25 N.Y.S. 3 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
This is an appeal from the decree of the surrogate of the county of Onondaga, made upon the final judicial settlement of the accounts of Charles T. Redfield, as the administrator of the estate of Anna Maria Redfield, deceased. Lewis H. Redfield is one of the children, and a next of Mn of the deceased, and as such was entitled to a distributive share of her estate. The amount of such share is fixed by such decree at the sum of $420.83, and the administrator holds such amount ready to pay to whomsoever it belongs. William A. Beach, the respondent on this appeal, appeared before the surrogate on such final settlement, and claimed the distributive share of Lewis H. Redfield, by virtue of a written assignment thereof from Lewis to his wife, Jessie A. Redfield, dated July 13, 1888, and acknowledged December 9, 1889, and from Jessie A. Redfield to himself, by written assignment dated November 5, 1890. No contest was made by any party over the genuineness of such assignments, nor of their validity as between the parties thereto. Upon such settlement, Louis Marshall, the appellant herein, also appeared, and claimed such distributive share by virtue of an equitable lien thereon, arising through a mortgage which Lewis H. Redfield and wife had executed to him upon the premises, from which the estate about to be distributed had been derived by the enforcement of an annuity, charged thereon for the benefit of the deceased, Anna Maria Redfield, during her life. The surrogate tried the issue thus raised between Marshall and Beach, and determined that Marshall had no lien or claim to such distributive share, and
On the threshold of this inquiry, the question presents itself whether the surrogate had jurisdiction to try the issue thus raised, or to make any decree whatever on the subject. A surrogate’s court has such jurisdiction only as is conferred upon it by statute, or necessarily implied from the powers so conferred. In re Underhill, 117 N. Y. 471, 22 N. E. Rep. 1120. The only statute under wMch it can be claimed that power was given sufficient to warrant the decree in this case is section 2743 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Such section does not in terms grant any powers, but it imposes upon the. surrogate’s court certain duties, and the powers necessary to fully perform those duties are by implication also conferred. Thus, the surrogate, under such section, has power to construe the provisions of a will so far as it is necessary to determine to whom a legacy belongs, because he is thereby required to distribute by his final decree that portion of the estate remaining after the executor has settled his accounts, among “the creditors, legatees, next of kin, husband, or wife of the decedent, or their assigns, * * * according to their respective rights.” In re Verplanck, 91 N. Y. 439. The precise question which the surrogate in this case was called upon to'pass on, and which he has, by the decree appealed from, determined, was whether a share of the estate confessedly belonging to one of the distributees should be paid over to him, (or Ms assignee,) or to one claiming it as a creditor of such distributee; that is, he was to inquire into the relations existing between a distributee and an alleged creditor of Ms, and to determine, not only whether the debt claimed actually existed, but whether the creditor had secured an equitable lien upon the share to be distributed. It seems very clear that no such power is conferred upon the surrogate’s court by the section referred to, nor is any duty imposed upon it which requires the exercise of any such power. The final decree is to distribute to “the creditors,” but that means creditors of the deceased only, (In re Underhill, 117 N. Y. 471, 22 N. E. Rep. 1120;) and nowhere 'is there any provision that a surrogate distribute the estate to persons other than in that section specified. The decree of distribution may order payment to a creditor of the deceased, or to an assignee of such creditor, or to a legatee, or to the next of kin, or to an assignee of either, because each of those is specified in the section; but to a creditor of a credit- or, or to the creditor of one of the next of kin, the surrogate 'is not required to decree payment, and hence there is neither necessity nor authority for Ms inquiring into the merits of such a claim. I have not been able to find any decision upon this precise question, except one by the surrogate of Westchester county, in Re Heelas, (Duncan v. Guest,) 5 Redf. Sur. 440, and the facts therein appearing will illustrate the impropriety of allowing to the surrogate’s court the jurisdiction which, in the case before us, has been assumed. A husband was entitled to a distributive share of an estate, and lie
Prior to the enactment of section 2743 of the Code, the statute did not include the word “assigns” in providing to whom distribution should be made, and it was held under such act that a surrogate could not inquire into the validity of, or even recognize the undisputed existence of, an assignment, nor direct payment to be made to an assignee. Hitchcock v. Marshall, 2 Redf. Sur. 174; Leviness v. Cassebeer, 3 Redf. Sur. 491. This same section 2743 also provides that when 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, etc. Under this provision it has been steadily held that the surrogate cannot try the validity of a debt or claim made against the estate, (In re Walker, 136 N. Y. 20, 27, 32 N. E. Rep. 633;) also, when a legatee asks for an accounting against the executor, and he replies that he has been fully released from all claims thereunder by such legatee, the validity of such release, if disputed by the legatee, cannot be tried in the surrogate’s court, (In re Wagners’ Estate, 119 N. Y. 29, 36, 23 N. E. Rep. 200;) also, it has been held that even now, under section 2743, the validity of an assignment of a legacy, as between the legatee and his assignee, cannot be tried in a surrogate’s court, (In re Cook, 68 Hun, 280, 22 N. Y. Supp. 969; In re Brown, 3 Civil Proc. R. 39, 55,) although the contrary of this has been held in McCabe’s Estate, (Surr.) 18 Y. Y. Supp. 715. The line of reason