38 Misc. 399 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1902
The contestant seeks to surcharge the executor with certain bonds and mortgages, which, it is claimed, were the property of the deceased.
The executor attempts to claim on the other hand, that these "bonds and mortgages had been duly assigned to him, and that therefore, this court has no power to set aside "any such convey
That a Surrogate’s Court does not possess the general powers of a court of equity cannot be questioned, and that it has not jurisdiction to try and determine the validity of an assignment where the same is attacked on the ground of fraud. Redf. Surr. (5th ed.), 48; Woodruff v. Woodruff, 3 Dem. 505.
And it has also been explicitly held that “ a Surrogate’s Court has no power, on the accounting of an executor to decide that a transfer made during the lifetime of the deceased to the person who is afterwards appointed his executor, valid as between the parties, is void as to creditors; and can thereupon require the executor to account for what he has thus received.” Matter of Kellogg, 39 Hun, 275.
These general powers of the Surrogate have been discussed and amplified in Matter of Walker, 136 N. Y. 20, and in Matter of Randall, 152 id. 508.
The counsel for the contestant does not attempt to assail the correctness of this proposition, but contends that the Surrogate’s 'Court, in this case has jurisdiction for the following reasons, viz.:
That the assignments of the bonds and mortgages in question, which were executed by the deceased to the executor, were not completed or perfected gifts or conveyances to the executor, but that, on the contrary, the assignments were simply delivered as a scheme or purpose to assist the executor in the distribution of the estate, when the testatrix should die, and that the legal title to these bonds and mortgages remain in the deceased up to the time of her death, and that she exercised full and complete ownership of the 'same.
Therefore this is not a proceeding to set them aside, but, as they are part of the deceased’s estate, the executor should account for same.
A consideration of the same satisfies me of the correctness of the views contended for by the contestant.
There is also some evidence showing that the executor appreciated that these mortgages were given to him to distribute in accordance with the will of the deceased.
The evidence is clear and positive, also, that at the time that", one of these mortgages was collected each of the legatees received? the proportionate share to which he was entitled. It is true that the executor tries to pretend that this money was sent by his wife, and, also, that it was sent to assist the relations on the other side of the water.
This excuse is flimsy. Tht coincidence of the charity of this executor happening to extend to the various legatees in the exact proportion to which they were entitled if this mortgage was a part of the estate, shows that it was meant as a payment of the legacy and not as any charity.
The mere fact that he should choose to try and excuse it make» his conduct on this matter more suspicious, and satisfies me that up to that time it was his belief that these bonds and mortgages were to .be treated as a part of the estate of the deceased.
The questions thus presented for my consideration are unusual, and I can find no direct authority in support of the same, and, with some hesitation, because of my having some doubt as to my power, I will hold that these bonds and mortgages should be treated as part of the decedent’s estate, and that the executor should be surcharged with the amount of the same.
The executor should therefore be surcharged with the bond and mortgage made by one Gertrude Schultz, for $1,000, and interest collected from May, 1898; also a bond and mortgage made by Mr. Hyer, for $600 and interest thereon from May, 1898; also the interest on the bond and mortgage made by Klober, for $775, and also the money in the Williamsburg Savings Bank, amounting to $600, and interest from May, 1898.
Let a decree be presented for settlement hereunder.
Decreed accordingly.