In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Cushman

16 Mills Surr. 389, 95 Misc. 9, 160 N.Y.S. 661
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 Mills Surr. 389 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Cushman) 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 Cushman, 16 Mills Surr. 389, 95 Misc. 9, 160 N.Y.S. 661 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Senn, S.—

Leroy Lamb, the claimant, has presented to the executor a claim for $900 damages sustained by him through the alleged negligence of the deceased. He has also filed a claim for the alleged fraud of the testator growing out of the [390]*390same transaction. Both claims were rejected by the executor and by consent have been heard by the surrogate.

Testator was an attorney and counselor-at-law and was attorney for the petitioners in a certain proceeding for the sale of infants’ real estate, being the interest of Rena 0. Stone and David F. Woodman, infants, who were 'the only heirs-at-law of said Seth J. Woodman, deceased. The testator was one of the general guardians' of said infants, the other being M. Jeanette Woodman, -an aunt.' The petition in the proceeding was made by the guardians and infants named and recited among other things that the infants weie the owners of the property as heirs-at-law of Seth J. Woodman, deceased, and that the premises were free from dower interest or rights. The testator was also the attorney for the petitioners in conducting the proceeding. The petition was verified by testator as well as the other petitioners and the papers were presumably prepared by the testator. This petition was presented to the Madison County Court and thereupon an order was duly made appointing Edward B. Stone, the husband of said Rena C. Stone, as special guardian, and James W. Welch, an attorney and counselor-at-law, was appointed, referee to take the evidence in proceeding. In the testimony before the referee, as appars from the referee’s report, E. Watts Cushman, the testator, was s^orn as a witness, and among other things testified that at the time of his death Seth J. Woodman was unmarried. M. Jeanette Woodman, the other guardian, was also sworn before the referee and presumably examined by the testator, acting as attorney, and among other things she testified as follows: Q. Your brother, Seth J. Woodman, was a ¡¡ingle man at the time of his death? A. Yes. Q. And there is no one who has any dower right or life estate or an estate for years in the property? A. Ho.”

Upon the referee’s report and the report of the special guardian an order was made directing the sale of the premises for a sum not less than $4,000, and on February 27, 1912, the [391]*391special guardian made his report that he had made an agreement with Leroy Lamb for the sale of the entire premises and all the right, title and interest of said infants therein for the sum of $4,100 to be paid by said Leroy E. Lamb, and on or about February 29, 1912, the premises were conveyed in said proceeding from Reha C. Stone and David F. Woodman by their said special guardian to Leroy E. Lamb, the claimant, for the sum of $4,100 by deed dated that day and recorded in Madison county clerk’s office March 4, 1912, in liber 234 of deeds, page 436.

It appears that Seth J. Woodman, through whom the infants derived the title to their real estate, was a married man and at some time before his decease brought an action, in which the testator was his attorney, against his wife, Oornia Woodman, for a divorce. An interlocutory judgment of divorce was obtained'and docketed in Madison county clerk’s office on March 18, 1907. Woodman died on or about the 6th day of June, 1907, less than three months after the docketing of the interlocutory decree, and hence no final decree of divorce was ever entered. Subsequently to his purchase of the premises the claimant discovered that no final decree had ever been entered and that therefore the premises he had purchased were still subject to the dower interest of Oornia Woodman, who was living. He employed attorneys to procure from her a release of her dower, which they were able to negotiate for the sum of $250. Their legal services and disbursements amounted to $149.69. It would seem under the circumstances that the widow settled for a reasonable sum.

The evidence in support of the claimant’s claim is contained • in the several exhibits which- have been offered in evidence, including all the papers in the infants’ real estate proceeding, the divorce proceeding, and the testimony of Edith Lamb, the wife of the claimant, who testified that she was present with the claimant in the law office of the testator in the latter part of [392]*392February, 1912, and overheard a conversation between her husband and the testator. Witness and her husband went there to sign a mortgage which the claimant was to give to testator for $3,000 and to help him to raise the purchase price, which amount testator was to advance for that purpose, and evidently to receive the deed of the premises. She states that the deed was handed to her husband but that he handed it back and that before giving the mortgage and accepting the deed the following conversation ensued: “ Mr. Lamb asked Mr. Cushman if Seth Woodman had a divorce from his wife and Mi*. Cushman said yes, an absolute divorce, and he then asked him if he would guarantee the title to be good and he said yes he would absolutely guarantee the title to be good.” That thereafter the mortgage. was signed and delivered and the deed accepted.

The claimant’s attorneys have practically abandoned their claim for negligence. They probably have concluded that there was no such privity of contract or employment between the testator and the claimant as to create a liability for negligence and that the testator owed no duty of diligence to the claimant. At any rate I hold such to be the law. But they seriously insist that either knowingly or unknowingly the testator practiced a fraud upon the claimant and thereby induced him to purchase the premises and pay the purchase price without deduction for the widow’s dower. They insist that the testator was not only a party to the proceeding ‘but the attorney conducting the same and not only falsely testified that Seth Woodman was unmarried but caused others to so testify, and that, when finally asked the direct question by the claimant as to the status of Seth J. Woodman with reference to his wife, he positively stated that there was an absolute divorce. This they claim constitutes a fraud upon the claimant and that his estate is answerable for the consequent damages, whether the testator profited by the transaction or not, and even though he may [393]*393have believed that what he said was true; that as attorney for Seth J. Woodman he positively knew that no final decree had ever been entered in the divorce matter and that he must- have known that none could be entered, and that the legal effect was to leave the dower rights of Cornia Woodman in full force and effect.

I will say that it is my opinion, based upon the whole evidence, that the testator did not intend to defraud the claimant. It may be that he believed that the effect of the interlocutory decree, followed as it was by the death of Mr. Woodman, no cause having been shown in the meantime why the decree should not be made final, was to extinguish the dower of Mrs. Woodman. I can see how an attorney who' had not examined the authorities, reasoning only upon the language of the Code (a relatively recent provision), might have reached such a conclusion. (Pettit v. Pettit, 105 App. Div. 312 ; Bryon v. Bryon, 134 id. 320 ; Matter of Crandall, 196 N. Y. 130.) Such a mistake in the law would probably constitute negligence, because the authorities were easily obtainable, but it may have been. an honest mistake. Possibly his recollection was at fault and he may have thought that final judgment had been obtained. This would not be strange after a lapse of five years after the interlocutory decree was obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Mills Surr. 389, 95 Misc. 9, 160 N.Y.S. 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-cushman-nysurct-1916.