Van Ness v. Kenyon

75 Misc. 526, 135 N.Y.S. 802
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 75 Misc. 526 (Van Ness v. Kenyon) 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
Van Ness v. Kenyon, 75 Misc. 526, 135 N.Y.S. 802 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

Vah Kirk, J.

This action is brought by an executor to recover on two counts: (1) For personal property of deceased sold to defendant at auction, seventy-six dollars and twenty cents;.(2) for rental of farm of deceased to defendant, fifty dollars. The defendant in his-answer, has set forth three counterclaims; (1).For services rendered to'the executor, as such; (2) and (3) for claims against the deceased.

The action was tried with a jury. Plaintiff claimed that [527]*527counterclaims (2) and (3) were barred by the short Statute of Limitations. A verdict of the jury , was taken, subject to the opinion of the court as to the application of the statute. The facts of the case are undisputed. In December, 1910, the defendant presented a verified claim to the executor containing the same matter as alleged in his counterclaims numbered (2) and (3). Under date of December 12, 1910, the executor served upon the defendant a notice in these words: You will please take notice that I doubt the justice and validity of your claim of $748 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.” Defendant’s attorney, shortly thereafter, had an interview with the executor, and the executor testifies as to said interview in substance as follows: We agreed to refer the claim to James Gibson, Jr., of Salem, and after some conversation it was left to defendant’s attorney to prepare the necessary papers. More than six months thereafter the defendant’s attorney presented the papers to the executor, who is an attorney at law, and who felt that the statute had run.against the defendant’s claim and, therefore, refused to execute the papers. Thereafter the executor brought this action, and the defendant answered, setting up the counterclaims. So, briefly, the condition is this: The executor, having a claim against the defendant and knowing that the defendant has a larger offset or counterclaim, serves a notice offering to refer the counterclaims, agrees to refer the same and chooses the referee; then, later, because the executor thinks the short statute has run, he brings an action upon his claim against the defendant and says: “ My claim is not barred but yours is.”

The sole question here presented is, whether or not ' counterclaims (2) and (3) are barred by the Statute of Limitations. Two sections of the Code are involved, 1822 and 2718." The first applies where a- claim is absolutely rejected. The title is/£ Limitation of action by creditor on ■ claim rejected,” etc., so it is intended to cover claims re[528]*528jected and none other; no qualification in the executor’s notice, which might lull to sleep the creditor’s attention, is permissible. . The “ consent ” mentioned is to be filed with the surrogate, not incorporated in the notice. In this section the short statute is enacted. ' Section 2718 applies to a different case. Under it the claim is not absolutely rejected, but the executor may give notice that he doubts the justice of the claim and offers to refer it. In this section there is no short Statute of Limitations. It is decided in Clark v. Scovill, 191 N. Y. 8, that a proceeding under one of these sections is entirely independent of a proceeding under the other; and that, where a party has elected to take one proceeding, he cannot thereafter abandon it and proceed under any other course that was originally open to him. "These two sections of the Code are not to be read together, and the limitation in section 1822 is not to be read into section 2718.

The question, therefore, is whether or not the notice, under date of December 12, 1910, was the rejection of the claim required under section 1822 or the other notice under section 2718. Section 1822 is a p’enal statute, and the executor" can not invoke the short Statute of Limitations under it unless he has complied with its terms exactly. ' One of the requirements is that the claim must be' absolutely rejected and in such' form that the claimant will be without excuse for failing to resort to his action within the time required to save his claim. Ulster County Savings Institution v. Young, 161 N. Y. 33; Hoyt v. Bonnett, 50 id. 542; cited in 161 id. 33. The discussion in Hoyt v. Bonnett, on pages 542 and 543, is applicable to the case at bar and very instructive. I find no modification of this rule. When the verified claim was presented to the executor, in making his reply, he had the choice of serving his notice under section 1822 or section 2718. Clark V. Scovill, 191 N. Y. 8. The executor did not serve a notice absolutely rejecting the claim under section 1822. The notice contains no warn-' ing that claimant must proceed by action if he intends to enforce his claim. : The wording of his notice identifies it as a notice under, and intended to be. under, section 2718;. the expressions conform substantially to section 2718 and ' [529]*529do not to section 1822. Under section 1822 there is no warrant for using the expression that he doubts the justice of the claim, or that he offers to refer it. Nor has he filed his consent to leave it" to the surrogate. And in this connection the amendment of 1895 should be remembered; before that, section 1822 contained a provision for a reference under the statute. By that amendment this provision was stricken out and a provision substituted for filing a consent with the surrogate that he hear the claim. The use of the word dispute ” by the executor does not bring the notice under section 1822. In that section the word dispute” is a synonym for.the word “ reject.” The executor in his notice has not so used it, but his wording plainly conveys the impression that he disputes the claim because he doubts the justice of it. Having served his notice under section 2718 and thus having elected to proceed thereunder, he is bound thereby and is not now at liberty to claim that he was proceeding under section 1822. Clark v. Scovill, 191 N. Y. 14.

I have examined the cases cited by the plaintiff and find none that seems to me to be in conflict with this holding. In Matter of Brown, 76 App. Div. 185, a claim was rejected and the administratrix filed a consent to leave it to the surrogate under section 1822. The procedure followed was, therefore, under section 1822,-and the short statute therein applied. Cornes v. Wilkin, 79 N. Y. 129, arose before the amendment of 1895. In that case the claim was presented and rejected; later, in May, 1874, the executor wrote offering to submit the claim under section 372 of the Code. The claimant made no reply until March, 1876. In answer to the claimant’s position that the executor’s letter was a waiver, the court said: To constitute a waiver, the offer should have been accepted within six months and have been followed by an actual submission as proposed.” It appeared, therefore, first, that the claim had been absolutely rejected, next, that the claimant had not, as in the case at bar, complied with the proposition made by the representative of the -estate. Clark v. Scovill, 191 N. Y. 8, holds that, after the claim is duly rejected, three ways are open to the [530]*530claimant; that the proceedings under section 1822 and section 2718 are each independent of the other. The claimant in that case had selected a way for establishing her claim by consenting to leave it to the surrogate and she was bound thereby. She could not, therefore, afterward proceed by action. In Matter of Hoes, 54 App. Div. 281, the administrator rejected the claim and consented to leave it to the surrogate.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Friedberg v. Mechanics Bank of Brooklyn
135 Misc. 194 (City of New York Municipal Court, 1929)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 Misc. 526, 135 N.Y.S. 802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-ness-v-kenyon-nysupct-1912.