87 N.Y.S. 938 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
An administratrix appeals from a judgment resulting from a" reference of a disputed claim under section 2718 of ■ the Code.of Civil Procedure. The plaintiff has recovered for the use and occupancy of a house, for funeral expenses and for money advanced to the intestate. •
The plaintiff must show either that the conventional relation of landlord and tenant existed, or must prove other circumstances sufficient for the law to imply a contract. (Lamb v. Lamb, 146 Ñ. Y. 317; Collyer v. Collyer, 113 id. 442.) The plaintiff was the nephew of the intestate. The intestate had leased from Mr. Eipley a house of nine rooms with a barn and outhouses, situated upon four and a half acres of land in a rural community, for sixty dollars a. year, and it appears that the plaintiff had made some payments to Eipley on that rent. Thereafter the plaintiff purchased the house, and owned it for a time, and also for a subsequent time controlled it as lessee. After the house passed from the ownersliip of Eipley, the intestate and his maiden sister occupied it for five years and upwards. The claim is for the rental value of those five years. It appears from the evidence that the intestate was in very moderate circumstances. The plaintiff has not only presented a claim for the rent against the estate, but has also sued his aunt (the administratrix), contending that she, too, is separately liable therefor. As I have said, the plaintiff does not pretend that he ever made any claim upon either his uncle or his aunt for any rent until after the death of the intestate, or that the matter was ever discussed between them. Although he states that he kept books of account wherein he charged every large indebtedness to him, save in the instance of his own brother’s debt, he admits that he' never made any charge therein for this rent, although he kept a memorandum of what it cost him “ to carry that place.” The plaintiff’s aunt, the joint occupant of this house, against whom the plaintiff now makes a separate demand for this rent, testifies without contradiction that the plaintiff never at any time said anything to her about a rent charge, never asserted any .claim therefor, and never demanded any rent from the intestate or from her. The relationship and the relative situation of the nephew, his uncle and his aunt at least afford a
I think that the judgment for the funeral expenses cannot be upheld. The reference is expressly made pursuant to section 2718 of the Code of Civil Procedure. This statute is limited to claims which existed against the intestate. A claim for funeral expenses is not of this character, inasmuch as it is not strictly regarded as a debt due from the intestate, but rather a charge against his estate. (Patterson v. Patterson, 59 N. Y. 574.) This charge, then, could not be made the subject of a reference, notwithstanding the consent of the administratrix and her omission to object upon the reference. (Shorter v. Mackey, 13 App. Div. 20; Matter of Van Slooten v. Dodge, 145 N. Y. 327; Hovey v. Hovey, 46 Hun, 71.)
The checks of the plaintiff and the indorsements- thereon, coupled with the writings of the intestate, are, I think, sufficient' to sustain the findings of the indebtedness of twenty-seven dollars. But in all other respects the testimony -is not sufficient to uphold the judgment.
The judgment should be reversed.
All concurred, except Hirschbbeg, P. J., dissenting.
Judgment reversed, with costs, and proceedings remitted to the " Surrogate’s Court for further action.