97 N.Y.S. 459 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
Testatrix died March 20, 189S. Letters' testamentary were issued to the executor here proceeded against in February, 1898. A proceeding to compel the executor to account was initiated by his brother in August, 1898. The main question litigated in said proceeding concerned the personal liability of the executor for a debt due from him to his testatrix, After a long and expensive trial'before a referee a
A copy of the decree'was duly served upon the executor, a demand for payment made, and an execution issued. The executor having refused to pay, and the execution having been returned unsatisfied,, this proceeding ,to: punish hint as for a contempt was-commenced by Rn order tó show cause dated December 7, 1904. Upon the return to [this order, the executor for the first time, .and after all these years of continued litigation, set up that “ since his appointment as executor, and, since the entry of the decree herein, (lie) has not had the money with which to pay the amount directed in said decree, and is insolvent, and has been ever since his appointment as executor.” For this reason he prays that he be- not adjudged in Contempt.
It is provided in section 2714 of the Code of Civil Procedure that “ the naming of a person executor in a will does not operate-as a discharge - or bequest of any, just claim which the'testator had against him ; but it must, be included among the credits and effects . of the deceased in the' inventory, and the executor shall be liable ■for the same, as for so much money in his hands at the time the debt or demand becomes due, and he must apply and distribute the same in the payment of debts and legacies, and among the next pf kin, as part of the personal property of tfie deceased.” By section 2552. of said Code it is provided that “ a decree directing payment by an executor * * * 'to a creditor of, or á person interested in, the estate or. fund * * * is, except tipon an appeal .therefrom, conclusive evidence that there are sufficient assets in his hands to satisfy the sum which the decree directs him. to pay.” Section 25.55 of
In Baucus v. Stover (89 N. Y. 1) the Court of Appeals said: “We perceive no room for doubt; the statute
In Baucus v. Barr (45 Hun, 582; affd., 107 N. Y. 624), in an action upon the bond of the same executor as in Baucus v. Stover (supra), for his failure to comply with a decree, it was field tfiat if his sureties could show the insolvency of the executor, they would not be held liable for the breach of the bond.
In Keegan v. Smith (60 App. Div. 168) an action was brought by the next of kin of decedent upon the bond of her administrator. A decree of the surrogate charged the administrator with his debt due to the intestate. The defendant claimed that the administrator being insolvent and not being able to pay the debt, the surety was not liable. The court below did not pass, in terms, upon the question whether the administrator was insolvent, but did find that he had been charged with his debt by the surrogate in the decree rendered against him, and as a conclusion of law found that the administrator having been charged with these amounts, the surety was liable for his failure to pay. This court, after citing Baucus v. Stover and Baucus v. Barr (supra), said: “ When, therefore, an action is brought "against a surety upon his bond after the return of an execution unsatisfied, all that it is necessary for the plaintiff to do is to prove the decree of the surrogate in the proper way, and
Applying those propositions .to the case at bar,, it is clear that-the-decree was conclusive.upon the executor that the money was in his hands, and upon proof of default the case was made out and the Order followed, unless the executor' sustained the burden of showing his inability to pay. There is no finding in the order either way. It was nót-necessary that .there should be a finding that he was unable to pay; but if there were such -necessity, we are. authorized to look into the evidence, for the purpose of seeing whether there is enough to- sustain such a finding. ■ -Looking into, the affidavits upon both, sides and weighing the- circumstances disclosed, we are' of the opinion that the executor has not sustained the burden of showing his financial inability. The ■ fact that he made no such claim during the long years of the protracted litigation conducted by him, his
If as matter of fact the executor is really unable to pay the amount imposed as a fine for his default, the provisions of section 2286 of the Code of Civil Procedure may be invoked. That section provides that “ where an offender, imprisoned as prescribed in this title,
O’Brien, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with costs. Order filed.
See 2 R. S. 84, § 13, revised in Code Civ. Proc., § 3714.— [Rep.
Code Civ. Prop. chap. 17, tit. 3.— [Rep,