Mitchell v. Mount

19 Abb. Pr. 1
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Abb. Pr. 1 (Mitchell v. Mount) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mitchell v. Mount, 19 Abb. Pr. 1 (N.Y. 1865).

Opinions

By the Court.—Potter, J.

This is an appeal from the judgment of the Supreme Court, in the first district, which reversed the order of the surrogate of the city of New York. In July, 1863, the appellants recovered a judgment against the respondent Mount in the Court of Common Pleas of the city of New York, for $1,261.76. Mount was sole acting executor of William B. Moffat, late of the city of New York, who died in April, 1862. Letters testamentary were issued to Mount, May 7, 1862. In September, 1863, Mitchell, one of the appellants, applied to the surrogate of New York for a citation, to be issued to Mount as such executor, to show cause why an execution should not issue against him as such executor for the collection of such judgment. The citation was issued. Mount appeared and accounted for the amount of the estate, by showing that $11,000 had come to his hands as the avails of the personal estate; that an amount of personal property amounting to about $27,715.17 was not yet available, by reason of its being under a lease; that the debts of the testator, unsecured by mortgage or other liens, [3]*3including the interest thereon, were about §42,000 ; that there was a large real estate, worth, over incumbrances, above $150,000, from the sales of a portion of which about $60,000 had been realized. Thereupon, the surrogate made an order granting leave to Mitchell and Cummings to issue execution, in due form of law, against the said Mount as executor, for the amount of said judgment, and interest. Mount appealed from this order to the general term of the Supreme Court, giving an undertaking in the sum of $100 on such appeal. The general term reversed such order of the surrogate, with costs, from which judgment an appeal is brought to this court.

It is so perfectly clear that the general term had no jurisdiction of the appeal in this case, that nothing further is required to be said after reading the provisions of the statute made for such purposes, which are as follows:

Every such order shall be conclusive evidence, that there are sufficient assets, in the hands of such executor or administrator, to satisfy the amount for which the execution is directed to be levied; and no appeal shall-be made from any such order, unless the person making the same shall execute to the plaintiff in such execution a bond with sufficient sureties, to be approved of by the surrogate, conditioned for the payment of the full amount so directed to be levied, with interest thereon, and the costs of defending the appeal, in case the order appealed from shall be affirmed.” (2 Rev Stat., 116, vol. 3, 5 ed., 204, § 22 [21].)

The bond in this case was in the penalty of $100, conditioned to pay the" costs that may be adjudged against the appellant in the Supreme Court. The amount of the execution directed to be levied was $1,261;76. I am not aware of any repeal or modification of this statute, or of any of its provisions in this respect; none were claimed on the argument, or referred to on the briefs. The provisions of the statute are plain and clear. It is not allowable to interpret what requires no interpretation. Courts possess no power in such cases to give construction to it. The act speaks its own unambiguous, emphatic, unmistakable language, plain to the comprehension of every ordinary mind. This statute is not unconstitutional; its authority is above the power of courts, and is to be obeyed. When a statute is conceived in clear and precise terms, when the sense is manifest [4]*4and leads to nothing absnrd, there can be no reason to refuse the sense which it naturally presents. To go elsewhere in search of conjectures, in order to restrain or extinguish it, is to endeavor to elude it. ( Vattel, B. 2.)

The section of the statute above quoted was enacted with especial reference to just such a case as the one before us. The first division of the section clearly intends to exclude from review by another court the question of discretion given to the surrogate in deciding as to the sufficiency of assets. It declares that his order shall be conclusive upon that point. No appeal therefrom- can be brought to correct or reverse such decision. If, for any other reason than that of the sufficiency of assets, the surrogate has committed an error, then the second part or division of the section applies, which declares that no appeal, shall be made for any purpose except upon condition of giving a bond in the form and containing the amount of security specified. This last division of the section is not to be construed as authorizing an appeal in relation to the question of discretion upon the question of sufficiency of assets. It must be some other question than that for which an. appeal lies. The argument in this case, as well as the opinion of the general term, shows that the only error complained of is, that the surrogate erroneously decided in relation to the sufficiency of assets. This is error. The Supreme Court had no jurisdiction of the appeal upon that question. If we could be wrong in this view, the question of the sufficiency of the bond is fatal to the appeal. The condition upon which only an appeal can be taken has not been complied with. This was decided in Davies a. Skidmore (5 Hill, 503), per Bronson, J. But such a statute needs no adjudication to sustain it.

If called upon to look at this case upon the merits, it presents a single question arising upon undisputed facts. Mitchell and Cummings had obtained a judgment against Mount, as*such executor, for $1,261.76, after a trial at law upon the merits. This statute, entitled, “ Of the Bights and Liabilities of Executors and Administrators,” ought to be permitted to speak forth its own decision of the case. It provides (§ 20), “ Where a creditor shall have obtained a judgment against any executor or administrator, after a trial at law upon the merits, he may at any time thereafter apply to the surrogate having j nrisdic[5]*5tion, for an order against such executor or administrator, • to show cause why an execution on such judgment should not be issued.”

. Section 21. The surrogate to whom such application shall be made, shall issue a citation, requiring the executor or administrator complained of, at a certain time and place therein to be named, to appear and account before him; and if, upon such accounting, it shall appear, that there are assets in the hands of such executor or administrator, properly applicable, under the provisions of this chapter, to the payment, in whole or in part, of the judgment so obtained, the surrogate shall make an order, that execution be issued for the amount so applicable.”

Exactly what these sections direct was done. The executor rendered his account of the estate. He had been an executor above one year; he had $11,000 in his hands, avails of personal estate; in his account of the estate, and of the performance of his duties, he set up no claim that he had paid a single debt.

There was no claim that there was any debt that was by law entitled to preference, or that there was any amount of debts to be preferred, that would .exhaust the $11,000, or any part of it; and although the whole debts of the testator would exceed the moneys in hand arising from the sales already made of personal estate, yet he showed to the surrogate in his account a large amount of real estate, more than sufficient, with the other personal estate not yet made available, to pay all the testator’s debts, with the avails of $60,000 of. the proceeds of the sales of real estate which had then been realized.

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Related

Newell v. Wheeler
2 Abb. Pr. 134 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1866)

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Bluebook (online)
19 Abb. Pr. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-mount-ny-1865.