Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution

48 How. Pr. 166
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 48 How. Pr. 166 (Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roderigas v. East River Savings Institution, 48 How. Pr. 166 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Spier, J.

The question in the case is, had*the surrogate jurisdiction to grant the letters of administration which protect the defendant in making the payments to Isabella McNeil % The only justification for doing so, as claimed, is that it paid upon the strength of the letters issued by the surrogate of the city and county of New York. It must be conceded if he had no jurisdiction it would be no protection.

The defendant claims, through its counsel, in order to sustain the surrogate’s jurisdiction for its protection, chiefly upon the ground that the state appoints, by judicial authority,. certain persons who, upon the death of an individual, administer upon his personal property; and although the state does not profess to administer it unless the individual he in fact dead, there are many cases where the question of death, like other questions of fact, are difficult of ascertainment, and that in such cases it is within the legitimate province of the state, on presumptive proof of death, to authorize administration on his estate, establish tribunals to take such proof, providing safeguards sufficient to make the sanction of its judicial authority a protection to third parties. It. claims that the state [168]*168of New York has done this, and the cases at bar are to be determined by its statutory law alonei

Section 26, article 2, title 2, chapter 6, volume 2, Revised Statutes (Edm’ds ed.), page 75, is relied on : “ Before any letters of administration shall be granted on the estate of any person who shall have died intestate it shall be proved to the satisfaction of the surrogate, who shall examine the persons applying for such letters, on oath, touching the time, place and manner of the death, and whether or not the party dying left any will; and he may also, in like manner, examine any other person, and may compel such persons to attend as witnesses for that purpose.”

Again; it is provided that “the letters testamentary and of administration, and letters appointing a collector, granted by any officer having jurisdiction, shall be conclusive evidence of the authority of the persons to whom the same may be granted, until the same shall be reversed on appeal or revoked, as in the chapter provided (2 R. S., 80, § 56).

In the twentytsixth section it is assumed, by the very •letter of the statute, that the proceedings take place only ■when “ any person shall have died intestate,” the fact of such person dying intestate shall be proved to the satisfaction of the surrogate. The court is not authorized to act except when "the fact exists that the person shall have died intestate. The court is set in motion by the admitted jurisdiction, that such person has died intestate, and the proceedings are carried forward only upon that assumption. So, in the fifty-sixth •section, the proviso is, that certain letters, issued by an officer having jurisdiction, shall be conclusive, &c. This, the defendant’s counsel says, means granted by the proper officer, and on proper proceedings taken before him, and if it means that the letters are a protection only in case the proof before the surrogate was conclusive, the section is useless. With great respect, I think the learned counsel assumes the premises for the sake of his deduction. Jurisdiction here is conceded, and, therefore, the surrogate is authorized to issue certain letters. [169]*169but it does not follow that he has authority to issue them under all circumstances, and much less where he has not the acquired jurisdiction. Nor in logical terms can the section be said to be useless; for the court, acting within the sphere of its original authority, the letters issued by an officer acting under such authority should be taken as conclusive, both as a useful and orderly proceeding on well settled principles.

The forty-seventh section (2 R. S., 79) is claimed to cover the whole ground assumed by the defendants. It is in the words following: .“All sales made in good faith, and all lawful acts done, either by administrators before notice of a will, or by executors or administrators who may be removed or superseded, or who may become incapable, shall remain valid, and shall not be impeached; or any will afterward appearing, or by any subsequent revocation or superseding of the authority of such executors or administrators.”

This section, like all others on this subject, is founded upon the fact that the surrogate shall and must have jurisdiction over the subject-matter before he could deliberate on the case. The proper surrogate obtains control over the personal estate of deceased persons only upon their death. He acts upon the estate either through administrators, according to the statute of distributions, or through executors, according to the provisions of a will. Having acquired jurisdiction by the event of death, the question whether there was a will or not, as determining the mode of distribution, falls within his province, and his action either in granting letters of administration or probating a will, as the case may be, 'cannot be attacked collaterally. By the actual facts of death and inhabitancy the surrogate acquires jurisdiction over the whole subject, and his action in granting -letters of administration cannot be attacked for want of jurisdiction. In case of. a ■will being subsequently proven, relief could be obtained by application to the surrogate himself, for a revocation of the letters of administration, in which case, as the grant of letters of administration was voidable, only the acts done under it [170]*170would be valid. In Prosser agt. Wagner (1 Com. B. [N. S.], 289), both the death of the party, and the granting the letters by the proper officer, was conceded. See also Sheldon agt. Wright (5 N. Y., 497), as to the necessary result of the principles there laid down.

The statute of 1870 (1 Laws of 1870, p. 826) is also referred to as sustaining defendant’s position. He claims that it being remedied it may well retract. The answer to this is, that all lawful orders and decrees in proceedings in the surrogate’s court, * '* * and the objection of want of jurisdiction, except by appeal in the manner prescribed by statute, &c.,” relate only to the case where such original jurisdiction has been acquired, and is to be construed in harmony with other statutes on the subject (1 Kent's Com., p. 524, 525 [10th ed.]). I hope to show, presently, it is not in the power of the legislature to confer jurisdiction on a surrogate over the estate of a living person.

In the case at bar, the parties not being dead, all the proceedings were totally void, and consequently the payment to an executor or administrator appointed where the supposed testator or intestate is alive, would not be a discharge of the debt.

I think it may well be conceded that, upon evidence being furnished, according to the rules and principles of evidence and law, establishing the fact of death and of intestacy, the surrogate would be bound to issue letters, but this is done at the peril of the applicant, in case death should not in fact have occurred. But, as already shown, a compliance with such duties never, by the statutes of this state, give him jurisdiction when the supposed intestate or testator was in actual being. The surrogate must always inquire and decide whether the person whose estate is to be committed to .the care of others be dead or in life.

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Related

Sheldon v. . Wright
5 N.Y. 497 (New York Court of Appeals, 1851)

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Bluebook (online)
48 How. Pr. 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roderigas-v-east-river-savings-institution-nysuperctnyc-1874.