In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Doubleday

17 Mills Surr. 458
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 30, 1916
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Mills Surr. 458 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Doubleday) 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 Doubleday, 17 Mills Surr. 458 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Woodward, J.—

Julia L. Sutliff presented a claim to the estate of James D. Clyde, deceased, for the sum of $3,374.54,-with interest on $400 of this amount from January 29, 1912, this claim being based upon eight different items. This claim was duly rejected by the administrators' and a stipulation was made that it might be heard on the final accounting. Passing over the matters of practice, the administrators petitioned for the judicial settlement of their account, and an answer, filed in behalf of the claimant, set up that the personal property belonging to the estate was insufficient for the payment of the just demands and charges against the estate, and asked that the administrators be required to -mortgage, lease or sell the real estate owned by decedent for the payment of such demands and charges. Upon the trial of the claimant’s claim, which as made to the administrators alleged that the deceased was indebted to the claimant for table board at the agreed price of $3.50 per week, the learned surrogate permitted an amendment to the effect that such table board was worth at the rate of $3.50 per week,” thus opening the way- around the provisions of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The trial resulted in an allowance of the claim to the-extent of $1,334.50-, and a decree directing the administrators to dispose of the real estate for the purpose of discharging this obligation. The [460]*460administrators appeal from so much of the decree as allows the sum last above mentioned to the claimant.

The claim, as presented, wasj first, table board, January 1, 1897, to April 1, 1904, 378 weeks at the agreed price of $3.50 per week,' $1,323; second,' table board' at agreed .price of $3.50 per week and rental and care of room, washing and mending worth $1.50 per week from April 1, 1904, to December 4, 1913, less 7 weeks’ absence in 1907, in all 496 weeks, at $5 per week, $2,480; third, extra labor caring for decedent during illness from June 1, 1907, to April 1, 1913, in all seventy months, reasonably worth $10 per month, $700; fourth, care and nurcing of decedent night and day during six months of his last illness, reasonably worth $25 per week, 26 weeks, $6^0; fifth, assisting in care of decedent during eight weeks of his last illness, reasonably worth $10 per week, $80; sixth, cash advanced for necessaries during his last illness, $25.33.; seventh, promissory note, $400, and interest from January 29, 1912, interest having been paid by decedent to that date; eighth, board of two guests 10 weeks each and one guest 8 weeks, in all 28 weeks, at $3.50 per week, $98, a total of $5,756:33. On this latter amount the claimant admitted credits amounting to $2,381.79, leaving a balance claimed of $3,374.54.

The learned surrogate held that' this claim, in so far 'as it accrued prior to the 4th day of December, 1907, with the exception of the promissory note, was barred by "the Statute of Limitations, so that all of the first item of - the claim is eliminated from the controversy, and with it all question as to the justification for the amendment by alleging the value of the board in place of the agreed price. And the same is true of a considerable part of the second item.

It appears .from the account submitted by the claimant ’that beginning with the 12th day of November, 1907, and continuing throughout the balance of his life, Dr. Clyde changed the policy of paying in groceries, taxes, etc., and made casjh pay[461]*461ments which appear to aggregate substantially the amount of the hoard at the agreed price, many of the items being the exact amount of the board for the intervals of time between payments, and it is very evident, from the claimant’s own showing, that Dr. Clyde intended to and did pay his board' in the agreed amount of three dollars and fifty cents during his lifetime, and the only excuse-fór making the claim for board was to give some sort of foundation for the testamony as to the other items making up the claim. Starting with the conceded fact that Dr. Clyde had boarded with the claimant’s mother and with the claimant for a long term of years; that Dr. Clyde had been in a measure a member of the claimant’s family since she was a girl of ten years of age, and it was comparatively easy to get neighbors and relatives to testify in a general way to little acts of courtsey, such as helping Dr. Clyde to put on his coat, assisting him to get up stairs, raising the clothes line to permit-him to pass under, with some references to washing, etc., due to his lack of control over his bowels and urinary organs; and to draw the inference that these services' were continuous during the periods for which the claim was made, and it is upon this class of evidence that this claim has been approved. With the fact out of the ease that Dr. Clyde had been a boarder in the claimant’s family for many years, paying his board with comparative regularity, as clearly appears from the evidence supplied by "the claimant’s own account, there would be no evidence worthy of consideration to support the great bulk of the claim, and the obvious purpos'e' of including all these items in refence to table board was for the purpose of giving a background for these claims which were never asserted during the lifetime of Dr.' Clyde. For years, according to the' claimant’s account, Dr. Clyde had been boarding and rooming with the claimant, arid during all of that time he had been- making payments which appeared to have covered practically'the amount of thte board at $3.50 -per wéék, arid now his estate is being [462]*462charged with $1,334.50, on the theory of an implied promise to pay for room rent and alleged services, with no evidence which conld support such a conclusion, except as it is woven in with the admitted fact that the deceased boarded at the claimant’s house. Why he should have religiously paid his board from away back in 1870 down to the very week of his death, and yet have permitted his room rent and care taking to be entirely in arrears is not suggested, and while there is the testimony of a neighbor that at- some time Dr. Clyde occupied his own house and took his meals at the claimant’s, and it appears that he subsequently occupied a room in the claimant’s house, there is no evidence to show that there was any understanding, expressed or implied, that there should be any larger charge for the board and lodging, or, indeed, that the board and lodging were not included in the price which Dr. Clyde paid. The evidence does not show- the price paid for table hoard prior to Dr. Clyde’s occupying the room in the claimant’s house, and while three dollars and fifty cents per week might seem a very small price for hoard and lodging, it is to be remembered that this transaction took place in a small community, and the prices fixed in 1870' and continued along to the time of the death of Dr. Clyde, might not have been anything out of the ordinary course of events in such a community. It is a significant fact that in the- eighth item of this claim, without any dates, the -claimant makes -a charge for two guests ten weeks each and one guest eight weeks *- * * board at $3.50 per week” and there is- nothing to indicate that these guests-did not occupy rooms in the claimant’s house, becoming boarders. Board ” is- defined as “ To receive food as a lodger, or without lodgings, for a compensation” (Pollock v. Landis, 36 Lowa, 651, 652), and boarder ” is defined as “ one who has food or diet and lodging'in another’s family, for reward; one who has food and lodging-in-another’s house'or family.for a stipulated price.” ' (5 Cyc. 718.) The claimant chose her own language, [463]

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Bluebook (online)
17 Mills Surr. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-doubleday-nysurct-1916.