61 N.Y.S. 382 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The appellant presented a claim to the respondent as executor of -Annie M. Blood, deceased, arising out of the following facts :
The claimant was president of the Mount Albert Gold Mining '"Tunnel and Power Company, a mining- corporation organized and ‘doing business in the State of Colorado.. He sold to the testatrix 30,000 shares of' the capital stock of said corporation for the sum of $2,000. That such :sale was actually made and for the price stated, and that the sum of $1,000 of this purchase price has been paid, are facts not controverted. It is contended,, however, that Phillips, the claimant* made the sale as president of the corporation, and that the claim belongs to it and not to Phillips. The proof of the transaction in reference to the sale rests chiefly upon'correspondence between the parties. These letters show that Miss Blood supposed she was dealing with Phillips as an individual; they are directed to him in that capacity, are'personal and friendly,, expressing confidence in him as a friend. In stating the price, she says was according “to agreement between Mr. B. ti. Phillips and myself; ” and in a letter to him she characterizes the stock as “ some of your holdings.” The check for part payment was to him individually, and there is no suggestion of any transaction with him in his official capacity, or that she was indebted to the company. In liis communications he does not claim he was acting as president of the company, but they indicate it was his stock, and he was making the sale on his own behalf, The fact that he was president of the ■company raises no barrier to a sale of stock by him. This was an infant corporation, founded largely on prospects which evidently did not materialize as these sanguine promoters and investors anticipated, •and the stock was being sold ; but that does not imply that any individual stockholder, even though an officer of the corporation, was ■prevented from disposing of his stock. It was his property, and it "was salable and" transferable. Whatever arrangement there might have been as to the avails arising from the sales made, the claimant had possession of these certificates of stock; he sold them to the testatrix, and she paid him in part therefor, and the debt, if any, belongs to him. . x
The burden was not upon the claimant to show affirmatively this claim had not been paid. He presented tó tile éxecu’tor a verified
To require a claimant to establish primarily that no payments have been made upon his claim would result often in defeating a just demand, as the owner of the claim is disqualified from testifying to any transaction with the decedent relating thereto. The personal representative can protect himself in a measure from the payment of demands already paid by requiring that the creditor in his affidavit state that no payments have been made; but the burden of proof is not shifted to the claimant when his claim has ■ been rejected and he is obliged to have it adjudged valid by a court.
While the proofs in this case are not as definite as we could wish, we are satisfied the referee and surrogate erred in disallowing the claim.
, The decree of the surrogate is reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event, payable out of the estate of the testatrix.
Ail concurred.
Decree of the surrogate reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs of this appeal to abide the final award of costs, and case remitted to the Surrogate’s Court.