138 Misc. 101 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1930
The questions here presented concern the propriety of the allowance of two claims against this estate. There is insufficient personalty from which to pay them and the executor has petitioned for the sale of the realty in the event of their allowance.
There is absolutely nothing in the record to justify the allowance of the claim of the physician as a proper charge against the estate. His testimony was merely that he prepared the bill for services to decedent and that in his opinion it was a reasonable one. It may well be that the services were rendered and that the recompense sought was proper, although the evidence adduced does not establish the facts; but even were that point conceded, it is clearly the obligation of a husband to pay the expenses of his wife’s last illness in the absence of a special agreement that her personal estate is to be liable therefor. (Matter of Shipman, 1 Con. Sur. 256; revd., on other grounds, 53 Hun, 511; Matter of Totten, 137 App. Div. 273; Thrall Hospital v. Caren, 140 id. 171.)
The husband’s direct claim aggregates $2,809.17; $826 of this sum is for work alleged to have been performed by the husband personally in painting, erecting a fence and doing brick and cement work on the premises; $8.05 is for the 1927 water tax; $108 is for mortgage interest on July 1, 1923, and January and July 1, 1924; and the balance is for sums alleged to have been paid by him to various artisans and materialmen for work done on and materials furnished to the premises between May 11, 1923, and November 19, 1927.
On the facts shown by the record, the items of this claim naturally divide themselves into three groups, namely, first, those for personal services by the husband of the decedent, aggregating $826; second, the claim for moneys alleged to have been paid (a) to J. C. Sapp on May 11, 1923, amounting to $257; (b) to L. Kallman’s Sons on December 15, 1925, amounting to $100, and (c) to Ilseman & Battersby on December 11, 1924, in the sum of $256 and on November 19, 1927, in the sum of $227.85; and, third, the balance of the claims aggregating $1,142.32. These three classes will be considered in order.
In connection with the right of the husband to recover for his own work against the estate of his wife, “ it is a fundamental principle of law that where one person renders, and another accepts, service, the law presumes a promise on the part of the
Turning now to the claims of the second class, John Sapp, Samuel Kallman and Irving Battersby were called as witnesses and severally testified without contradiction that work was done or articles furnished upon the direct order of the decedent and that upon
The amounts of the payments made by the claimant differ in certain instances from those set up in the proof of claim and where such differences occur the smaller sums must be taken since the claimant cannot receive more than he claims in any event nor more than it is proved that he paid on behalf of the decedent.
Mr. Sapp testified that he was paid $157 in the “ fall ” of 1923; Mr. Kallman stated his amount as $100 in December, 1925, and Mr. Battersby fixed his payments as $250 in December, 1925, and $250 in November, 1927. The two latter payments are stated in the proof of claim to have been $256 and $227.85 respectively. Since the precise dates were not proved, it must follow that the claimant is entitled to interest only from the last days of the respective periods. The recovery in this connection will, therefore, be $157, with interest from November 30, 1923; $350, with interest from December 31, 1925, and $227.85, with interest from November 30, 1927.
As to the third class of items, all that can be said is that the claims were for reimbursement of sums alleged to have been expended, and there is not a scintilla of evidence in the record that one cent was ever paid by the claimant on these accounts.
Since the claims here allowed, plus the unpaid portions of the funeral expenses and the attorneys’ fees, considerably exceed the balance of ten dollars and ninety cents in the executor’s hands, it is obvious that the real estate must be sold unless some adjustment in respect thereto can be made by the parties.
Proceed accordingly.