Miller v. Harrison

34 N.J. Eq. 374
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 34 N.J. Eq. 374 (Miller v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Harrison, 34 N.J. Eq. 374 (N.J. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The bill is filed by a creditor of the estate of John C. Johnson, late of Newark, deceased, against the administrator, to bring into this court, from the Essex orphans court, where they are pending, the accounts of the latter for settlement here, to the end that the complainant may be relieved from the effect of a receipt given by him to the defendant. That instrument, though purporting to be in full of his claim against the estate, was given on the receipt of only part of the amount due on the claim. The ground of relief is that the complainant accepted the dividend in ignorance, through concealment thereof from him by the defendant of his rights, which he insists entitled him to payment in full; and he claims that the defendant is therefore answerable to him for the balance of his debt. The claim, as proved June 19th, 1876, was $10,000. It was subsequently reduced by a payment of $3,300 which the complainant obtained from the estate out of the assets of the intestate’s firm in New York. The amount of the dividend paid was on the whole claim, as proved, and was $4,094.40. The complainant complains that the defendant concealed from him the fact that the complainant was (as he claims to have been) entitled, with two other creditors, to preference over the rest of the creditors because they three alone had exhibited their claims, under oath, within the time designated in the order for limiting creditors, which the defendant had taken and published; and that the defendant, ignoring and keeping silence as to the advantage which the complainant had thus obtained, distributed the estate, which was sufficient to pay7 the three (but not all the creditors) in full, among all the creditors, and thus gave to those who had not come in within the limited period participation in the assets to which they were not by law entitled; and, on the other hand, paid to the complainant only part, instead of the whole of his claim, thus depriving him of the preference which he insists he had gained by his diligence. The intestate died on November 17th, 1875. Administration was granted to the defendant on the 22d of that month, and an order limiting creditors to nine months was taken on that day. The inventory was filed on August 5th, 1876. The [376]*376limited period expired on August 22d, 1876. A rule to show cause why the decedent’s land should not be sold to pay debts was taken January 2d, 1877, and an order to sell was made in March following. The land was sold and the sale was confirmed on May 29th, 1877. On that day the administrator made a representation that the estate was insolvent, and a decree barring the creditors who had not come in within the nine months was made on the same day. Erom that time until the filing of the administrator’s final account, no proceedings were taken in the orphans court, but the defendant distributed the estate among all the creditors, paying them a dividend of forty and ninety-hundredths per cent, of their claims. He afterwards filed his final account on December 30th, 1878. The complainant, who had received the dividend and given the defendant a receipt in full for his claim against the estate, filed exceptions, which were referred to a master in chancery on April 2d, 1879, and testimony was taken thereon, but further proceedings in the orphans court were stayed by the injunction of this court, issued on the filing of the bill. It appears that in the outset, and for perhaps the first six months of his administration, the defendant supposed that the estate would prove sufficient to pay all the creditors in full, but he soon afterwards found that it was not only insolvent, but would need care and management to make it pay any considerable dividend. The order to limit was applied for and taken on the suggestion of the surrogate that it was a proper and customary proceeding, and not in view of supposed insolvency. It was obtained on the same day on which the letters of administration were granted. No order barring creditors, however, was taken until May 29th, 1877, when the representation of insolvency was made. That order, then, was not taken until more than nine months after the expiration of the time limited for bringing in claims. The complainant and two other creditors exhibited their claims, under oath, within the time designated in the order limiting creditors. Afterwards, and before the order barring creditors was made, other creditors exhibited their claims, under oath, to the amount of about $25,000. The claims exhibited within the period designated in the order limiting [377]*377creditors, amounted to about $33,500, but they were subsequently reduced to about $23,000. The amount realized from ‘the personal and real estate appears to have been about $37,400. In addition to the debts which were proved, there were others to a very large anlount, believed to be genuine and correct, which the administrator therefore allowed. The undertaker’s bill was among these. The estate was only sufficient to pay a dividend of forty and ninety-hundredths per cent, upon all the debts. After the representation of insolvency had been made, the surrogate suggested to the administrator, with a view to saving trouble and expense, the propriety of settling the estate in the same manner in which he would if it were solvent; that is, by agreeing with the creditors as to the amount of their dividend, and paying it without proceedings in court to establish it. The administrator, approving of the suggestion, and being advised by his counsel that it was safe to do so, acted upon it. After-wards, and in the summer of 1878, an impediment having been thrown in the way of the settlement of the estate by an attachment or injunction, by which the payment to the defendant of a large amount of money coming to the estate out of the decedent’s business partnership in the city of Hew York, was stopped, the complainant called a meeting of the creditors at the Pacific Bank in that city, and some of the creditors met there accordingly. The result of the meeting was an endeavor to get rid of the obstruction before mentioned, which was successful. The defendant and complainant were both present at the meeting. The former stated there that he could not tell definitely what the estate would pay, but that he thought it would pay from forty to fifty per cent. Ho question was asked of him, nor was anything said, so far as appears, as to the time when the claims were presented, and the defendant made no representation or statement on the subject. Indeed, there is no room to doubt that he supposed that all the bona fide creditors were entitled to participate ratably in the distribution of the assets, without reference to the time or manner of exhibiting their claims, and whether they exhibited them or not, so long as their claims were known to the administrator. After the restraint by legal proceedings in Hew [378]*378York, before mentioned, had been removed, he proceeded to the distribution of the assets among all the creditors, and paid the complainant his ratable proportion (and more than that, in view' of what he had received in New York) on such division, part of it, $2,500, before, and the residue at the time of signing the receipt. The receipt, with the check for the residue of the dividend, was left for convenience, by the defendant, with Mr. Farrington, the decedent’s late partner, at the office of the firm, in New York, where the complainant lived; the check to be delivered on the signing of the receipt. The complainant at first refused to accept the check and sign the receipt, on the ground that he thought that the estate should have proved sufficient to pay the debts in full, and he suspected that there had been mismanagement of the assets. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.J. Eq. 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-harrison-njch-1881.