Snedeker v. Snedeker
This text of 47 A.D. 471 (Snedeker v. Snedeker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
All concurred.
The following is the opinion of the surrogate of Kings county:
I am unable to agree with the contention of the learned counsel for the administratrix, although there is much force in his argument.
The terms of the statute are explicit. The action must be brought by the administrator or executor (Code Civ. Proc. § 1902), and a release by the person appointed administrator, executed prior to his appointment, constitutes no defense to the cause of action. (Stuber v. McEntee, 142 N. Y. 200.)
[472]*472The damages are exclusively “ for the benefit of the decedent’s husband or wife, and next of kin, and when they are collected, they musí be distributed, by the plaintiff, as if they were unbequeathed assets left in his hand:” (Code Civ. Proc. § 1903.)
The term “next of kin ” as used in these sections, “includes all those entitled, under the provisions of law relating to the distribution of personal property, to share in the unbequeathed assets of a' decedent.” (§§ 1905, 1870.)
The cause of action allowed is purely statutory and did not exist at common law, and we must look to the statute exclusively for direction as to distribution of the sum recovered.
I fully recognize the apparent inconsistency between the provisions of section 1904, that the damages awarded shall be “ a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injuries resulting from the decedent’s death, to the person or persons for whose benefit the action is brought,” and the direction of section 1903, that the damages collected, after the deduction of commissions and expenses, “ must be distributed * * * as if they were unbequeathed assets; ” but the latter direction is explicit, and to my mind susceptible of only one construction.
Let an order be presented on two days’ notice in conformity with the views herein expressed,
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47 A.D. 471, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snedeker-v-snedeker-nyappdiv-1900.