18 N.Y.S. 715 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1891
At the threshold of this matter lies the question as to the contestant’s right to appear, and hence whether this court has any power to try and determine the validity of the alleged assignment of his share in the estate, for if he has, by his own act, ceased to have any interest in the estate, he cannot contest the account, and if, on the contrary, the assignment should prove to be void for any reason, then his objections to the same must be heard and determined. How, if this court has no power to try the question as to the validity of the assignment, then this proceeding must be suspended until it shall be determined by some court having general jurisdiction. If such an action were to be commenced at once, it might take years to reach a final result, and indeed such an action might not be commenced at all; and in the mean time the other next of kin, who are content with the account as rendered, could not receive the shares due them now. The court would be practically enjoined from proceeding to the discharge of its duty by a party who would thus, in this respect, have all the power of a superior court. It has been intimated that the surrogate has power, incident to the authority conferred upon him by subdivision 3 of section 2472 of the Code, “to direct and control the conduct * * * of executors and administrators, ” to compel them to commence a like action. In re Underhill, 117 N. Y. 471, 22 N. E. Rep. 1120. But the closing sentence of that section says that the jurisdiction conferred thereby “must be exercised in the cases and in the manner provided by statute.” I know of no statute conferring upon the surrogate any power to compel an executor or administrator to bring an action for any purpose in another court, nor any principal power to which it may be regarded as incident. Follow the matter out to its legitimate consequence. If it were done, it would be by an order to that effect, disobedience of which could be punished as a contempt of court by imprisonment. To deprive one of liberty of person is of so grave a character that there must surely be an express, and not a mere inferential, grant of power to justify the act. It may be safely asserted that no surrogate in this state has ever made such an order, and none who would venture to punish disobedience, were it made, as a contempt. Of course, were such a thing possible, it could only be done in this ease by coercing the administratrix to bring the action by filing what was formerly known as a “billof interpleader;” for she is no way interested in the controversy, except as its determination may have an effect upon the objections filed. It would be utterly preposterous to hold that this court can compel either the alleged assignor or assignee to commence such an action. While the statutes make no specific provision for the determination of a dispute as to the validity of an assignment, other than may be found in section 2743, they do abundantly provide for the speedy disposal of a disputed debt or claim by a reference, by an action, or by the short statute of limitation.
Prior to the.Code a surrogate had no power to direct payment of any debt, legacy, or distributive share, etc., to any one but the creditor, legatee, or next of kin; but now, by the provisions of section 2743,
It has been intimated that this court has no more power to try the validity of an assignment than of a release, and, as some of the courts have held that it has not the power to try the latter, it has none to try the former. There is some plausibility in this position. Still, there is this marked difference: A release is usually presented by the executor or administrator, purporting to have been executed to him by some one interested in the estate, and affects the amount of the balance alleged to be in his hands for distribution, while an assignment to another person does not. It is worthy of remark that most of the utterances in regard to the latter proposition appear to be based upon certain dicta of Judge Folger in the case of Bevan v. Cooper, 72 N. Y. 317, which were obiter, and before the enactment of the section of the Code in question, and of that conferring such power on the accounting of trustees. In re Wagner’s Estate, 119 N. Y. 28, 23 N. E. Rep. 200, also obiter; Sanders v. Soutter, 126 N. Y. 193, 27 N. E. Rep. 263. The court of appeals has thus held, tentatively, that it involves a range of judicial power, in its determination, that an inferior tribunal, like this, could not exercise, on an accounting of executors or administrators, while the legislature declares that it can, on the account
Code Civil Proc. § 2743, provides that on the judicial settlement of an executor’s or administrator’s account by the surrogate, where any part of the estate remains to be distributed, the decree must direct the payment and distribution thereof “to the persons so entitled, ” and that “where the validity of a debt, claim, or distributive share is not disputed, or has been established, the decree must determine to whom it is payable, the sum to be paid by reason thereof, and all other questions concerning the same. ”