3 Redf. 8 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1877
The objections considered, and on which testimony has been given, are to $70 paid to Nicholas Walsh, sexton, for expenses of deceased’s funeral; and to C. J. Winterbottom and Go’s, account
Testimony was principally taken before my predecessor, and concluded before the present Surrogate. Thomas E. Stewart, one of the executors, testified that he received' from the estate of Andrew Erlacher, decedent’s father, $2,625.78; that he knew the deceased well, and that several years ago he boarded at several prominent hotels in the city, and appeared to be in good circumstances; that a few years before his decease he called upon witness to become surety for the uniform he was about to purchase as fireman, saying that he had not money enough to purchase it, without getting credit; that he thought this was about two years before his death; that at his death he was an assistant engineer of the fire department; that he did not consider the plot in Greenwood Cemetery excessively expensive, considering decedent’s circumstances, or that the expenses of the monument, or, of the funeral were so; that the counsel’s fees mentioned were paid necessarily in proceedings taken in behalf of the estate, to enforce its claims against the representatives of his father’s estate, and that the charges were reasonable; that the deceased at the time of his death lived in a house, or part of a house in 6th Avenue; that he was buried from St. Joseph’s
James E. Taylor, a fireman, testified that he knew the deceased; that he was a fireman, and foreman for a time, and received $1,500 a year as such.
David McAulay testified to the execution of the deed to Mrs. Erlacher of a lot in Greenwood Cemetery for $270; that it was a half lot; and that the lots were divided into one quarter, one third, one half, and whole lots.
The witness Stewart, being recalled, testified that decedent was held in high esteem in the fire department ; that his associates seemed to be different from the ordinary class; that the amount of property he was entitled to from his father’s estate was about $4,000; that the funeral at the church was under the auspices of the fire department, a band of music being employed, and the church draped; and that the reason he assented to the expenditure for the monument was that the money from his father’s estate belonging to the decedent, the Surrogate of Kings County, on the accounting of his father’s estate, allowed $500 for a monument, and because of his social position.
Austin Leek testified that the funeral in question was a public funeral, and firemen and policemen were present, fire commissioners, and the usual attendants upon the public procession of a man killed in the performance of his duty, and that he was reported to have moneys besides his salary.
From the evidence in this case I am of the opinion that the objections to the sexton’s charge, the undertaker’s, and the two counsel’s fees are not well taken.
I am of the opinion, under the circumstances of the case, that the bill of the undertaker was not unreasonable, considering the station in life of the deceased, and the amount of his estate.
But as to the expenses incurred for the burial plot in Greenwood, and the monument erected over the remains of the deceased, I am of the opinion that the expenditure is excessive, and should not be allowed.
It has been urged on behalf of the executors that the fact that the decedent was a public officer, and the Department desired a public demonstration at his funeral, afford sufficient reasons for the large expenditure, but I am not able to perceive any good reason why any public demonstration should be demanded, especially where those urging it do not assume the pecuniary responsibility of it.
Willard on Executors (p. 272),makes a very judicious distinction between expenses of the funeral, and the erection of a head stone, or monument, and after reviewing numerous authorities, says: “ The
principle which seems deducible from the cases is that when the estate is large, and the claims of creditors do not intervene, the personal representatives are justified in burying the deceased in the style and manner
Regarding this conclusion of the learned commentator as both reasonable and authoritative, I am of the opinion that the expenses of a monument, and the decoration of the buiial plot, should have been postponed until the amount of the estate was definitely ascertained, and upon the assumption that the executors knew the real value of the estate when those expenses were incurred, I am of the opinion that the expenditure for the monument and enclosure exceeding $250, was excessive, and should not be allowed, and this amount is considerably in excess of the allowances in the cases which were cited by the learned judge in his treatise.
In Ferrin v. Meyrick (41 N. Y., 315) Hunt, C. J., in discussing this question, says : “ The contract for grave stones was proved to have been made. They were of a character suitable to the rank and station in life of the deceased, and to the circumstances of his estate. He [the administrator] had a right to contract for stones,' suitable to the rank and station in life of the deceased, and to the estate left by him
The decisions which have been generally followed in this country are English authorities, arid those which I have had occasion to examine in this state, were cases arising prior to 1869, and it seems to me reasonable that some consideration should be given to the generally recognized fact, that the expense of a monument, as well as of other things, has been of late years greatly enhanced, and hence the proportion of expenditure to an estate in England, would not be entirely reasonable in this country, and in the present times, and it is apparent that each case must be controlled by its peculiar circumstances, and cannot, except as to general principles, be made conclusive authority for any other.
The evidence in this case shows that the burial plot was purchased by a conveyance taken in the name of the widow and co-administratrix, and was for half a lot, and that the cemetery' in question sold quarter lots. It also appears that the father of the intestate owned a cemetery lot in Flatbush, Queen’s County, but that the deceased had expressed a disinclination to be buried there in consequence of the low and damp
Let a decree be submitted in conformity to the above conclusion, for settlement on one day’s notice.