Woodruff v. H. B. Claflin Co.

91 N.E. 1103, 198 N.Y. 470, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 822
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 17, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 91 N.E. 1103 (Woodruff v. H. B. Claflin Co.) 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
Woodruff v. H. B. Claflin Co., 91 N.E. 1103, 198 N.Y. 470, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 822 (N.Y. 1910).

Opinion

Willard Bartlett, J.

Jason G. Cooke, who died at Potsdam, H. Y., on December 23, 1899, was indebted to the defendant in the sum of $725.95. His widow, the plaintiff, became his administratrix on January 2, 1900. The defendant pressed for payment of its claim, threatening to sue if it were not speedily paid, whereupon the administratrix, believing the estate to be solvent, compromised it by paying $700 in the month of May, 1900. Upon her subsequent accounting in the Surrogate’s Court it turned out that the estate had been from the outset insolvent and was really capable. of paying only a dividend of 71.04 per cent upon its indebtedness. Such a dividend would have given the H. B. Claflin Company $178.48 less than it received from the administratrix in discharge of its claim; and she brought the present suit to recover that amount with interest. As evidence of the insolvency of the estate and its extent, she was allowed to introduce, over the defendant’s objection and exception, a decree of the Surrogate’s Court of St. Lawrence county upon her accounting, to which it is conceded the defendant was not a party, and a second decree of the same court purporting to amend the first, made in a proceeding which the defendant was cited to attend. The competency of this proof will be considered presently. The trial court directed a verdict for the plaintiff and the judgment thereon has been affirmed by the Appellate Division.

We have no statute in Hew York giving the personal representative of an insolvent decedent a right of action in such a case as this; and the first question presented for our determination is whether an action of this character can be maintained in the absence of statutory authority therefor. The only Hew York case referring to the question, to which our *473 attention has been called by counsel, is Gulke v. Uhlig (55 How. Pr. 434) which was decided by a General Term of the Hew York Court of Common Pleas, consisting of Chief Justice Charles P. Daly and Judges Van Hoesen and Joseph F. Daly. Two opinions were written, one by Judge Van Hoesen and the other by Judge Joseph F. Daly. ' It does not appear with which of these the chief justice concurred. Judge Van Hoesen distinctly assumed that an administrator could recover money which he had overpaid to creditors in confidence in the ultimate solvency of the estate, but insisted that the suit must be brought in equity and not at law; while Judge Joseph F. Daly avowed his inability to perceive any good reason for denying the administratrix relief in an action at law, if she made out a case which would entitle her to recover formerly in equity. The case involved other issues, however, and it is impossible to ascertain from the report which of these conflicting views received the sanction of a majority of the court.

The decisions in other states are conflicting. The doctrine which is supported by the weight of judicial authority, and which, it seems to me, we ought to sanction, may be briefly stated. In the case of the death of an insolvent debtor, the law contemplates equality in the distribution of the proceeds of his estate among his creditors. A creditor who seeks more than his fro rata share of the debtor’s property under such circumstances seeks that which does not belong to him, and makes the other creditors poor in proportion. To insist upon full payment from an insolvent estate is dishonest, if the party thus insisting is aware of the insolvency. Hence, whether the overpaid creditor shares the erroneous belief of the administrator that the estate is solvent, or is acquainted with its true condition, he is equally obligated to return the surplus he has received over the dividend to which he was entitled when it has become judicially ascertained that the estate is not large enough to pay all the debts in full; for in the first case both parties act under a mutual mistake of fact, and in the second case there is a wrongful intent on one side and a mistake on *474 the other. The creditor who has received the excess has no right to retain it in equity and. good conscience; and the personal representative who has innocently paid such excess may maintain an action to recover it, if lie moves seasonably after the ascertainment of the insolvency, and has done nothing which -Ought to constitute an estoppel in favor of the overpaid creditor.

It is settled by a uniform series of decisions in Massachusetts, beginning with the case of Walker v. Hill (17 Mass. 380), that an administrator who pays a debt due from his intestate within a year after giving notice of his appointment, and under the honest belief that the estate is solvent, may subsequently, when the estate is shown to be insolvent, recover back the difference between the amount of the debt so paid and the amount awarded to the creditor by the Probate Court on a judicial settlement of the estate. (See Heard v. Drake, 4 Gray, 514, and Flint v. Valpey, 130 Mass. 385.) It is not entirely clear, however, that the assertion of this doctrine in Massachusetts has not been dependent to some extent upon the statutes of that commonwealth. The case of Walker v. Hill (supra) was cited by Pinch, J., writing for this court in Matter of Hodgman (140 N. Y. 421, 431), when he said it must probably be granted “that an executor may, at least in equity, recover an overpayment to a legatee under peculiar circumstances which excuse his mistake.”

The case of Mansfield v. Lynch (59 Conn. 320) was an action by an administrator de bonis non. The first administrator, within the time limited for’the presentation of claims, paid in full to the defendants a claim of $400 under the belief that the estate was solvent and having disallowed certain claims against the estate on the ground that they were invalid as he had been advised by the probate judge. These disallowed claims were subsequently held to be valid in a judicial proceeding and the estate was thereby rendered insolvent. The dividend which the defendants would have received was $290 less than the amount actually paid them. The first administrator having died and the plaintiff having sue *475 ceeded him as administrator de bonis non he sued the defendants to recover $290 on the ground that it was money paid to them under a mistake by the original administrator. The Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut held that the action was maintainable, saying: “We know of no case and have been referred to none wherein it is decided that the administrator may not recover in a case like the present.” The court points out that in such a case the mistake in overpayment vorks no harm whatever to the creditor but that it would be gainst equity and good conscience tó allow the creditor to ■etain money which rightfully belongs to the estate and which las been obtained solely in consequence of an honest error. 1 considerable portion of the opinion is devoted to a discusión of the question whether it is necessary that the mistake hould be one of fact and the conclusion is reached that the me principle should apply even where the mistake is only ne of law. That question, however, does not arise in the resent case where it is clear that the administratrix made a listake of fact as to the condition of the estate.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.E. 1103, 198 N.Y. 470, 1910 N.Y. LEXIS 822, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-h-b-claflin-co-ny-1910.