In Re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Robert

18 N.E. 843, 111 N.Y. 372, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 269, 66 Sickels 372, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1025
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 27, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 18 N.E. 843 (In Re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Robert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals 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 Robert, 18 N.E. 843, 111 N.Y. 372, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 269, 66 Sickels 372, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1025 (N.Y. 1888).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The problem to be solved on this appeal is the meaning and intent of a single provision in the will of the testator. By itself it presents no difficulty and is not at all ambiguous, but read, as it must be, in connection with the entries standing upon the books of the testator at the date of his death, it invites a scrutiny which has led to different and contradictory constructions. The provision reads thus : “All moneys or indebtedness which shall appear upon any inven *379 tory or ledger or books of account kept by me or under my direction, charged as due to me from any or either of my said children or Robert College of Constantinople during my lifetime and as an outstanding or unsettled account at the time of my decease, whether with or without security, shall be considered as forming part of my estate mentioned or referred to in the fourth article of this my will, and a discharge from such indebtedness by my executors shall be deemed and taken as an equivalent of an equal amount paid such college, child or children on account of its, his, her or their share or portion under this my will.”

If we pause for a moment to scan this language and gather the testator’s meaning from his words ¿lone, it is impossible not to see that he refers to existing debts due and payable to him, some of which are secured by collateral liabilities and some of which may not be, but' all of which stand charged against the debtors as outstanding and unsettled accounts and are capable of being released and discharged by his executors. The description plainly contemplates cases of actual indebtedness which might have been enforced by the testator in his lifetime, and which his books show were not so enforced, but remain unsettled and outstanding at his death. The use of the word moneys ” preceding the words “ or indebtedness ” does not throw a doubt upon this interpretation, for they are included in the phrase “such indebtedness” when the discharge is referred to, and must be charged as due to the testator, and as an outstanding and unsettled account, and constituting a liability which admitted of a release.

That this interpretation is, upon the face of the provision, the natural and obvious meaning of the testator is quite evident from the impression which it left upon our minds when other questions arising out of this will were before us for determination. (R obert v. Corning, 89 N. Y. 241.) I do not think we then settled the question now raised, for the testator’s words were not at that túne confronted with his books of account or the entries upon them, nor was accurate attention challenged or analysis demanded in view of those entries; but the case in *380 all the courts drew out an expression of what seemed the natural and obvious interpretation, of the provision. The Special Term said “ the whole phraseology shows that it was only existing indebtedness which was to be deducted if found charged on testator’s books, and that the charges on the books were not to be arbitrarily deducted, but must have their foundation in an indebtedness.” The General Term added, “ the indebtedness must be actual and such as would form, by reason of its character, a portion of the personal estate which could be collected by the executors.” And we said of it that it was “ intended to provide simply that, any actual indebtedness found charged concurrently therewith on the testator’s books of account should go in diminution of the payments to the several legatees as a part of their shares, respectively.” These expressions show one thing at least; that the words of the testator, taken by themsélves, conveyed a precise and definite idea, about which there was no room for doubt or hesitation; and that, if ambiguous at all, they have become so by the light thrown upon them from the facts to which they have been applied.

But the provision in the will continued thus: “ And my executors are hereby directed to deduct the amount of such indebtedness from such respective share or portion, but-no interest is to be charged upon or added to any such indebtedness, except in case a bond, note or other obligation, securing such indebtedness, be found among my assets, upon which said bond, note or obligation interest has been paid or charged, in which case the said indebtedness shall continue to be charged with interest.” In this clause we find an added incident of the indebtedness before referred to. It is such as is interest bearing, either by its own terms or by operation of law consequent upon its being due and payable, and the object of the provision is to interfere with and modify the legal rules which would attach interest to the debt due or to become due. It means that interest is not to attach to the debt, except where a note or obligation exists, upon which interest has been paid or charged. Here again the character of the indebtedness *381 referred to by the testator is stamped upon it by an indelible mark. It is an indebtedness which, by its terms, or because it is “ charged as due,” is interest bearing, and, therefore, can only mean an actual debt which the child, as debtor, owes to the father as creditor, and which the entry upon the books, as an outstanding account, shows that the father has not forgiven or discharged.

The will then adds a further provision to avoid a possible mistake or misapprehension, and one upon which the respondents very much rely. That clause reads: “Any items or charges which may appear in any account of my private, personal or family expenses, shall not be included or charged as such indebtedness. hTor shall any moneys which shall appear in my books charged to either of my said children to a furniture or allowance account be debited to such child on the settlement of my estate, but the same is considered as a gift made by me to such child in my lifetime.” The distinction here made impresses my mind as one of the most decisive character. It is between a debt and a gift; a debt due and payable, and a gift not payable at all; a claim capable of collection and enforcement, and a donation executed and ended; a debt to be deducted, and a gift not to be deducted. The clause indicates a recollection in the mind of the testator that there stood upon his books charges in his private account or against his children, which, on their face, would appear to be debts, and the true character of which, as gifts, the books would not disclose ; and so, under his will, his intention would be thwarted, and, what was really a gift and not a debt, would stand as a debt for want of an explanation in or a disclosure of the truth by the books themselves. To guard against that error he puts the explanation, which the books do not contain, in the will itself, and so substantially declares that entries are upon his books which import a debt from the form in which they are made, but which, in truth, are not a debt but a gift, and were so intended, and which, therefore, should not be included -in the deductions from shares or portions. So that in every possible way, by direct expression and indirect description, by *382

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bowron v. . Kent
83 N.E. 472 (New York Court of Appeals, 1908)
In re the Accounting of Downs
3 Mills Surr. 397 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1903)
In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of Twombly
2 Gibb. Surr. 477 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 N.E. 843, 111 N.Y. 372, 19 N.Y. St. Rep. 269, 66 Sickels 372, 1888 N.Y. LEXIS 1025, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-robert-ny-1888.