128 Misc. 819 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1927
The decedent died intestate on December 20, 1921. He left surviving, as distributees of his estate, his widow, Florence B. Van Valkenburgh, who is the administratrix, and his daughter by a former marriage, Mrs. Susie V. Huntington, who is the objectant to the account. The value of the estate, excluding the property in dispute, is approximately $1,300,000.
The issues before the referee involved the claim of the widow of title, by gifts from her husband, to certain securities of the value of approximately $200,000, and the ownership of certain personal property consisting of the furnishings and other contents of the decedent’s residences in New York city and his country home at Woodstock, Vt. The daughter, on the other hand, claimed that all this property should be included in the account as part of the estate and that the administratrix should be surcharged with the specific items or their value. Numerous hearings were had before the referee on these issues and in his report he finds that the administratrix has established valid gifts of most of the property in dispute.
The questions presented upon this motion involve, first, the sufficiency of the proof supporting the gifts; secondly, the propriety of certain rulings of the referee in the admission of evidence, and particularly whether he improperly received certain testimony of the administratrix in violation of section 347 of the Civil Practice Act (formerly section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure) as personal transactions with the decedent. Save for his findings and conclusions as to the ownership of Liberty bonds valued at $200, hereinafter discussed, the report of the learned referee is confirmed, and the exceptions thereto are overruled.
First. I hold that the evidence sustained the referee’s findings and conclusions of valid gifts of the securities and other property by the decedent to the administratrix. I hold further that entirely aside from the competency of the testimony of the widow there was sufficient independent proof before the referee to sustain each and every one of such gifts. The entire record strongly indicates the wide financial knowledge and legal experience of the decedent, his appreciation of his acts, and his great affection for his wife, which found expression in the frequent donations made to her. Certain transfers of securities and other property of substantial value, both before and after their marriage, were established by
Second. I hold that the referee correctly ruled that the evidence of the widow as to the gifts was competent and not prohibited by section 347 of the Civil Practice Act. It is clear that the door had been opened for all of such testimony by the examination of the widow as administratrix, under section 263 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, in the accounting proceeding by counsel for the daughter. The sequence of procedure on the accounting becomes important in this connection. A proceeding was commenced by the daughter for a compulsory accounting by the administratrix, citation issued, but before the return day the administratrix filed her voluntary account together with the petition for its judicial settlement. The two proceedings were thereupon consolidated by appropriate order. Thereafter the daughter obtained an order, dated June 23, 1924, under the authority of section 263 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, directing the administratrix to submit to an examination as to the property which belonged to the decedent at the time of his death, or at any time prior thereto, and as to the circumstances under which she claimed that the same or any part thereof was given or transferred to her by the decedent, and as to any matter relating to her administration of the estate. The administratrix was sworn by the surrogate and the examination was lengthy and comprehensive.
Counsel for the daughter brought out from the administratrix her version of the various gifts made to her by the decedent. The administratrix claimed on the hearings before the referee that her subsequent testimony as to the gifts was competent because the door was opened on this examination by the objectant. The objectant contends that the examination of the administratrix was a preliminary formality in .the nature of an examination before trial, and that the mere examination before trial of an interested
In Matter of Britsch (128 Misc. 219) I pointed out that the provisions of the Civil Practice Act relating to an examination of a party before trial have no application to the examination of a representative under section 263 of the Surrogate’s Court Act, because the Surrogate’s Court Act furnishes complete authority for such an examination. (Surrogate’s Court Act, § 316; People ex rel. Lewis v. Fowler, 229 N. Y. 84; Matter of Hodgman, 113 Misc. 215.) Moreover, under the section there is no requirement as to the order of procedure. Objections may be filed after the examination or the examination may follow the filing of objections. No matter when the examination may be had in the course of the proceeding, the testimony given by the representative is before the surrogate or the referee for all purposes. Such appears to have been the long-established practice of this court: For in 1882 Surrogate Rollins of this court in Geer v. Ransom (5 Redf. 578) held that the testimony taken pursuant to the order of examination before the filing of objections should “ be regarded as testimony taken in the proceedings upon the contested accounting.” Moreover the scope of the examination is at the peril of the party who conducts it. He may retain the advantage given by section 347 of the Civil Practice Act and keep the mouth of the survivor sealed. But if he inquires as to personal transactions, he waives the incompetency of the interested party. The door is then open to further testimony by the witness as to the specific transactions which have been the subject of interrogation.
The manner in which the examination here was conducted was by consent of the parties and the* objectant is now estopped to
The history of this right of examination also sustains the conclusion that it is not an examination before trial, but a component part of the record in the proceeding. It was clearly derived from the equitable jurisdiction over an accounting in an administration suit. It was the remedy for the discovery of assets withheld by the representative. The comprehensive and learned opinion of Judge Haight of the Court of Appeals in Malone v. Saints Peter & Paul’s Church (172 N. Y. 269) sets forth the history of accounting proceedings in the Surrogate’s Court, and their equitable derivation and nature. (See, also, Matter of Boyle, 242 N. Y. 342.) I pointed out in Matter of Beare (122 Misc. 519) that the development of equitable jurisdiction over accounts of executors or other representatives of estates grew out of the dissatisfaction and delay in the common-law action for an account, and the necessity for breaking up the determination of disputed claims into separate jury trials. The Court of Chancery assumed jurisdiction in matters of accounts when it was found that that court furnished the parties
Additional support for my_ conclusion may also be found in
The statements of the administratrix in the present estate regarding the source of her title to the property were, therefore, admissible after she had been compelled to testify to the same transactions. (Cole v. Sweet, 187 N. Y. 488; Matter of Sherman, 227 id. 350; Nay v. Curley, 113 id. 575, 579; Matter of Cozine, 104 App. Div. 182.)
Section 347 of the Civil Practice Act was never intended to give an opposing party the advantage which the objectant now claims. In Cole v. Sweet (187 N. Y. 488, 492) the court said: “ After compelling her to state a part of what was said and done by herself and the decedent, he insisted that she could not explain the transaction or state all that was said and done. He could not thus turn a shield into a sword. The careful balance of rights made by the Legislature to protect both parties and injure neither, would be disturbed if he could thus take advantage of the defendant. It would promote fraud instead of preventing it, which is the aim of the statute. Having forced her to tell a part of her story before the surrogate he could not read it as evidence in this action and then prevent her from telling the whole, because the spirit of the statute, as interpreted by the decisions of the courts, is against it. The spirit of the statute is that the survivor shall not speak when the decedent cannot, unless the representative of the decedent speaks himself, or compels the survivor to tell a part when he waives the right to object to his telling the rest.”
Third. The referee’s findings and conclusions with respect to the ownership of the furnishings and contents of decedent’s residence and country home are also correct and the exceptions thereto are, therefore, overruled. As to the Liberty bonds of the par value of $200 above mentioned, the referee found as facts that they were delivered by the decedent to the administratrix in an envelope on which was indorsed a memorandum in the handwriting of decedent to the effect that they were to be kept by her for his convenience, and were to be returned to him if anything happened to her, and that she had not accounted for said $200 of Liberty Loan bonds. The referee has determined that the administratrix is chargeable with the $200 of bonds and interest thereon. Those findings of fact and conclusion were based on a clerical error. It was conceded
Submit decree on notice confirming the referee’s report as modified by the foregoing decision and settling the account accordingly.