152 N.Y.S. 698 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1915
The complaint, summarized, alleges that plaintiff was the husband' of Eva Gerber, who died February 4, 1914, intestate and without descendants; that said intestate left no debts and that plaintiff is of sufficient financial responsibility to pay her debts, if she left any. It is further alleged that at the time of her death said Eva Gerber had on deposit in defendant, and said defendant owed her, a sum of money, which plaintiff seeks to recover in his own right by virtue his jus mariti, no administrator having been appointed. The defendant demurs.
It is the settled law in this State that upon the death of a wife, intestate and without descendants, the title of her personal property of all kinds at once passes to and vests in her surviving husband, and this notwithstanding our Married Women’s Acts, which have secured to a wife during coverture the same rights to her separate property and the disposition thereof that she would have enjoyed if unmarried (Gittings v. Russel, 114 App. Div. 405; Robins v. McClure, 100 N. Y. 328; Ransom v. Nichols, 22 id. 110), and that this title is derived solely from the jus mariti is now also well settled. In Barnes v. Underwood (47 N. Y. 351) it was intimated that in such a case the husband’s title was derived through his right to administer, but this view was distinctly repudiated in later cases. (Robins v. McClure, supra.)
The only question .in the case is whether or not, as to a chose in action like the debt owed by defendant to plaintiff’s deceased Wife, the husband must, in order to recover, take out administration, or may, as he seeks to do here, recover in his individual capacity without administration. This precise question does not appear to have been passed upon in this State, although the authorities are numerous in other States to the effect that having failed to reduce the property into possession during coverture, it becomes a part of the wife’s estate, to be recovered through administration. (See cases collated in 21 Cyc. 1179.) The rule was formulated in Allen v. Wilkins (85 Mass. 321). That was an action upon a promissory note given to the wife and held by her at her death. It was held that it was a chose in action, and, since the husband had omitted to reduce
That, in case of the death of a wife owning choses in action not reduced to possession by the husband during coverture, it may be necessary for the husband to take out letters of administration in order to collect is distinctly recognized in Olmsted v. Keyes (85 N. Y. 602), in which Judge Earl, writing for the court, said: “All the choses of the wife not reduced to posses
We are of opinion that, in a case like the present where the debtor to the wife at the time of her death is unwilling to make voluntary payment to the husband, the latter can enforce payment only by taking out letters of administration in due and orderly course. This may serve to protect the debtor if, as may happen, it shall hereafter he found that the wife was in debt at the time of her death.
The determination appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Ingraham, P. J., Clarke, Dowling and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred.
Determination affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.