In re the Proceedings for Disbarment of Clark

108 A.D. 150, 95 N.Y.S. 388
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 108 A.D. 150 (In re the Proceedings for Disbarment of Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Proceedings for Disbarment of Clark, 108 A.D. 150, 95 N.Y.S. 388 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

McLennan, P. J. :

In entering upon a discussion of the facts disclosed by the evidence and the conclusions to be drawn therefrom, we fully realize the responsibility and the importance of the investigation. The heretofore good standing of the defendant, the vital interest which [152]*152he has in any determination which we may reach, the duty which we owe to the court, to the members of the profession of the law and to the public, admonish us to be diligent in our examination and to be actuated solely by a desire to do exact justice, uninfluenced by prejudice because of any seeming delinquencies or by sympathy or friendship for a member of our profession.

Our labor is much lessened, however, because practically the facts are not in dispute, and because the referee in his exhaustive report has presented them 'fairly and concisely and has with much care fortified his conclusions by a reference to and an analysis of the important features of the evidence.

The first two charges relate to the same transactions and may properly be considered together. Charge Bo. 1 is1 in effect that the. defendant, as executor of the last will and testament of one Elias Pettibone, deceased, duly verified and presented to the surrogate of Genesee county a false account, in that he credited himself with having on March 21, 1892, paid in full two judgments recovered against said Pettibone by one Strable, which amounted on that day, principal and interest, to $196.61 and $109.25, respectively, when in truth and in fact he had not paid to exceed $65 on account of the same.

Charge Bo. 2 is in substance that the defendant about the 1st day of May, 1903, procured Strable to satisfy said two judgments by falsely representing that the Pettibone estate was practically insolvent • and to enable him, the defendant, to present vouchers to the Surrogate’s Court upon the settlement of the estate, showing their payment in full, when in truth and in fact such estate was solvent and such payments had not been made.

The facts in regard to .these two transactions and alleged charges of misconduct are as follows:

In the year 1890 one Elias Pettibone died in the county of Genesee, B. Y., leaving a last will and testament appointing the defendant sole executor, which was duly admitted to probate on February 8, 1890, letters issued to him, and he immediately entered upon the discharge of the duties of. his office. About March 23, 1903, thirteen years after his - appointment, proceedings were commenced to compel the defendant, to. account as such executor, he not having during that time taken any steps to that end, There[153]*153after and on May 4, 1903, the defendant filed an account duly verified, in which, among other things, he stated that he paid in full the two Strable judgments on the 21st day of March, 1892, amounting at that date, principal and interest, to the sum of $305.86, and he so credited himself in the schedule annexed to said account. Objections were filed to the account and both Strable and the defendant gave evidence before the surrogate in respect thereto with the result that it appeared without contradiction that he had not paid to exceed $65 on account of said Strable judgments, and he stipulated such to be the fact. Thereupon a decree was made requiring him to pay the balance to Strable.

Admittedly the account and verification of the' same were false. It is urged, however, that any error or discrepancy in that regard was. the result of personal! inattention or carelessness, caused by the pressure of more important business in which the defendant was a,t that time engaged. Such suggestion makes it necessary to consider the proof given in support of the second charge. From it, it appears that within a few months after the defendant was appointed executor he received, as the proceeds of lands belonging to the estate in Pennsylvania sold by him, the sum of $800, and that such estate was at all times thereafter perfectly solvent. In fact, the only claims against it were the two Strable judgments, another judgment in favor of one Morris for about $180 and other small claims amounting in the aggregate to not more than $125. There was, therefore, no valid reason why all claims against said estate should not have been paid at once and in full, and so notwithstanding the will provided that the estate should not be distributed until certain of the beneficiaries reached the age of twenty-one years. In 1892,' and about the time of the alleged payment of the Strable judgments by the defendant, Strable learned of the sale of the Pennsylvania property and called upon the defendant at his office for the purpose of obtaining payment of his judgments. He saw the defendant with his clerk, a Mr. Long, and was informed by them that the Pettibone estate was practically insolvent and that he could not expect to realize anything. There was then more than sufficient funds in'defendant’s hands to pay the same in full and all other claims against the estate. Strable was induced by such false and fraudulent statements to assign to Long, defendant’s, clerk, his judg[154]*154ments for $18 and $15 respectively. Matters thus rested for eleven, years and until 1903 when proceedings were commenced, as before stated, to compel the defendant to account. The hearing- upon such ■ accounting was. appointed for May 4, 1903. A. day or two previous . the defendant sought and found Strable and asked him to execute a discharge and satisfaction of his two judgments, again representing- and stating to him that the Pettibone estate was practically.insolvent, that practically the judgments were of no value, but that he, the defendant, wanted satisfactions of the same in order to present themas vouchers to the surrogate. Believing such representations .to be true, Strable executed such satisfactions, receiving no additional consideration therefor, and, upon the day1 following the defendant verified his account in which he state'd that he, ten years before, had paid the judgments in full. He'also omitted to state and the account failed to show that the $800 oi* any other sum for the" Pennsylvania lands had been ■ received by him, - The account, concededly, contained many other inaccuracies, but .they are not embraced in the specific charges, being considered and so need not be discussed in detail. Objections having been made to the account and the foregoing .facts, with others, appearing before the surrogate,. a decree , was made directing the defendant to. pay to Strable the balance of ' his said judgments, which he did. It also directed that the defendant be charged with the proceeds of the Pennsylvania real estate and interest on all sums in his hands and that he be not allowed any commission as executor because of the improper manner in which he discharged the duties of his office. .

The evidence relating to the two charges referred to conclusively shows that while the defendant, as executor of the Pettibone estate, < had iii his possession money more than sufficient to discharge every1 obligation against it, he procured or permitted; two. valid claims amounting to $305.8.6 to be assigned to. his clerk for $18 and $15 . respectively, and that a day or two before he presented lfis verified account to the surrogate, in which he stated that he had paid said judgments in full, principal and interest, he told and represented to the 'judgment creditor that there were no. assets of the estate with which to pay any part of the same, and upon such representation, which Was false and untrue, obtained satisfactions of the ' same. Ignorance on the part of the defendant as to the true state [155]

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Bluebook (online)
108 A.D. 150, 95 N.Y.S. 388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-proceedings-for-disbarment-of-clark-nyappdiv-1905.