In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Benjamin

9 Mills Surr. 419, 77 Misc. 434, 137 N.Y.S. 758
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedAugust 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Mills Surr. 419 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Benjamin) 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 Accounts of Benjamin, 9 Mills Surr. 419, 77 Misc. 434, 137 N.Y.S. 758 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This matter comes before the surrogate on the settlement of the final decree. The only question remaining concerns the disposition of the one-fourth of Ann Shannon’s estate which prima facie belongs to Bridget Shannon, one of the sisters of the deceased. The surrogate is now asked not only to presume the death of Bridget Shannon from certain facts appearing only in affidavits made on the part of claimants to her interests, but that she died before her sister Ann. It is Ann Shannon’s estate which is now the subject of consideration in this court, and prima facie Bridget Shannon is entitled to share in it. But it is asserted that from the facts stated in the affidavit the surrogate is bound to presume the death of Bridget Shannon before her sister Ann.

From the affidavits submitted, it would appear that Bridget Shannon, the alleged deceased, came to this country from Ireland about 1863, being then about twenty-four years of age. On her arrival she was employed in New Jersey as a domestic servant for about ten years, when in 1873 she suddenly left her employment, without taking her trunk or belongings. She was then about thirty-four years of age and unmarried. Since then she has not been heard of by those of her relations living in New Jersey. Search was made at the time of her disappearance by her sister and her employer, but without avail. There is no evidence that the public authorities inter[421]*421vened in the affair, and the inference would seem to be that her disappearance was regarded as natural and voluntary. The value of her possessions abandoned is not given. It may have been trifling or nothing. If the disappearance was natural it may have been for some reason satisfactory to herself. As she was in 1873 young, and in good health, the presumption of a continuation of life to good old age is in her case very strong. Even so late as 1910, there could be no conclusive presumption, in this matter, from mere lapse of time that she was then dead. But it is asserted by counsel that there is a conclusive presumption in law in this case that she is dead. This is the only point for my consideration at this time.

In this jurisdiction, where so many estates of persons, of foreign origin come before the court, an inference of death from an established absence or disappearance from a former temporary place of abode is always attended with unusual dangers. It should be made, if at all, only with great caution and under circumstances tending to preserve the corpus of the estate against the possibility of a reappearance of the person who is thus sought to be constructively and by mere inference adjudicated to be dead. It would be a shocking thing lightly and on a slender presumption of death to take away property or an inheritance from an apparent owner unrepresented and give it to some one else who is represented to squander or to dissipate. If such an applied presumption of death proves contrary to the fact (as has been often the case) what would the owner of the estate or interest think of judicial procedure when he again appears to claim his inheritance.

This is all that was. meant to be implied in Matter of Matthews, 75 Misc. Rep. 449, when it was intimated that a Probate Court ought not to presume the death of any person, other than that one whose estate was in court for the purpose of being administered. Although the actual decision in Matter of [422]*422Matthews did not turn on that point, the surrogate then ven-, tured to approve a suggestion, lately, made by a distinguished English judge, to the effect that a presumption of death in probate courts should be confined to the death of the person whose estate was to be administered. Matter of Goods of Amelia Clark, 15 P. & D. 1. This decision is approved in the last authoritative work on modern English probate practice (Mortimer, London, 1911). The decision itself was in any event consistent with conservative procedure and wise practice on applications to Probate Courts for administration. Of course we are all familiar with the principle that modern English decisions are without authority in this sovereign state. It is also true that, from many and wide differences between the two countries, such decisions should in any case always now be adopted with great caution.

It was not Mr. Justice Butt’s own decision which attracted me, but his statement implying an ancient practice in probate matters, because, in the absence of any countervailing mandate practice or authority of my own state, it might be that such ancient practice would afford some criterion of the practice in this jurisdiction. Martin V. Dry Dock, E. B. & B. R. R. Co., 92 N. Y. 70, 74. Even if Mr. Justice Butt has been, as asserted, overruled in England, which is not found to be the fact, the surrogate would in a proper case be at liberty in this jurisdiction to adopt the view taken by the lower court as the modern decisions of England qua decisions have rightly no inherent force here. It is not so with the decisions of England which antedate our independence and embody the primitive common law. As stated by our old Court of Errors of this state, the doctrine of stare decisis in its fullest extent compels us to follow the old decisions rendered before A. D. 1775, unless the particular doctrine enunciated is irrelevant or is abrogated by some constitutional limitation. Had Mr. Justice Butt, in Matter of [423]*423Goods of Clark, intended to enunciate a principle of English law which antedated our independence of England, the presumption, in the absence of any statute, practice, or decision of this state contrarywise, might well be, as stated, that the rule was still applicable in a court of probate in this state. But that proposition was not then critically examined, for, as before intimated, the decision in Matter of Matthews did not ultimately turn upon any such point. In that case the facts did hot seem to warrant a presumption that one Julia Smith was dead, even if the presumption was properly applicable in that matter. At a later day a direct application was however made to the surrogate for letters of administration on the estate of Julia Smith; citations were duly published and on the return day evidence was taken and the application was granted by the surrogate, a proper, bond being given by the administrator. Matter of Smith, 77 Misc. Rep. 76. In this way every effort was made by the surrogate to guard against the misapplication of the estate of Julia Smith, dead or alive. To be sure, in Matter of Julia Smith the content of the presumption of death was somewhat considered, and her death generally was found by the surrogate to be prima facie established so far as was necessary to a decree for an administration thereof. It may be that the decision of Mr. Justice Butt in Matter of Goods of Clark throws no light on the rules governing distribution of estates in the surrogates’ courts, but that point I should wish to consider further. It is not necessary to consider it at this time. If the surrogates’ jurisdiction over distribution is derived indirectly from other tribunals of this state, of course such jurisdiction attracts to it all the principles of law, including rules of evidence, applied in such tribunals (Code Civ. Pro., subd. 11, § 2481), and Mr. Justice Butt’s decision may then throw no light on the proper application of a presumption of death in such cases. If on the [424]*424other hand the jurisdiction originally inhered in the courts of probate of New York (see Younge v. Skelton, 3 Hagg. 780) it may not be irrelevant.

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9 Mills Surr. 419, 77 Misc. 434, 137 N.Y.S. 758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-benjamin-nysurct-1912.