104 N.Y.S. 832 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
FTo executor was appointed by the will of the decedent. Pending the application for the probate of' the will, the temporary
The learned counsel for the appellant very properly questions the sufficiency of tire answer, upon the grounds that it fails ■ to show that the action in the Supreme Court was commenced before this proceeding was instituted, in that it fails to show that the summons
With respect to the general, accounting, no special facts or circumstances are shown .for the exercise of jurisdiction by .the Supreme Court. It is well settled that the Surrogate’s Court is .not ■ only the statutory tribunal for accountings by administrators'and executors who are there appointéd, and give or may be required to give bonds' to.account to that court (Code Civ. Proc. § 2664), but that it is the appropriate tribunal, and that while the Supreme Court has concurrent jurisdiction it will not exercise its jurisdiction where the Surrogate’s Court has full and complete jurisdiction in the premises. (Bushe v. Wright, 118 App. Div. 320.) As already observed, the temporary administrator’s authority is- at an end, but he has not accounted, and it is his duty to accoiint fo the Surrogate’s Court which appointed him, and he will then be directed to turn over the personal property in his hands to the petitioner, who is entitled to the possession and to make distribution. - (Code Civ. Proc. §-2126; Matter of Philp, 29 Misc. Rep. 263; Redf. Surr. Pr. [6th ed.] § 422.) I am' of opinion, however, .that the petitioner is not entitled to have the temporary administrator account to him for or pay over to .him the rents of the realty. In many of the States, apart from any authority conferred by the will or by the consent of the heirs or the devisees, the executor or administrator is authorized to take possession of the real estate and collect the rents, pending the settlement of the estate, for the protection of-the rights of creditors, to the end that should it be necessary to draw on the real estate to pay the debts, the rents thus collected may render' a sale, of the realty unnecessary, and it would insure .the appropriation of all the real estate to the payment of the claims of creditors, should that
It follows-that the order should be reversed and the application granted to the extent of requiring the temporary administrator to account in the Surrogate’s Court for the personal estate, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellant to he paid out of the . fund in the hands of the temporary administrator.
Patterson, P. J., Ingraham, Clarke and Scott JJ., concurred,
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the appellant "to be paid out of the fund in the hands of the temporary administrator, and the application granted to the extent stated in opinión.
This statute was amended by chapter 291 of the Laws of 1901.— [Rep.