In re the Judicial Settlement of the Estate of Tierney

13 Mills Surr. 285, 88 Misc. 347, 151 N.Y.S. 972
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 13 Mills Surr. 285 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Estate of Tierney) 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 Tierney, 13 Mills Surr. 285, 88 Misc. 347, 151 N.Y.S. 972 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Sexton, S.

Letters of administration were issued on this estate to Catherine Tierney May 29, 1911; she having thereafter died, on-January 31, 1914, letters of administration were issued to her son, Joseph J. Tierney, who is now before the court for a judicial settlement of his account as such administrator. The only money in his hands is $869, having come from the sale of real estate. The total liabilities are approximately $2,814.70. Because of the insolvency of the estate, a contention among the creditors as to priority of payment of their claims has arisen.

On February 24, 1908, Maria and Augustino La Monica, and Costanza Erasmo recovered judgment against the deceased in the Supreme Court for $996.19. D. F. Searle was the attorney of record. Assignment of this judgment to John Viscosi was filed December 20, 1910.

On February 24, 1908, a judgment was docketed against deceased and in favor of Maria and Augustino La Monica jointly with said John Viscosi for the sum of $685.69, which was thereafter assigned to Clinton W. Searle, an attorney of Rome, FT. Y., and a son of said D. F. Searle.

The decree of sale contained the following:

“ D. Francis Searle, costs allowed on judgment in above action in the amount of $110.03, with interest thereon from February 24, 1908, $39.61 (Total) $149.64.”

In objections to the account Mr. Searle asserts his lien for costs included in said Supreme Court judgment. Flo evidence was given on the subj ect, but the decree having fixed the amount of the costs, in a statement separate from the damages-, the court is bound thereby. We are dealing with taxed costs only. The attorney’s lien for the costs as taxed attached upon the rendition of the judgment (Bevins v. Albro, 86 Hun, 590; Puber v. Harris, 52 N. Y. 73) and permeates the entire judgment, as well as the proceeds thereof, into whosoever’s hands they may come. (Judiciary Law, § 475.) The language of this section [287]*287creates a lien in favor of the attorney on his client’s cause of action and enables him to follow the proceeds into the hands of third parties. (Peri v. New York Central R. R. Co., 152 N. Y. 521.) Hence any money in the hands of an administrator, applicable to a judgment recovered ag’ainst the deceased, is money in the hands of a third person to which the lien of the attorney recovering said judgment attaches, and to the extent ■of such lien. No lien is claimed for any services rendered in this court, hence the point is made that proof should have been given ’ of the lien or some notice that such a claim was to be made. Only costs as taxed in a Supreme Court judgment are ■claimed by the attorney. So far as concerns the recovery of an ■attorney’s costs, the judgment itself is notice, but if he would enforce his lien further and recover for his services beyond taxable costs, actual notice of the lien must be given. (Marshall v. Meech, 51 N. Y. 140.)

The remaining, question is as to whether an attorney’s lien ■and judgments of record shall be paid by the administrator before the funeral bill; it being contended that where there is no personal property and proceeds of real estate only are to be distributed, then a judgment of record must be given priority in payment over funeral expenses. To hold that the lien of a live attorney or judgment creditor should be paid before the expense of interment of decedent, might lead to embarrassment in insolvent estates and would be in contravention of law and public policy.

Civilization from the earliest days has provided for the burial of the dead. History deals with the tombs of the antediluvian worthies Abel, Seth, Noah and Ham. Sheikh Mohammed grew rich by representing to the passing public the tomb of an ass as that of a noted saint. Even animals have recognized the beneficence of such a custom. It is recorded that when Paul the Hermit died, two lions issued from the desert to dig his [288]*288grave, uttered a long’ howl of mourning over his body and then departed.

The general tendency of mankind has always been to bury the dead out of the sight of the living. Amongst the ancients an unburied body was held to be disgraced and the spirit was unhappy until a kindly stranger, at least, threw a few handfuls of earth on the corpse.

Long before the Pilgrim Fathers began to worry, work, freeze and sweat upon our shores, the common law of England gave to every person the right to be buried in his parish churchyard.

In England the common law cast the duty of burying the dead upon the person under whose roof the death occurred. (Scott v. Riley, 40 Leg. Int. 382.)

In Blackstone’s time, English civilization had reached a point where the law required an executor or administrator to bury the deceased in a' manner suitable to the estate which he left behind him. “ Recessary funeral expenses are allowed previous to all other debts and charges.” (Sharswood’s Black. Comm., Vol. 1, Book 2, p. 508.)

In the United States, neglect to 'bury a dead body by any one whose duty it is to bury it, and having sufficient means to do so, is a misdemeanor. Section 306 of the Penal Code provides: “ Except in the case in which a right to dissect it is expressly conferred by law, every dead body of a human being lying within this State must be decently buried within a reasonable time after death.”

The dead having a legal right to be buried, and it being a misdemeanor hot to bury a dead body, and it being the duty of a person under whose roof one dies to see that burial is given, it must be the law contemplated reimbursement therefor. Where the owner of some estate dies, the duty of the burial is upon the executor or administrator. »

In the case at bar there is some estate, hence it is the adminis[289]*289trator’s duty to take a reasonable portion of that estate to compensate the undertaker for the burial of the dead body or whoever paid the undertaker for such services. There is no doubt but that the reasonable and necessary expenses of interment of the body of one deceased are a charge against his estate, though not strictly a debt due from him, and this is based upon the general right of every one to decent burial after death; which implies the right to have his body carried, decently covered, from the place where it lies to. a cemetery or other proper inclosure, and there put under ground.

“ To the claim for the payment of such expenses by an executor, the objection does not lie that the rule of distribution of assets will be improperly interfered with if the claim is allowed and paid. Unless there is some objection arising out of statutory provisions ■ these expenses must be preferred to all other debts, not excepting debts due by record even to the sovereign.”' (Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 574.)

A funeral bill is classed the same as the expenses of probate- and other expenses of administration, and must be first paid out of the estate, and this has long been the law of this, jurisdiction.

“ In paying the debts, the order prescribed by the rules of" common law is to pay, first, funeral charges and the expenses, at the probate office, next, debts due to the State; then, debts of." record, as judgments, recognizances and final decrees,” etc.. (2 Kent Comm. [Lacky’s ed.], 416.)

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13 Mills Surr. 285, 88 Misc. 347, 151 N.Y.S. 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-estate-of-tierney-nysurct-1914.