the family connection. The question as to parties so situated is a question of fact dependent upon the circumstances in each case. (Cowee v. Cornell, supra, pp. 91-101.) Most of the business relations between persons, in a sense and to a degree, rest upon confidence reposed by the one in the other.

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