O'Connor v. . Huggins

21 N.E. 184, 113 N.Y. 511, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 275, 68 Sickels 511, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 971
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 3, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 21 N.E. 184 (O'Connor v. . Huggins) 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
O'Connor v. . Huggins, 21 N.E. 184, 113 N.Y. 511, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 275, 68 Sickels 511, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 971 (N.Y. 1889).

Opinion

*515 Gray, J.

The defendant has objected to the title proffered by the plaintiffs, on the ground that it was not a good and marketable one, and he bases his objection on the invalidity of a sale of the premises made to the plaintiffs’ testator in 1851. Isaac F. Craft acquired the title to the premises in 1828, and, while seized of them, died intestate in Indiana, in 1845. In 1850 one Pell, a creditor of Craft, obtained the grant to himself of letters of administration of the goods, etc., of the intestaté from the Surrogate’s Court of the county of Richmond, in this state. Subsequently to his obtaining this grant of letters, the administrator made due application for authority to mortgage, lease or sell the real estate of the intestate for the payment of his debts, and, in 1851, such authority being granted, the premises were sold to the plaintiffs’ testator, Andrew Oarrigan. Carrigan lived in a mansion-house, upon a tract of land, of which the premises in question formed a part, until his death. In 1813 letters testamentary on his estate were granted to these plaintiffs, who had been named in his last will as his executor and executrix. They sold the premises in question here to the defendant at public auction, in 1886, and the agreement was then executed, to enforce which the plaintiffs have brought this action. The defendant raises two distinct questions with respect to the acquisition of title by the plaintiffs’ testator. The first is that the Surrogate’s Court of Richmond county did not acquire jurisdiction to issue the letters to Craft’s administrator; and the second is that the proceedings, instituted by the administrator for a .sale of the real estate, were defective in certain respects, and hence were ineffectual to confer any title to the land. The objection, which goes to the granting of the letters of administration, proceeds on the theory that the recital in them, that Craft left assets unadministered in the county of Richmond, by reason whereof jurisdiction to grant administration thereupon appertained to the surrogate of said county, was disproved by the evidence upon the trial.

It. is true that, in the petition for the granting of the letters, it was stated generally that the intestate “ died possessed of *516 certain personal property in the state of Hew York,” etc., and that the particular situs of the property in the county was not alleged; but, before the letters issued, further facts were alleged, by the affidavit of the petitioner, showing the existence of assets in that county. Thus the fact which existed to give jurisdiction to the surrogate to act, but which was not precisely stated in the petition of the administrator, was made to appear before the rendering of the decision upon the application. The statutory requirement of a jurisdictional fact was met by the production, by the applicant, of proof of its existence. The recital in the letters was grima faoie evidence of its existence; and the record shows that the necessary facts were alleged, upon which the surrogate acted in granting them. His determination upon the proof cannot be disturbed by an attack upon its correctness, in a collateral proceeding. Surrogates’ Courts, though established as courts of special and limited jurisdiction, have possessed the general and exclusive jurisdiction to order the administration upon the estates of deceased persons, and, where jurisdiction to act exists, their orders and decrees are made conclusive until they are revoked, or reversed on appeal. (2 R. S. 80 § 56.) That conclusiveness attaches in a case where a jurisdictional fact is in question, and it then appears that there was proof with respect to its existence, upon which the surrogate decided. His adjudication, in the exercise of his general and exclusive jurisdiction, where jurisdictional facts, necessary to the possession of that jurisdiction, appear to have been alleged, and when the necessary parties have been duly cited to appear before him, is not thereafter open to collateral attack. Power to affect the adjudication resides in the court which made it, and in the court to which it may be appealed; but otherwise it is not open to question. This principle, of course, in its application to other parties affected, implies the absence of fraud, or collusion. It is not material how the decision was reached; provided the facts, which confer power to act, were alleged. The surrogate was not confined to any form of procedure, or to any mode of proof, in acting upon an application for letters. The defect in the *517 allegations of the petition was supplied by allegations in a subsequent deposition, and we are bound to presume that, prior to issuing the letters, the surrogate deliberated and decided upon the right of the petitioner.

The plea, when - urged collaterally, that the decision was erroneous, must always be unavailing. For its errors the remedy was by a direct proceeding for their correction, and subsequent proceedings, which rest upon the decree, will' not he affected, however erroneous the adjudication may be urged to have been. (Porter v. Purdy, 29 N. Y. 106.)

The conclusiveness of letters of administration as to the authority of the surrogate has been the text of several decisions by this court. In Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution (63 N. Y. 460) it appeared that, at the time when certain letters of administration had issued, the alleged intestate was yet living, and the due statutory proofs of his death, upon which the surrogate acted, were shown not to have been founded in the fact. The defendant was sued for moneys, which it had paid over on the demand of the previous administrator, by the plaintiff, to whom letters were subsequently issued upon proofs of death. This court held that no recovery could be had against the defendant. In the opinion it was said: “ "Where general jurisdiction is given to a court over any subject, and that jurisdiction depends, in a particular case, upon facts which must be brought before the court for its determination upon evidence, and where it is required to act •upon such evidence its decision upon the question of its jurisdiction is conclusive until reversed, revoked or vacated, so far as to protect its officers and all other innocent persons who act upon the faith of it.” In Kelly v. West (80 N. Y. 139) the objection was raised that letters of administration were wholly void, because issued without any citation to the widow or renunciation by her. The objection was overruled, and it was said that “the surrogate had jurisdiction to grant the letters, and hence the statute makes them conclusive evidence of the authority of the persons to whom they were granted until revoked or set aside.” In Leonard v. Columbia Steam *518 Navigation Company (84 N. Y. 48) it was said that “ the letters of administration granted by the surrogate are conclusive as to his authority. * * * The letters on their face show that the intestate died leaving assets in the state and in the county of New York, and this gave the surrogate of the county of New York jurisdiction.”

In the present case, all things concur to warrant the application of this rule of conclusiveness.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.E. 184, 113 N.Y. 511, 23 N.Y. St. Rep. 275, 68 Sickels 511, 1889 N.Y. LEXIS 971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oconnor-v-huggins-ny-1889.