Payment of the Undertaker's Bill v. Wingersky

8 Mills Surr. 538, 75 Misc. 79, 134 N.Y.S. 877
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 8 Mills Surr. 538 (Payment of the Undertaker's Bill v. Wingersky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payment of the Undertaker's Bill v. Wingersky, 8 Mills Surr. 538, 75 Misc. 79, 134 N.Y.S. 877 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1911).

Opinion

Fowler, S.

This is a proceeding by the undertaker, under section 2729 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to compel the administrator to pay the funeral expenses of the late Wulf Wingersky.

Again, as is common in these matters, the legal theory upon which a recovery is sought in this proceeding is not precisely set forth, and the surrogate must satisfy himself of the validity of some relevant legal theory which justifies granting the relief sought.

The funeral of Wulf Wingersky was contracted for, not by an executor or an administrator, but by a third person— to be sure a relative of the deceased, and not a volunteer or intermeddler, but nevertheless a third person ad hoc, or, in other words, by one who was a “ stranger ” in legal terminology. Who is an “ intermeddler ” is discussed in Watkins v. Brown, 89 App. Div. 194. Yet the proceeding is in this matter directed against the administrator. It is my duty to justify granting relief against the administrator in this proceeding. If it is to be allowed at all, it must be so allowed pursuant to law, and not arbitrarily on some theory resting in gremio magistratus.

The informality of these proceedings on funeral bills is .very striking, and such informality is in the end advantageous to the public, and should, therefore, be tolerated if possible. But [540]*540underneath the informality there must in every such matter fee found and applied some common law grounds which will sustain the award of the surrogate. There must be a perfect contract, express or implied, and a direct or ultimate liability of the personal representative according to some established legal theory. The surrogate cannot be responsible for the regularity of all the proceedings in such matters at every stage. As was said bjr Chancellor Kent: “ In the course of judicial business courts cannot be responsible for the order and regularity of proceedings. The parties always take these things at their peril.” Hart v. Ten Eyck, 22 Johns. Ch. 113. Notwithstanding this discriminating utterance of this supremely great man, I take it that in these proceedings the surrogate is bound to see, however informal they may be, that the judgment of the surrogate rests on some established legal formula, and that it is precisely consonant with law.

In the statement just made I am not unmindful of the somewhat vague utterance in Patterson v. Buchanan, 40 App. Div. 493, which only at first glance may seem to sanction another theory of law. In reality that decision cannot be so construed. It would be a curious conception of the law established in this State, if that decision were taken to sanction a recovery at law where neither the common nor the statute law created a legal liability. I have before ventured to consider the doctrine also sometimes advanced (Matter of Smith, 18 Misc. Rep. 139), to the effect that the estate of the deceased is at common law “ chargeable for funeral expenses,” independently of a theory of contract, as such doctrine, I am convinced, has no sanction under our system of jurisprudence. See Matter of Moran, 75 Misc. Rep. 90. Independently of the act (Laws of 1901, chap. 393), hereafter referred to, this doctrine is without foundation. It is in fact opposed to the common law of this State, which binds us at every stage, in the absence of a statute to the contrary. As a figure of speech [541]*541to denote the ultimate result of payment of funeral expenses out of the estate of deceased, the expression “ that the estate was chargeable ” is not incorrect. But as a statement of a legal doctrine at common law it is not precise.

Under the old law the duty to bury the dead rested with the executor, and by analogy with the administrator. Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 583. This duty was one of those which might at common law, and under our Revised Statutes, be discharged by the executor before he received his letters. So by the old law, if a stranger buried the dead, he could recover the reasonable expenses thereof over against the executor or administrator upon the theory of an assumpsit. See Matter of Moran, supra; Dayton Surr. 314. But the recovery was de bonis propriis and not de bonis testatoris vel intestatoris in the first instance. Matter of Kalbfleisch, 78 Hun, 464; Kittle v. Huntley, 67 id. 617. Originally, actions arising on the contract, express or implied, for the funeral, were like other actions on contract settled in the courts of law, and the final allowance therefor to the executor or administrator, as against creditors and next of kin or legatees, was settled, if disputed, in chancery on the accounting of the personal representatives.

The old procedure on recoveries for funeral expenses has long been changed by statute of this State, and both the cause of action therefor and the accounting now fall sub modo within the proper jurisdiction of the surrogate. The courts of the surrogates have by statute a much more extended jurisdiction than the Ecclesiastical Courts on which they were modeled, and one more extended than the earlier probate jurisdictions of New York. Their jurisdiction now. includes matters formerly within the exclusive cognizance of the courts of common law or the Court of Chancery. The latest of the statutory changes bearing on this subject of jurisdiction of funeral claims is now embodied in section [542]*5422729 of the Code of Civil Procedure (subd. 3), enacted by-chapter 293, Laws of 1901. Whether or not this statute was enacted with reference to the decision in Patterson v. Buchanan, 40 App. Div. 493, it certainly gave authenticity to the doctrine there expressed. Section 2729 of the Code of Civil Procedure is to some extent mandatory in terms, and it directs that every executor or administrator shall pay, out of the first moneys received, the reasonable funeral expenses of the deceased. It proceeds to provide the creditor with a short remedy for non-payment of the reasonable funeral expenses, but for no other expenses. The statute relates to procedure, not to substantive law. Matter of Kipp, 70 App. Div. 56. A person who invokes the aid of this section of the Code is by its express terms limited to the recovery of reasonable funeral expenses, and no recovery beyond that which is reasonable is contemplated or justifiable by the terms of such section, which is jurisdictional.

If the expense of a funeral be so unreasonable as to constitute a devastavit, I take it that even if the contract therefor were express and made by the personal representatives themselves, there -could be only a partial recovery in this court under section 2729 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which cannot be held to sanction a devastavit. Further liability for the excessive cost must be prosecuted elsewhere, if at all. See Ruggiero v. Tufani, 54 Misc. Rep. 497.

While section 2729 of the Code of Civil Procedure directs the executors or administrators to pay the reasonable funeral expenses of the deceased whom they represent, it cannot intend an obligation to pay such expenses where, on no theory of law, no such liability to pay subsists. The section was intended to avoid circuity only. If on any legal theory the estate would have been formerly ultimately chargeable with the funeral expenses, the payment, provided they are reasonable^ may now be enforced under section 2729 of the Code of [543]*543Civil Procedure. Such is the summary of the reform contemplated by section 2729 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

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243 A.D. 443 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1935)
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Bluebook (online)
8 Mills Surr. 538, 75 Misc. 79, 134 N.Y.S. 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payment-of-the-undertakers-bill-v-wingersky-nysurct-1911.