95 N.Y.S. 678 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
Upon this appeal the genuineness of the note or the. fact of its indorsement by appellant’s intestate is not questioned. The note was dated Adams, N. Y., January 19, 1901; was for $415, payable six months after date, and, as stated, was indorsed by appellant’s intestate. On the 19th day of July, 1901, the day when the note became due, it was duly protested for non-payment and notice thereof was given to the maker and to Nellis as administrator of the estate of the indorser Porter, he having died on the nineteenth day of May previous. On the day when the note became due $112.45 was paid and indorsed thereon, and it is not claimed that any other payments have been made. The administrator only defended. He asks for a reversal of the judgment upon the ground, among others, that the evidence conclusively establishes that the claim was presented to and rejected by him as administrator more than six months before the action was brought, and, therefore,, that the short Statute of Limitations, section 1822 of the Code of Civil Procedure, is a bar to a recovery in this action. Tile section, so far as it is . important to note, provides that where an administrator disputes or rejects a claim against the estate of a decedent, exhibited to him, the claimant must commence an action for the recovery thereof against the administrator within six months after the dispute or rejection, and that in default thereof such claimant and all persons claiming under him are forever barred from maintaining any action to enforce payment of the same.
In rendering its verdict in favor of the plaintiff the jury necessarily found that the claim in que'stion had not been exhibited to and disputed or rejected by the administrator more than six months before the commencement of this action. The appellant insists that there is no evidence to support such finding, and in any event that it was contrary to and against the weight of the evidence. Appel
After a claim is once barred by the statute the administrator has no power or authority to voluntarily renew it or reinstate it to the prejudice of the parties in interest. (Flynn v. Dzefendorf, 51 Hun, 194.)
j It is equally well settled' that if the claim in question was presented by Hannahs or Brown and rejected by the administrator, such rejection would have been binding upon the plaintiff even although he was not informed of such rejection or had been misinformed by such parties, the agents selected by him to present the claim. (Peters v. Stewart, 2 Misc. Rep. 357.)
The rule is stated in Dillon, v. Anderson (43 N. Y. 231, 238) as follows: “ .Notice to the agent is notice to the principal, if the agent comes to the knowledge of the fact while he is acting for the principal in the course of the very transaction which becomes the subject of the suit.”
It is also considered that a verbal rejection is sufficient to set the statute m operation., (Peters v. Stewart, supra.)
It is entirely immaterial whether the plaintiff was ever informed that the claim had been rejected by the administrator, if such was the fact, the witnesses referred to having been authorized to present ■such claim. (Cox v. Pearce, 112 N. Y. 637.)
So that the important question is whether the claim was rejected. There is no dispute but that it was presented early in January, 1902, and again in the spring of 1903. The evidence of the two witnesses to whom wé have referred is to the efféct that it Was rejected at the times when the. claim was respectively presented by them; but the fact of such rejection rests upon their evidence, and the plaintiff testified that at the time, and apparently when there could be no purpose served by misstatement by them to him, they told him in substance that the claim had not been rejected by the administrator. The jury had a right to find that the witnesses Hannahs and Brown stated to the plaintiff, as testified by him, that the administrator did not reject the claim, and, if so, the jury had a right to find that the evidence given upon the trial by them that such claim was rejected by the administrator was not true. After the plaintiff had testified as to what he was informed by Hannahs
It is urged by the appellant that the complaint should have been dismissed because it failed to allege that the plaintiff had exhausted his remedy against Pitcher, .the maker of the note,, or that he was insolvent. We think such allegation is only necessary in an action brought to enforce a claim against joint -obligors." In this case the obligation of Porter was joint and several, If he. had been living an action could have been' brought- against him alone to recover the amount of the note, and, therefore, we think the learned trial court properly denied appellant’s motion to dismiss the complaint.
It is urged that the court in the course of the trial made certain remarks which were improper and which would naturally tend to influence the jury adversely to the defendant,, and that the court committed error in refusing. to charge certain requests submitted by. the appellant. We think it sufficient to say that no exception was taken which presents any of the alleged errors complained of, and in this case we think the court is not called upon to exercise its discretion for the pur.pos,e of reviewing an alleged error not raised by objection or exception in order to give, force and effect to the
Only a word need be said respecting the order awarding costs against the administrator payable out of the estate. So far as disclosed by the evidence there was no defense to the note in question upon the merits. The only issue, as we have seen, was whether it had been presented and rejected and its collection thereby barred by the short Statute of Limitations. As to that defense the appellant had full knowledge of the facts, and upon such facts, as found by the jury, we think the administrator unreasonably resisted and neglected the payment of plaintiff’s claim within the meaning of section 1836 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and, therefore, that the order as to the payment of costs was proper.
It follows that the judgment and orders appealed from should be affirmed, with costs to the respondent payable out of the estate.
All concurred, except Williams and Nash, JJ., who dissented.
Judgment and orders affirmed, with costs.