Spiegelberg v. Mink

1 N.M. 308
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 N.M. 308 (Spiegelberg v. Mink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spiegelberg v. Mink, 1 N.M. 308 (N.M. 1859).

Opinion

By Court,

Benedict, C. J.:

Mink presented, in tbe probate court for tbe county of Santa Ee, a claim against Levi Spiegelberg, as administrator of Elias Spiegelberg, deceased, for the sum of one hundred and twenty dollars, for service as an appraiser of decedent’s estate. The probate approved of sixty-three dollars and forty cents of the claim, and rejected the balance. The administrator’then appealed to the district court, and, on trial, judgment was rendered against tbe appellant for the same amount adjudged against bim in the probate, and thereupon be appealed to this court. The points made in the cause are few. We deem it proper to notice one matter of practice which the record brings to view.' In the district court neither party required a jury. The judge was substituted in the place of the jury, heard the testimony, and found the judgment, or rather the verdict, upon the facts submitted. Spiegelberg excepted to the decision of the court, and tendered his bill of exceptions.

Now, had the cause been tried by a jury, the party, to be placed in a condition to have entitled him to a revision of the facts in this court, should have moved the court below for a new trial, and, upon being overruled, embodied the evidence in a bill of exceptions. No exceptions could have been supported against the judgment of the court, upon the verdict of the jury, until its attention should have especially and formally been called to a re-examination of the correctness of the verdict. So, too, where the judge is substituted for the jury, the party aggrieved should move for a new trial, and the judge be thus required to revise his finding upon the facts in the case. If the motion is carried, the party will then- be entitled to his bill of exceptions on the evidence. This will be found to be the usual rule of practice where the courts are permitted to put the judge, by the consent of the parties, in the place of the jury, in trying the facts in a civil action. In this case, such course was not pursued; the appellant only excepted to the judgment of the court. Upon this practice no point has been made before us in this court, and we shall give the parties the full benefit of a revision of their testimony, the same as if it had been brought here in the most regular and commanding mode. The chief arguments have been made in review of the evidence, and our judgment by both parties is expected to be rendered upon such merits as this evidence discloses.

Mink’s claim was founded upon alleged services as one of the appraisers of the estate of the deceased Spiegel-berg. It was not questioned that he was duly appointed and sworn. The statute provides that “ appraisers shall receive at the rate of fifty cents for every hundred dollars until the termination of the appraisement on property left by will as well as property left by intestates:” Eev. Codes, 490.

It appears that Spiegelberg, administrator, made an inventory of tbe deceased’s estate, and tbe same was filed in probate, amounting to tbe sum of twenty-four thousand one hundred dollars and fifty-two cents. Five days from tbe date of said inventory, Mink, with C. P. Clever,■ sworn appraisers, certify that they had appraised tbe property specified in tbe inventory at tbe same sum of twenty-four thousand one hundred dollars and fifty-two cents. This appraisement appears to have been filed with tbe probate as tbe true valuation of tbe estate, and its correctness was never opposed by tbe administrator. Tbe latter opposed tbe justness of Mink’s demand upon the grounds, to wit:

1. He never performed the services as appraiser to entitle him to compensation.
2. That be agreed to perform those services without compensation.

Tbe only oral witness was Mr. Clever, tbe joint appraiser. Some objection was made by counsel for Mink, to tbe competency of this witness, upon tbe ground that the appraiser’s action being reduced to writing, Mr. Clever could not give verbal testimony as to anything said or done by Mink touching tbe premises. We think that tbe court properly admitted tbe witness to testify, and upon grounds so obvious as not to require further remark in this opinion. Clever’s testimony unfolds a state of affairs which calls for our marked condemnation from this place. We are unable to say that any fraud was actually practiced upon those interested in tbe estate; but the mode of procedure, if permitted to go unrebuked, and should it be repeated, might lead to frauds upon estates, heirs, and creditors, of the most aggravated character. A large portion of the estate consisted of merchandise. Clever testifies that he, the witness, appraised the goods in company with the administrator; that Mink did not invoice tbe said goods, nor did he render any service in the invoicing; that Mink was probably in the store two or three times during the appraisement. Clever states the reason for this strange conduct to have been, that tbe witness and bis partner had purchased the goods of the administrator at a certain percentage on the original cost, and as they were going to put said goods on the market, they did not desire said Mink to know the prices of said goods.

The way the goods were appraised was by putting a percentage on the original cost. As to the other items in the account, witness did not appraise them, nor does he know whether the plaintiff appraised them or not. The list of the other items was made out by the administrator and Mink, and the administrator brought the certificate of ap-praisement to the witness and told him it was all right, and he signed the certificate. Now, it is evident that if Mink was not present and aiding in the invoicing, it was because by design and consent between the joint appraiser and the administrator he was excluded. Whether Mink knew that he was thus combined against, and became willingly passive in his exclusion from his active and sworn duties, the witness does not say. The witness was unwilling to trust the private interest he had in the subject-matters to be invoiced to the information of Mink for fear he might impart his knowledge to the damage of the new partnership in trade then formed.

To all this the administrator became a willing party. What other motive he may have had, aside from the interests of the purchasers of those goods in usurping the duties of Mink, and excluding a sworn agent of the law and the estate from the discharge of his functions, is not brought to view in the testimony. If Mink was unworthy of the trust with which he was clothed, and such was known to the administrator, he should have resisted his appraisement or applied for his removal. From all that appears in this case, it is difficult to resist the conclusion that Mink was appointed, at least with the acquiescence of the administrator, with the hope, if not the positive understanding, that he should passively and willingly minister to the convenience of the parties most immediately interested in the goods to be appraised. We do not see that he was at all unfaithful to their views and wishes. After the goods were disposed of, it seems that Me. Clever became passive as to the other items of the estate, though exceeding thirteen thousand dollars in valuation. Mink could not give any knowledge of these items, the imparting of which would inj ure the private interest of others, and so Mr. Clever retired from further labor, and the administrator joined himself with Mink, in whom both he and Clever seem at this point to have found confidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 N.M. 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spiegelberg-v-mink-nm-1859.