Signor v. Signor

122 Misc. 444
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1924
StatusPublished

This text of 122 Misc. 444 (Signor v. Signor) 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
Signor v. Signor, 122 Misc. 444 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Rhodes, J.

This action is brought by the plaintiff, Arthur M. Signor, Jr., as ward, against Arthur M. Signor, Sr., as guardian of the property, and the National Surety Company as surety on the bond of said guardian, the action being for an accounting.

It appears that the plaintiff, then a minor, was injured by the Erie Railroad Company in an accident as the result of which he lost a leg, and the railroad company paid to the guardian the sum of $5,500 in settlement, which was paid to the guardian on or about the 2d day of October, 1903. Shortly after this money was received by the guardian, he drew it from the banks where it had been deposited and invested it for his own use and benefit in certain real property, and shortly afterward became bankrupt, as the result of which the money in question was lost. This was not only a violation of his duty as trustee acting in a fiduciary capacity toward his ward, but was also a felony.

The guardian’s only defense to this action is that he has paid back to his son, the plaintiff, at different times various amounts totaling more than the amount with which the guardian should be chargeable for money received.

The guardian, having commingled the trust funds with his own and appropriated them to his own use, should be and is chargeable with interest at the rate of six per cent from the date of such appropriation and commingling.

It is conceded by the plaintiff that the guardian should be allowed the sum of two hundred and fifty-one dollars and fifty-three cents for artificial legs purchased for the plaintiff, and the sum of forty-four dollars paid by the guardian as a premium on the guardian’s bond, amounting in the aggregate to two hundred and ninety-five dollars and fifty-three cents. The guardian claims to have made other payments and advancements for the benefit of the plaintiff both before and after plaintiff arrived at the age of twenty-one years; that after the plaintiff arrived at his majority the defendant guardian stated to plaintiff that said guardian would make payments weekly or at stated intervals to apply on said account, and that thereafter the defendant guardian did make payments of money at stated intervals, usually in amounts of twenty dollars or twenty-five dollars weekly. Plaintiff denies any such arrangement and claims that whatever amounts were paid to him were paid to [446]*446him as salary and wages for work which he did for his father and guardian, the defendant above named.

No matter how much sympathy may be aroused by the distressing situation in which the guardian is placed, such condition of affairs is the result of the guardian’s own acts, misconduct and slipshod method of handling the trust moneys, and he should not be heard to complain. If any payments out of the trust funds were proper or desirable to be made, the guardian could have protected himself by procuring an order of the court authorizing such payment, or at least the transaction might have been evidenced by receipts and writings showing with definiteness and certainty what the payments and disbursements were for. Nothing of the sort appears in the record herein and in case of doubt or uncertainty, all the payments being disputed, the doubt should be resolved against the guardian and he should be held to strict accountability.

I, therefore, hold that the guardian is chargeable and should account for the full amount of principal which he received, less the sum of $295.53, and is also chargeable with interest at six per cent upon each item of the moneys appropriated, from the date of such appropriation, and his claims for payments and offsets are rejected and disallowed except as to the said sum of $295.53, and excepting as to the sum of $5 per week which the guardian was, by the order appointing him, authorized to use out of the income for the maintenance, support and education of the plaintiff. I think the defendant should be permitted this allowance of $5 per week during the time plaintiff lived at home with and was supported by the defendant and until the time plaintiff was employed by the defendant for wages and salary, as claimed by plaintiff, such employment commencing in the fall of 1914 before plaintiff went on a trip to California.

The remaining question is as to the liability of the defendant surety company. When the guardian was appointed, the Empire State Surety Company became surety on his bond under seal. Later on the defendant, the National Surety Company, entered into a contract of reinsurance with the Empire State Surety Company by which the Empire State Surety Company transferred its outstanding unexpired surety and fidelity bonds, with certain others, to the defendant surety company, with the approval of the superintendent of insurance of the state of New York, said agreement being in writing under seal, and providing for such transfer upon certain conditions, one of such conditions being that the said defendant surety company thereby agreed to reinsure all the said unexpired surety and fidelity bonds and policies against burglary and theft “ for any default of the principals named in said bonds * * * [447]*447occurring after four o’clock P. M. of the 22nd day of August, 1912.” The agreement further states by subdivision 3 thereof, it being the intention of this agreement that the National Surety Company shall take the place of The Empire State Surety Company as to all said unexpired bonds and .all said unexpired policies in all respects with regard to all obligations therein and for loss thereunder, on which no written notice of claim was received by any of the officers of The Empire State Surety Company, located at its home office in the City of New York, or in the Borough of Brooklyn, and upon which no written notice was received by any of its general agents, or branch office managers, located at Albany, N. Y., Brooklyn, N. Y., * * * or upon which any written notice was given to any agent of the said company prior to four o’clock P. M. on August 22, 1912.”

The schedule of bonds which were transferred by the Empire State Surety Company to the said defendant, the National Surety Company, included the bond of the defendant guardian in question. The defendant surety company received from the Empire State Surety Company, for the premium of reinsurance on said bond, the sum of one dollar and forty-five cents, being the amount payable therefor under said contract. The contract in question has been construed by the courts in the case of Escott v. National Surety Co., 219 N. Y. 613. In that case the administrator had misappropriated and embezzled funds and evidence tended to show that the branch office manager of the Empire State Surety Company of the city of Buffalo knew of such default prior to the making of said contract of reinsurance. The court held that as no written notice of claim was received by any of the officers or branch office managers of the Empire State Surety Company prior to the making of the reinsurance contract, the bond there in question did not fall within the exceptions of the letter or provisions of subdivision 3 of the contract, and that, therefore, the reinsurer was hable. The court also said: “ The only other clause of the contract offering any ground of defense is the 12th clause.

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Related

Escott v. . National Surety Company
114 N.E. 1066 (New York Court of Appeals, 1916)

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Bluebook (online)
122 Misc. 444, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/signor-v-signor-nysupct-1924.