61 A.D. 562 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
Lucina Miles and Andrew Carmer were appointed administrators of the estate of John C. Miles on the 29th of October, 1894. In 1898 they filed their accounts with the surrogate of Erie county, and a decree settling the accounts was entered. Mrs. Leroy, the respondent, had no notice of the filing of the accounts, or of the proceeding for the judicial settlement. On the 8th of August, 1900, she presented to the surrogate a petition setting up, among other things, that she had “ a claim against the said John C. Miles, deceased, amounting to the sum of Three thousand dollars, which sum the said deceased during his lifetime ordered and directed to be paid to your petitioner by the said Lucina Miles, upon the settlement of his estate.” The petition then alleges that she presented the claim to the administrators; that it was by them duly allowed and admitted and a partial payment made upon it, but that there was still due to her the sum of $2,133.35, which they refused to pay, and she asks that the decree of judicial settlement be opened, and a decree made requiring the payment of that sum to her by the administrators. The administrators answered separately, each one denying upon information and belief that Rose Leroy, the petitioner named in the petition, “ has or at any time had any claim against the estate of John O. Miles, deceased, in the sum of Three Thousand Dollars or any other amount.” The answers further deny that Mrs. Leroy ever
We think that the surrogate had no jurisdiction of this matter after the tiling of the answers. The Surrogate’s Court, while in some respects a court of general jurisdiction, has no other authority ■ than is given to it by statute. All the power of that court in this proceeding is derived from section 2722 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which expressly directs that where an administrator files a written answer duly verified, setting forth facts which show that it is doubtful whether the petitioner’s claim is valid and legal, and denying its validity or legality absolutely, or on information and .belief, the surrogate must dismiss the petition without prejudice to-an action or an accounting in behalf of the petitioner. .
It is quite clear that within, the provisions of that statute the power of the surrogate ceased when the answers of the administrators were filed. His duty after that time was to dismiss the proceedings, as he was expressly, directed to do by the statute. It is-hardly necessary to cite cases to establish the duty of the surrogate •more clearly than is done by the statute itself, but such cases are-not lacking, In Fiester v. Shepard, (92 N. Y. 251) it is said by the-
It is said, however, that if the administrator' had in fact admitted this claim, then the surrogate was justified in taking proof of that fact to show that the denial of its .validity was not true; but the trouble with that contention is that the statute does not permit the surrogate to take proof of any fact. His power is limited by the statute, which gives him no right to examine into questions of fact after the filing of such an answer as is described in section 2722 of the Code.
It is necessary to discuss no further question, but for the error of the surrogate in refusing to dismiss the petition the decree must be reversed, with costs to the appellants, and the matter remitted to the surrogate with directions to dismiss the proceedings as required by section 2722 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
All concurred.
Decree of Surrogate’s Court reversed and proceedings dismissed, with costs against the respondent.