103 N.Y.S. 699 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
Lead Opinion
I concur in the view expressed by Mr. Justice Ingraham, “that when this accounting administrator accepted the letters of administration issued to him,' he was chargeable with the amount of this indebtedness represented by the notes and checks of the firm of which he was a member as'so much money in his hands for the usual purposes of administration.” I do not, however, concur in the view that when the letters of Julius Ablowich were revoked before the estate was administered and he turned the notes and obligations of his firm over to Iris successor, as ad minis
I think the decree of the surrogate confirming the report of the referee overruling the objections to the account of Julius Ablowich should be reversed, with costs, and the proceeding remitted for further action.
Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred; Ingraham and McLaughlin, JJ., dissented in part.
Dissenting Opinion
It appeared that one Harris Ablowich died in the city of Hew York intestate, and on July 5, 1895, the respondent Julius Ablowich was appointed administrator of his estate. Subsequently and in September, ■ 1895, the letters issued to Julius' Ablowich were revoked and the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company was appointed temporary administrator, to whom Julius Ablowich turned over all the assets of the estate which had come into his hands. Subsequently the appellant Blumenstiel and another were appointed administrators, and they received the assets of the estate from the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company. Julius Ablowich accounted, pursuant to a decree of the surrogate, on June 5, 1901. Objections to these accounts were filed by certain óf the next of kin and by the. substituted administrator, and the accounts and objections were sent to a referee. Subsequently the referee reported, overruling the objections both of the next of kin and of the administrator,
The original administrator, Julius Ablowich, was a member of a firm which consisted of. himself and two sons. Among the assets of the estate of Harris Ablowich which came into the-hands of the administrator were found various promissory notes and checks of this firm, amounting to a large sum, but which were disputed by the firm, it being claimed that these notes were accommodation paper. After the letters of administration were revoked, Juliiis Ablowich turned over these notes and checks, with the other assets of the estate, to his successor, the temporary administrator, and subsequently upon the appointment o.f a substituted administrator lie commenced an action against the members of the firm on these notes and recovered judgment against them for the amount due. The firm of Julius Ablowich & Co. subsequently became insolvent and were adjudicated bankrupts. This copartnership was insolvent at the time of the death of the intestate, and although they continued in business, for some months thereafter they never had assets sufficient to pay the indebtedness of the firm.
In the account filed the administrator charges himself with $7,057.03, being cash received and notes and other obligations collected, which it is conceded were turned over to the temporary administrator. There -was also annexed to the account a schedule “ B,” which contained, a statement of the property other than money received by the accounting administrator which had been turned over by him to the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, the temporary-administrator-. Included in this were the notes and checks of-the firm of which the accounting administrator was a-member, aggregating more than $40,000. By the objections the substituted administrator sought to charge the accounting administrator with-the amount of these various checks and notes of the firm as money in his hands for which he was bound to account. The referee found that the accounting administrator was not chargeable -with the amount of these notes as money in his hands, and he was discharged from liability on the accounting, haying turned over all the notes and other obligations to the temporary administrator.
The only question presented on this appeal is, whether the surro-'
The reasons for the rule given in this case, while applicable to ' executors, do not apply to administrators, as the appointment was
It would seem to follow, therefore, that when this accounting administrator accepted the letters of administration issued to him, he was chargeable with the amount of this indebtedness represented by the notes and checks of the firm of which he was a member as so much money in his hands for the usual purposes of administration. The debt not being extinguished, the remedy being suspended, when his letters were revoked before the estate was administered, and he was required to turn over to the temporary administrator the assets of the estate in his hands, the question was presented as to whether the estate would reserve the claim upon the notes, receiving them as a part of the estate, or insist upon a claim against the accounting administrator as so much money in Ins hands for which he was accountable. It might well be that the firm obligations would be much more valuable to the estate than a claim against the administrator as a debtor of the estate. The fact that the administrator or éxecutor could he charged with the amount of his indebtedness to the estate does not of itself discharge the obligation of the debtor
For this reason, I think the learned surrogate correctly held that the administrator had accounted for all the property that he had received as administrator and passed his accounts, and the decree must, therefore, be affirmed, with costs.
McLaughlin, J., concurred.
Decree reversed, with costs, and proceedings remitted.
see 3 R, S. 84, § 13; Laws o£ 1893, chap. 686,— [Rep,
See Laws of 1893, chap. 686,— [Rep,