136 N.Y.S. 825 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1912
This is a direct application upon an allegation of death for letters of administration upon the estate of Julia Smith, who disappeared many years since and never again has been heard from. Citation has been duly served by publication pursuant to an order of this court. In Matter of Matthews, 75 Misc. Rep. 449, the surrogate declined to presume the death of Julia Smith, one of the next of kin of John Matthews, on the ground that such a presumption should be made only in a direct proceeding, and that it should be confined to the death of an intestate whose estate is to be administered.' Such is the rule in other like jurisidictions which are charged with the administration of estates of intestates. Matter of Goods of Amelia Clark (1889), 15 Prob. Div. 10. The same rule, it is conceived, is as applicable here, as a matter of correct procedure, as it is elsewhere. But if it is not strictly binding here, it is certainly a convenient and orderly rule of procedure, calculated to save the rights of third persons, and conducive to the protection of parties who may be interested in the administration sought. A direct proceeding necessitates a bond as security for due and orderly administration and distribution in conformity with the statute regulating the administration of the estates of intestates. It protects the surrogate and it presents the question of death in a direct proceeding in rem after a citation published, and with all the binding force and efficacy which attaches to a direct proceeding in rem. If the presumption of death is applied collaterally, the person thus presumed dead is simply passed over. No bond is required of those who take his inheritance, and
Upon the return of the citation duly issued in this proceeding, the matter was regularly brought on for hearing before me and proofs were taken in the orderly course. In the Matter of Matthews the surrogate declined to consider the content and application of the presumption of death of Julia Smith, as the issue was conceived to be not then properly or adequately before the surrogate in that proceeding to administer the estate of John Matthews. On several occasions where an estate has been divided after a collateral presumption of death, the person presumed dead has appeared to find his inheritance squandered by the next of kin who received it. I shall try to prevent this in this court if it can be done, and, if it cannot, the responsibility will not be upon the surrogate.
In Matter of Matthews I distinctly stated that the content
The presumption of death is a very modern presumption.
In the State of New York the adjudications seem to conform to the modern common law rule on this point. They support the presumption of death from a mere disappearance, when the person so disappearing is never again heard of by those, if any, who would naturally hear of him, and more than seven years have elapsed since the disappearance established. Eagle v. Emmet, 4 Bradf. 117, 120; Karstens v. Karstens, 20 Misc. Rep. 247; Matter of Davenport, 37 id. 455; Matter of Wagener, 143 App. Div. 286, 287.
At the time of her disappearance Julia Smith was unmarried and childless, and the presumption of fact is that she died urn-married and childless in the absence of any contrary proofs. Doe d. Banning v. Griffin, 15 East, 293; McComb v. Wright, 5 Johns. Ch. 263; Matter of Harding (1891), May 28; Karstens v. Karstens, 20 Misc. Rep. 247, 251.
It seems to the surrogate that the evidence given in this proceeding is sufficient to establish, in the absence of any proofs to the contrary, that Julia Smith is dead.
The letters of administration will issue, as prayed, upon the giving of a bond in the usual form in double the amount of the estate. Decree accordingly.
Decreed accordingly.
So in official series. Ed.