2 Bradf. 258 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1853
The intestate died on his passage to this country, leaving a widow and minor children in Germany, where he had been previously domiciled. He never gained a residence in this State, but the assets left on board of the vessel in which he died, came into possession of the Public Administrator of the City of New York. Nothing having been set apart in the inventory, for the widow and children, and creditors having appeared, whose demands will exhaust the whole estate, the widow now applies by her attorney in fact, for an order to reform the inventory in this respect.
The terms of the statute are, that “ where a man ha/umg a farming shall die, leaving a widow or a minor child or children, the following articles shall not he deemed assets, but shall he included and stated in the inventory of the estate, without being appraised.” (2 R. S., p. 83, § 9.) The
It is true that it is generally an allowance in the nature of household furniture; but the only result of that is, that in case no specific articles of furniture are in this jurisdiction, the widow is limited to the amount of $150 in other property. That she should be excluded from this because she is not a resident, or because her husband was not a resident, is more than the law has declared. The benevolent design of the statute has a subject, whether the deceased was an inhabitant or not; and so long as the legislature have not confined the benefit of this beneficent provision, it is hard to find any reason for narrowing the charities of the law by judicial interpretation. The same construction which would exclude a widow and orphan children in Germany, would shut them out, if the intestate had happened to have resided in Hew Jersey. This view brings the case nearer home. It is said, however, that if the assets of the deceased were distributed through several States, the widow might have the advantage of numerous exemptions of this kind. It will be time enough to consider that objection when it appears that an allowance of this kind has been made to her in any other jurisdiction. It is sufficient to