The questions here presented for review were disposed of upon a former appeal (McMahon v. Smith, 24 App.
The trial court, by the sixth finding of fact, among other things, found that the referee to whom the surrogate referred the questions arising upon the settlement of the administrator’s account, had reported “ that the administrator was indebted to the estate for three several judgments recovered by the defendant against the said administrator in her lifetime, viz.: on the 5th day of October, 1888, for $155.92, with interest from said date. On the 5th day of October, 1888, for $218.67, with interest from said date. On October 5, 1888, for $218.67, with interest from said date. And that the said administrator should have accounted for said judgments as debts due from him to said estate, as he was able to pay them, and that the said administrator should be charged with the same and with certain other items.” It will be perceived that these findings are not of the facts themselves, but are merely a statement that the referee had so found them. A bare inspection of the latter’s report, however, shows that the referee did not pass upon the administrator’s ability to pay the judgments in suit, and hence the statement contained in such sixth finding that the administrator “was able to pay them” is without foundation.
It is urged, however, by the respondents, that the surrogate’s decree upon the accounting adjudging that the administrator “ should have accounted for such judgments as debts due said estate from him, and should be personally charged therewith ” binds the sureties upon the administrator’s bond. The liability imposed upon an executor by section 2714 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which superseded 2 Revised Statutes, m. p. 84, section 18, for his own indebtedness to the estate, is independent of the performance of his duty. It provides 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 that such claim shall be included among the credits and effects of the deceased in the inventory, and the executor shall be liable
As I have stated, this finding merely contained a statement of what the referee in the Surrogate’s Court had reported, and the statement that this referee had found that the administrator was able to pay the judgment is without foundation. No evidence upon this subject was adduced before the referee, and, therefore, even had a finding with respect thereto been made, it would have been unwarranted. But the referee made no finding whatever with regard to the ability of the administrator to pay the judgments in question, and, consequently, the exception, noted by the appellant to the finding of the trial court, that the referee had reported to the Surrogate’s Court that said administrator was able to pay the judgments in suit, was well taken. The case is, therefore, destitute of a finding that the administrator was able to pay the judgments, and, in the absence of a finding of this essential fact, the judgment cannot be sustained. Baucus v. Barr, supra.
In the opinion handed down by the General Term below, certain items of evidence were recited from which the inference may be drawn that the administrator was of sufficient pecuniary ability to pay the judgments in controversy, but, since the trial court made no such finding of fact, the evidence in question cannot be considered in support of the conclusions of law (Foote v. Valentine, 48 Hun, 476), which read as follows: “ First. That the defense having conceded, in his argument on this trial, that the Surrogate of New York had jurisdiction to make the decree of August 29, 1895; but seeks to attack it by an action-by the next of kin for its enforcement, I hold that this cannot be done. The decree, while it stands, is conclusive, however hard its provisions may seem. Second. I, therefore, render judgment for plaintiffs against John Smith for $639.20, the distributive share of the plaintiffs,
The judgment must, therefore, be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Beekman, P. J., and O’Gobman, J., concur.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
