Keegan v. Smith

39 N.Y.S. 826, 25 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 417
CourtCity of New York Municipal Court
DecidedJune 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 39 N.Y.S. 826 (Keegan v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering City of New York Municipal Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keegan v. Smith, 39 N.Y.S. 826, 25 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 417 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

VAN WVCK, O. J.

These two actions were tried by consent upon the same proof, by the court, without a jury, and Smith alone appeared and defended. He is sued as a surety on the official bond of Michael Keegan, who was in February, 1893, appointed administrator of the estate of his sister Jane, who died unmarried in the previous month. Another of her brothers, James Keegan, under section 2727, Code, petitioned the surrogate to issue a citation to the administrator, who had failed to file an account, although more than 18 months had elapsed since his appointment, to show cause why he should not be compelled to render his account, and have the same judicially settled; and the. administrator was. alone so cited, and thereafter he filed his account, in which he charged himself as having collected the money left by decedent in her savings bank, amounting in cash to $579.35, and credited himself with $390, as properly disbursed by him for undertaker’s, funeral, and church services. The petitioner, by his attorneys, McMahon et al., who are plaintiffs in one of these actions, filed objections to this account,— that the disbursements of $390 were excessive, and that the administrator had failed to charge himself in the account with a just debt due by him to the decedent in her lifetime. This account and the objections were referred by the surrogate to one Bradley, and one Bonynge, as stenographer, took notes of the minutes at the hearings before the referee. The petitioner, by his attorneys, made proof [827]*827before the referee that the decedent had obtained on October 5, 1888 (four years before her death), against the administrator, three judgments, aggregating $593.26, and, with interest, amounting to $821.53; that these judgments remained unsatisfied of record; that, during decedent’s lifetime, her attorney had made ineffectual efforts to collect the same, or any part thereof; and that the same still remained wholly unpaid,—but did not make the slightest effort to prove that these judgments were collectible. So that the only issues tried on this reference were whether the item of disbursement of $390 was reasonable and proper, and whether the administrator was indebted to the estate upon these judgments recovered by decedent against him, in her lifetime; and the referee reported that he w7as so indebted, and that his disbursements should be reduced by two items, $19 and $46.63,—$65.63, which deducted from $390 left $324.37, as properly disbursed and credited to him in his account. The administrator had received in cash $579.35, from which deduct the $324.37 as allowed, and there will still be a cash balance in his hands of $254.98, to which add $821.23, which must be charged in his account as a debt due by him to the decedent in her lifetime, and his account will show a nominal balance of $1,076.51 in his hands. However, the liability of the sureties on the administrator’s bond is entirely different as to these two items of $254.98 and $821.23. The action of James Keegan et al. is by four of the five next of kin of the decedent against Smith, as surety on the bond of the administrator, who is also the other next of kin, and is based upon the decree entered upon the referee’s report, and which decree purports to be a final judicial settlement of the administrator’s account, and decrees the final distribution of the decedent’s entire estate, although no one was cited upon this special proceeding except the administrator, who is one of five of decedent’s next of kin, and no one appeared.except him and the petitioner, another next of kin. The decree, after judicially settling the account by charging the administrator with the balance of cash of $579.35 and with $821.23, as “an indebtedness to the estate for judgments recovered by decedent against the administrator in her lifetime,” and crediting him with the $324.37, directs a final distribution of the balance of $1,076.51 by the administrator as follows: First, to the referee, $75, and to the stenographer, $80.20; second, to McMahon et al., attorneys for the petitioner and his brother Joseph, as costs and allowance, $121.99; third, to distribute the residue of said estate among James (the petitioner), Michael (the administrator), and Joseph Keegan, and Margaret and Edward Biggs, the next of kin of deceased. There is no specific direction as to how much is to be paid to each, or as to how much each is entitled to, or as to whether Margaret and Edward Riggs are children of a deceased sister, and only entitled to her share of Jane Keegan’s estate. The sums directed to be paid to the referee, the stenographer, and petitioner’s attorneys, amounting in aggregate to $277.19, exceeds by $22.21 the cash balance of $254.98 in the administrator’s hands. These sums must be paid, if at all, before distribution to next of kin; and this w7ould leave only $799.32 of the $821.53 charged as a debt due by administrator to decedent during [828]*828her life, to be so distributed. The petitioner’s attorneys obtained and filed with the county clerk a transcript showing a judgment perfected by the decree in favor of James and Joseph Keegan and Margaret and Edward Riggs (the plaintiffs in this action) and Michael Keegan against Michael Keegan, as administrator of Jane Keegan, deceased, for $799.32, and issued, under Code, § 2554, an execution thereon to the sheriff against the administrator, to enforce the payment to plaintiffs of $639.20, or four-fifths of the total amount directed to be paid to next of kin; but it does not appear whether’ plaintiff’s shares amount to four-fifths or to three-fourths. This execution against the administrator was returned wholly unsatisfied; and the four next of kin (plaintiffs) bring this action, under Code, § 2607, against Smith, as surety on the administrator’s bond.

It must be conceded that under 2 Rev. St. p. 84, § 13, an administrator, by decree in a proper special proceeding, must be charged in his account with a debt due by him to decedent in her lifetime; and, although such debt must be treated as money in his hands for the purpose of administration, it will not, for all purposes, stand on the same footing as if he had actually received so much money, and, if wholly unable to pay the money as directed by a decree, he will not be punished for contempt, as he could be if he had actually received the money from some other debtor. Baucus v. Stover, 89 N. Y. 1, in which it is said:

“Whether his sureties could be held for such debt as so much money actually received by him we are not now called upon to determine, and do not determine.”

However, the court of appeals has since held that his sureties could not be held for such debt in the action in which the sureties were sued, and such action against them was dismissed. See Baucus v. Barr, 107 N. Y. 624, 13 N. E. 939, which affirmed same case in 45 Hun, 582, on the opinion of general term, which says:

“The surrogate, following the decision of the court of appeals [Baucus v. Stover, 89 N. Y. 1], has ordered that the executor do apply and ¿distribute the amount due upon the note as part of the personal estate of the testator. As he can do nothing of the kind, and legal remedies against him have proved unavailing, this action is brought against his sureties. The sureties are not liable, and judgment must pass in their favor.”

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Related

Sanders v. Dodge
103 N.W. 597 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1905)
Howell v. Anderson
61 L.R.A. 313 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1902)
Keegan v. Smith
49 N.Y.S. 1139 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)
Keegan v. Smith
42 N.Y.S. 1126 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1896)
McMahon v. Smith
42 N.Y.S. 1127 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1896)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 N.Y.S. 826, 25 N.Y. Civ. Proc. R. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keegan-v-smith-nynyccityct-1896.