3 Bradf. 233 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1855
The administrator, a brother of the intestate, was cited by the husband of his sister on the application for administration, and on his preferring to take the letters rather than have them issued to the applicant, his right to administration was contested on the ground that he was indebted to the intestate. (2 Bradford’s Rep., 304.) He denied the indebtedness, and I refused to hear a litigation on that point, the debt being positively sworn to by the applicant. Eighteen months having elapsed, the administrator has been called to account, and his sister and mother now endeavor to charge him as a debtor to the intestate. They show that the decedent made him advances, and produce a letter of the administrator indicating that the advances were treated by him as a loan.
The administrator alleges in defence that similar advances were made by the intestate to the other next of kin, tfiat he