109 N.E. 86 | NY | 1915
The question involved in this appeal is whether the surrogate had jurisdiction to determine the issue raised by the objections to the executors' account interposed by the appellant to the effect that the executors had failed to account for a ruby ring and a pearl necklace which it was alleged belonged to the testatrix at the time of her death. One of the accounting executors, *211 a daughter of the testatrix, claimed that the ring and necklace had been given to her by her mother. The surrogate referred the matter to a referee, who reported in favor of the appellant. So much of the report as related to that subject was overruled by the surrogate on two grounds, viz.: (1) That the appellant had not sustained the burden of showing that the property omitted from the schedule of account belonged to the estate of the testatrix, and (2) that in any event the surrogate did not have jurisdiction to determine the matter. The Appellate Division passed on the question of jurisdiction only and affirmed the decree "without prejudice to the appellant's right to the maintenance of an action to recover for the estate of the testatrix the articles involved in this appeal."
The Appellate Division decided the case on the authority ofMatter of Schnabel (
Where a contest arises respecting property "alleged to belong to the estate, but to which the accounting party lays claim, * * * individually * * * the contest must * * * be tried and determined in the same manner as *213 any other issue arising in the surrogate's court." It is the allegation that the property to which the accounting party lays claim belongs to the estate, not the actual fact of ownership, which gives the court jurisdiction. If the surrogate had decided the fact of ownership against the appellant, the unanimous affirmance of the finding by the Appellate Division would have deprived this court of jurisdiction to review it; but the surrogate declined jurisdiction to decide the contest on the assumption that the merits of it were with the accounting party and the decision of the Appellate Division was solely on the question of jurisdiction.
That the Surrogate's Court has jurisdiction to try and determine the issues arising upon such a contest as was involved in this case has been held by different surrogates (Matter ofAmmarell,
Plainly the Surrogate's Court has jurisdiction to try and determine issues arising upon any contest respecting a debt alleged to be due by the accounting party to the decedent or by the decedent to the accounting party. With equal reason it should have jurisdiction to determine conflicting claims of ownership to personal property between an accounting party and his estate. The trial and determination of such issues falls far short of the exercise of general equitable jurisdiction, and we think that the statute was intended to confer jurisdiction in both classes of cases. *214
On the question of the burden of proof it is sufficient to say that the surrogate did not attach sufficient importance to the undisputed fact that the property in dispute was owned and possessed by the testatrix up to within a short time before her death. (See Matter of Perry, supra.)
The order of the Appellate Division and decree of the surrogate should be reversed and the proceeding remitted to the Surrogate's Court, with costs to abide the final award of costs.
WERNER, HISCOCK, CHASE, COLLIN, HOGAN and CARDOZO, JJ., concur.
Order and decree reversed, etc.