In re the Judicial Settlement of the Estate of Joost

5 Mills Surr. 310, 50 Misc. 78, 100 N.Y.S. 378
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 Mills Surr. 310 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Estate of Joost) 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 Estate of Joost, 5 Mills Surr. 310, 50 Misc. 78, 100 N.Y.S. 378 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1906).

Opinion

Church, S.

The executor in his accounting states 'that, among the assets left by the deceased was a note for $12,000,. which was made by one Moritz Hammerschlag, and also two certificates of stock of the .Waverly Refining Company, each for fifty shares of the par value of $100, as collateral to the same; but 'that such note was uncollectable and that the company whose stock was thus pledged as collateral was insolvent and, therefore, he was unable to obtain this money for the estate. The contestant, however, asserts that the executor could, with due diligence, have collected such note and that his failure to collect it is solely attributable to his neglectful and improper conduct; and that, therefore, he should not be given credit for the amount of the note but his acounts should be surcharged with the value of the same.

In the accounting of an executor, where he seeks credit for not collecting any :asset of the deceased by reason of the same being worthless, the burden of establishing this fact must be borne by the executor, as insolvency of a person, or the mere inability to pay his debts and obligations, will not only not be' presumed, but, on the contrary, the law indulges in the presumption that all persons are solvent. Matter of Hosford, 27 App. Div. 427.

The court in this case held (at page 434) : “ The executors,, finding among the estate of the deceased this note for so large a sum, were bound to act with vigilance for its collection. And' on the accounting the onus was upon them to show a fair reason why they did not commence an action for its collection. The presumption is that it could have been collected, as the usual [313]*313course is for men to pay their debts, and solvency is presumed until the contrary is shown.”

The question is, therefore, whether the executor has shown affirmatively that he acted with due diligence in endeavoring to collect the note under consideration and that the same was uncollectable notwithstanding that he so acted.

The note in question is a somewhat peculiar document. It, was dated January 6, 1899; but it was not made payable at any bank or trust company, as is usual in such cases, but at a private house, which was evidently the residence of the deceased. Instead of being made payable at the expiration of two, three or four months, or on demand, the ordinary and usual course in regard to negotiable paper, it is made payable one year after date. In addition, there is, upon the back of the note, a statement, evidently made at the time of its signing, as follows:

“ Brooklyn, Jan. 6, ’99. I hereby agree to give six months’ notice after this note is due if payment is required.

“(Signed) Eioolaus Joost.

“ John 0. Robebtson,

Witness.”

The shares of stock held by the deceased as collateral contain a proviso that such stock was redeemable at par on the 1st day of January, 1900. Such certificates were not indorsed by the maker of the note. It is to be observed that the day of the redemption of such stock is five days previous to the note’s becoming due in accordance with the provisions on the face of the note. The counsel for the contestant repeatedly suggested upon the trial that the provision on the back of the note, extending the time of payment for six months, was illegal; and, in some of the correspondence between the parties, 'this suggestion was also made, and, in addition, it was contended that certain counsel could establish its illegality. There are no reasons shown why this proviso is illegal, nor is it apparent why it should be re[314]*314.garded as such. For the purpose of the consideration of this ■case, while this paper is in the form of a note, yet, as it was simply a transaction between the parties and there is thus no -question of the rights of third parties involved, it should be treated simply as a memorandum establishing that there was a loan by the deceased to Hammerschlag, with a proviso as to the . time of payment of the same.

■If this was correct, then no proceedings could be taken to -collect.the amount of such loan until failure to pay the same on July 6, 1900. If Hammerschlag was insolvent at that time, then the executor is not responsible for his inability to collect .such note. But it is also urged that, as Mr. Joost had died before January 1st, when the note became due, it was the executor’s duty to collect on the first of January (when such collateral became redeemable by such company), the amount of such stock and hold the same as collateral with which to- meet the face of the note. This suggestion brings up for careful consideration •the proposition of law which the executor contends protects him for his failure to collect the amount due.

The testator herein had died before the expiration of the year during which the note was to run. The executor herein •had a conversation with Hammerschlag in relation to- the payment of the note and also requested him to indorse- the collateral

• so that it could be transferred., if necessary. Hammerschlag stated that it was impossible for him to pay this note when it became due and that he would have to insist upon the six

■ months’ notification provided upon the back thereof; and he also refused to indorse the stock certificates in question. Before ■January 1, 1900, the executor had this matter -submitted to an -attorney, a Mr. G-reenhall. Mr. Greenh-all advised that no- pro- ■ ceedings could be taken to collect the note until the expiration of the six months’ notification provided for on the back thereof, • and that, in .the meantime the executor -could not take any pro- • ceedings to compel Hammerschlag to indorse the certificates of [315]*315stock or have the same redeemed on January 1, 1900. Some suggestion is made that the executor did not directly consult Mr. Greenhall in the first instance, but that he took counsel with a man who was only a real estate agent. I do not appreciate the force of this suggestion, so long as it appears that, prior to the 1st day of January, 1900, he had consulted with an attorney and received an attorney’s opinion thereon, bio suggestion is made that Mr. Greenhall is not a competent and reputable attorney, or that his advice was other than his honest belief concerning the legal status of the situation. The question, therefore, is not whether or not Mr. Greenhall’s advice was correct as a matter of law, but was the executor, who in good faith sought such advice and followed it, discharging his duty by the estate; or was it his duty, upon the receipt of such advice, to disregard it .and proceed to endeavor to collect this note ?

The executor is only required to bring to the discharge of his duties the intelligence which an ordinarily good business man would use in like matters; and where, in the course of the administration of his trust he is confronted with any question which requires the advice of a skilled specialist and in good faith seeks such advice, receives the same and acts thereon, he is not held .accountable for the consequences of following it. And this is particularly true of intricate propositions of law. If, in spite of .the advice of his counsel herein, he had persisted in instituting an expensive litigation for the purpose of endeavoring to realize upon this note, and the final result of the same had been disadvantageous to the estate, he would have been criticized for bringing such a fruitless .action and would have been compelled to bear the expenses thereof himself. O’Conner v. Gifford, 117 N. Y. 275.

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Related

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5 Mills Surr. 310, 50 Misc. 78, 100 N.Y.S. 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-estate-of-joost-nysurct-1906.