Seaward v. Tasker

80 Misc. 570, 141 N.Y.S. 618
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 Misc. 570 (Seaward v. Tasker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seaward v. Tasker, 80 Misc. 570, 141 N.Y.S. 618 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Scudder, J.

Upon the trial the evidence introduced consisted chiefly of a judgment roll, the printed cases on various appeals, and other court records. It being impossible to examine these records upon the trial, the court directed a verdict for the plaintiff, and reserved its decision on the motion to set aside the verdict, in order that a thorough examination of the records might be made and the merits of the controversy determined. It was stipulated on the trial that if anything had not been admitted in evidence, which the court might re[571]*571gard as material, it might be admitted in evidence at any time.

The court has found it necessary to examine the original record of the accounting proceeding of Mary E. King as executrix of William Z. King, deceased, in the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county, and the same will be regarded as admitted in evidence.

The action is in the nature of the common law action of money had and received.

The plaintiff, as administrator with the will annexed of William Z. King, deceased, seeks to recover from the defendant, an attorney at law, money which was paid to him for legal services by one Buell G. Davis, as executor of Mary E. King, deceased, upon the ground that Mary E. King left no estate, and that all the money and property in Davis’s possession as executor in fact belonged, and had been adjuged to belong, to the estate of William Z. King.

An action for money had and received is to be determined upon equitable principles. In order to recover plaintiff must prove, not merely as a matter of technical law, but that in equity and good conscience he is better entitled to the money than defendant.

To establish his title, or rather his equitable right, to the money which was paid by Davis, the executor of Mary E. King, to Tasker, the defendant in this action, plaintiff relies solely upon the judgment roll in Seaward against Davis filed with the clerk of Kings county on April 4, 1911, and the affirmance of that judgment by the Appellate Division. See 148 App. Div. 805.

An examination of the court records in that case has led me to the conclusion that I must disregard the judgment on which the plaintiff in this action relies because the courts responsible for it seemingly have considered themselves bound by mere rules of prac[572]*572tice to render a judgment contrary to what they have declared in their opinions to he the law, and thereby have perpetrated an injustice which shocks the conscience.

What first led me to an examination of this judgment was the glaring difference between the construction which is placed on the will of William Z. King by the opinion of Chief Judge Cullen in Seaward v. Davis, 198 N. Y. 415, and that which is placed thereon by the opinion of Mr. Justice Woodward rendered later in the same case, reported in 148 App. Div. 805.

Mr. Justice Woodward in his opinion, after referring to the opinions previously rendered in the case by the Appellate Division (121 App. Div. 290; 133 id. 191), and to the opinion of the Court of Appeals therein (198 N. Y. 415), says: “ The effect of these adjudications is to make conclusive the judgment of this court as to the proper construction of the will of William Z. King, who gave his personal property to his wife for life, with power to use the principal ‘ for her own personal use, ’ and that she held such personal property ‘ as trustee for the remaindermen as to all that portion thereof which was not used by her during her lifetime for her own personal use,’ and that the defendant, as administrator (sic), was liable to account for the acts of said wife as such trustee.” 148 App. Div. 806.

In rendering the opinion of the Court of Appeals, Chief Judge Cullen (198 N. Y. 419, 420) says: “ On the merits we are of opinion that the will of William Z. King was properly construed by the Appellate Division on the first appeal in this case (Tuthill v. Davis, 121 App. Div. 290). That is to say, its effect was to give the widow a life estate with the absolute power of disposition during her lifetime, with remainder over of such part as she might not dispose of to the persons named in the will * * *. It is doubtless true that [573]*573ordinarily a life tenant in possession of personal property is a trustee to preserve the principal for the remaindermen to whom it may pass on his death. In this case, however, the widow had the right to dispose of the property in her lifetime and as to such property as she did dispose of neither she nor her executor was bound to account to the remaindermen because they had no interest in it. ”

Both of these opinions in their entirety will be considered hereafter. It is sufficient to state at this point that the several constructions placed upon the will of William Z. King by these opinions are so contradictory and irreconcilable that duty compelled me to examine the judgment on which the plaintiff relies in this ac- ■ tion, to ascertain whether or not it has been obtained or rendered by wrong or grievous mistake.

To determine this, the history of the litigation between the administrator cum testamento 'annexo of William Z. King and the executor of Mary E. King must be reviewed.

William Z. King and Mary E. King in their lifetime were husband and wife. William Z. King died in February, 1899, leaving a will containing the following provision:

“ Third. I give and bequeath all my personal property of every name and kind to my wife excepting my piano which I give to Lilly Corwin aforesaid.

“ Whatever personal estate may remain at the decease of my wife I give and bequeath to Buel Davis and Abagail Davis the parents of my wife, or if they are not living then to my sisters aforesaid and Lilly Corwin share and share alike.”

By the will the wife was appointed executrix, and she duly qualified as such.' She employed as her attorneys in the settlement of her husband’s estate the firm of Burr, Coombs & Wilson. The senior member of this [574]*574firm, Mr. Joseph A. Burr, subsequently (1905) became justice of the Supreme Court, and ceased to be a member of the firm.

■ These attorneys presented Mrs. King’s account as executrix of her husband’s estate to the Surrogate’s Court of Kings county. In this account it is stated that she was sole legatee of her husband, and on May 18, 1900, a decree was obtained which in effect adjudges that she turn over all the personal property of the estate to herself as the absolute owner thereof.

Her account shows that the principal part of the estate of William Z. King consisted of an' account of $1,000 in the Seaman’s Savings Bank and twenty-six United States Government bonds of the aggregate face value of $14,000. She states in her account that she had not sold any of the personal property mentioned in the inventory of her husband’s estate. The account, however, shows that she had sold two $1,000 United States Government bonds and had turned over the proceeds to herself as sole legatee. It nowhere appears from the account itself whether or not she had transferred or appropriated to herself the $1,000! in the Seaman’s Savings Bank.

The decree settling this account adjudged among other things that she be permitted and allowed to sell the Government bonds remaining unsold, of the face value of $12,000, or, if she so elected, to have the title to the said bonds transferred to her.

This account and decree, although rendered in an ex parte

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Related

In re Rogers' Estate
149 N.Y.S. 462 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1914)
Davis v. Seaward
85 Misc. 210 (New York Supreme Court, 1914)
Seaward v. Tasker
143 N.Y.S. 257 (New York Supreme Court, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
80 Misc. 570, 141 N.Y.S. 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seaward-v-tasker-nysupct-1913.