Van Ness v. . Kenyon

101 N.E. 881, 208 N.Y. 228, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1046
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 22, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 101 N.E. 881 (Van Ness v. . Kenyon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Ness v. . Kenyon, 101 N.E. 881, 208 N.Y. 228, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1046 (N.Y. 1913).

Opinion

Hiscook, J.

The plaintiff, as executor of one Whitaker, brought this-action to recover on three several claims which arose in behalf of the estate represented by him subsequently to the death of his testator. Two of these claims were not in any way disputed by the defendant, but he set forth in his answer three counterclaims alleged to have accrued against the testator during his lifetime, and upon which the verdict of the jury and the judgment now appealed from was and is in his favor. Plaintiff did not challenge the right of defendant to prosecute the said counterclaims in this action if otherwise valid, but by his reply contended and now urges that the same claims alleged as two of the counterclaims were presented to him as such executor as aforesaid after notice to creditors to present claims and that he rejected the same, and that *231 at the time of the commencement of this action they were barred by the so-called short Statute of Limitations because no agreement had been made and filed permitting the surrogate to pass thereon on the settlement of the executor’s accounts, and no action thereon commenced as provided by section 1822 of the Code. It is conceded that a notice disputing such claims was served by the plaintiff, and that no proceedings were actually taken to enforce them until this action was commenced, but it does appear that after the alleged rejection of the claims a verbal agreement was made by the parties for a reference under Code of Civil Procedure, section 2718, and it was left to the defendant’s attorney to prepare the proper papers for such reference. This, however, he did not do although nearly three months elapsed between the date when it was thus agreed and the expiration of the short period of limitations, and thereafter the plaintiff insisted upon such statute as a defense to the claims.

The questions, therefore, are presented whether plaintiff did make an effective rejection of the claims, and if so whether he is prevented by these negotiations for a reference or otherwise from invoking the statute.

Section 1822 of the Code, so far as applicable, provides: “Where an executor or administrator disputes or rejects a claim against the estate of a decedent, exhibited to him, * * * unless a written consent shall be filed by the respective parties with the surrogate that said claim may be heard and determined by him upon the judicial settlement of the accounts of said executor or administrator as provided by section twenty-seven hundred and forty-three, the claimant must commence an action for the recovery thereof against the executor or administrator, within six months after the dispute or rejection, * * "x"; in default whereof, he, and all the persons claiming under him, are forever barred from maintaining such an action thereupon, and from every other remedy to enforce payment thereof out of the decedent’s property.”

*232 Section 2718 of the Code, so far as applicable, provides:. “ The executor or administrator at any time after the granting of his letters, may insert a notice * * * requiring all persons having claims against the deceased to exhibit the same, with the vouchers therefor. * * * If the executor or administrator doubts the justice of any such claim, he may enter into an agreement in writing with the claimant to refer the matter in controversy to one or more disinterested persons, to be approved by the surrogate. On filing such agreement and approval in the office of the clerk of the supreme court * * * an' order shall be entered by the clerk referring the matter in controversy to the person or persons so selected. On the entry of such order the proceedings shall become an action in the supreme court.”

The notice which the plaintiff signed and served upon the defendant concerning his demands read as follows:

“ To J. Andrew Kenyon:

You will please take notice that I doubt the justice and validity of your claim of $748.00 against the above named estate, and I hereby dispute the same and offer to refer it under the statute to some suitable and proper person as referee, to be approved by the surrogate, to hear and determine the same.”

It is in substance argued that this was not sufficient under section 1822 for the purpose of setting in motion the short Statute of Limitations, but that the claimant was fairly entitled to regard it as a notice under section 2718 whereby the executor simply indicated a doubt concerning the claim and a desire to refer it, and which action drew after it no unusual Statute of Limitations.

We are unable to agree with this view.

Section 1822 of the Code provides a penalty of the short Statute of Limitations for a case where the executor or administrator disputes or rejects ” a claim, and no agreement is made for a hearing by the surrogate. Wherever the section deals with the contingency in ques *233 tion it speaks of a dispute or rejection of a claim. The two words are used as synonymous in describing the hostile attitude and action of an executor or administrator, and in fact they are inevitably so. If an executor disputes a claim it quite necessarily follows that he does not admit its validity but on the contrary rejects it. Likewise, if he rejects it, he certainly disputes it in a very practical way.

The notice which was served, independent now of the clause offering to refer, fully complied with the requirements of this section. The executor states in reference to the claim, ‘ ‘ I hereby dispute the same. ” This certainly was a literal compliance with the section in question and a perfectly plain ¡statement of his attitude, and this compliance and attitude were in no manner limited or weakened by the introductory statement of the executor that he doubted the justice and validity of the claim, because from a legal standpoint such doubt would necessarily be implied in a dispute or rejection thereof. Therefore, we have an express and sufficient dispute of the claim invoking the operation of the short Statute of Limitations, and this result was not in my opinion at all impaired because the executor, still further, offered to make a reference of the claim. There may be various reasons why an executor should prefer a reference of a disputed claim rather than some other course by which to determine its validity, and I see nothing which requires us to construe a dispute or rejection under section 1822 as inconsistent with or exclusive of an offer to refer under section 2118. If the parties had duly agreed upon such reference it would have become an action in the Supreme Court and thus the requirements of section 1822 would have been satisfied. (Section 2118.) The important, controlling fact is that because he doubted the justice and validity of defendant’s claim the executor explicitly and plainly disputed the same and that circumstance of dispute set in operation the Statute of Limitations which is *234 now invoked, in the absence of escape therefrom by other procedure specified in the Code.

Nothing is found in the authorities cited in behalf of the defendant which forbids these views. The most that can be gathered from them is the principle, conceded and undisputed, that a notice of rejection or dispute must be unequivocal and plain.

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Bluebook (online)
101 N.E. 881, 208 N.Y. 228, 1913 N.Y. LEXIS 1046, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-ness-v-kenyon-ny-1913.