4 N.Y.S. 59 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
Letters of administration upon the estate of Richard Tobin, who died in the city of Hew York on the 23d day of January, 1884, were issued by the surrogate to the public administrator. Upon an accounting made before the surrogate by the public administrator, on the 3d day of July, 1885, the administrator was directed to pay one-quarter of the estate to Michael Tobin, one-quarter to Ellen Cooke, and the residue, namely, one-half of the estate, into the city treasury for the benefit equally of John Tobin and Mary Molloy, two of the next of kin of the deceased. At this time it was not known whether either John Tobin or Mary Molloy was living. In the month of October, 1885, the other two next of kin, namely, Michael Tobin and Ellen Cooke, to whom the money is now directed to be paid, by publishing notices in Melbourne and in Sydney, in Australia, where John Tobin and Mary Molloy had gone 18 years previously, and by correspondence and other like acts, endeavored to ascertain whether these relatives were living, and, if so, where they were, and, if not, if they left descendants. Being satisfied from the evidence which they were able to obtain that these absentees, of whom they had not heard for over seven years, were dead, they applied to the surrogate in January, 1888, for modification of the previous decree, and for payment to them, as the next of kin of John Tobin and Mary Molloy, of the portion which had been originally paid into the city treasury in due course of the administration of Richard Tobin’s estate. The surrogate, however, was not satisfied of the sufficiency of the proof then adduced, and denied the application, but with leave to renew the same. Subsequently, upon further evidence, the order appealed from was made. After an absence of seven years, with