132 N.Y.S. 92 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
When the testator died he had in his possession five promissory notes of $1,000 each, signed by the defendant and payable to the order of the testator, which with interest amounted to' $6,962.50. The defendant admits the making of the notes and receiving from the testator up or prior to the time that they were dated the. sums specified. In the testator’s will there was
The sole question presented in this case is whether the executors are entitled to deduct from the defendant’s distributive share of the estate the amount of these notes. I agree with Mr. Justice Clarke that the. evidence would not justify us in reversing the decision of the court below that these notes were existing obligations at the time of the testator’s death: In a case between these executors and a nephew of the testator, where the testator had advanced money to his nephew and had taken from him promissory notes, we upheld the claim of the executors that they were entitled to deduct from the share of a residuary legatee the amount due to the estate represented by promissory notes of the legatee held by the testator and the court even went so far as to allow the executors to deduct from the amount due to the nephew subsequent payments made by the testator for which he took no notes and as to which there was no evidence that he intended that the payments were made by way of loan, or that the testator ever intended or which the testator ever expected would be paid. (See Leask v. Hoagland, 136 App. Div. 658; 144 id. 138.) The testator advanced to the defendant the sum of $1,000 a year, taking therefor promissory notes whereby the defendant promised to repay the sums advanced to the testator. There was no question of advancement and no postponement of the obligation to repay until after the testator’s death, nothing but an ordinary loan of money for which the borrower executed and delivered to a lender her promissory notes for the amount; and it seems to me that the question is, whether upon those obligations there existed an indebtedness from' the defendant to the testator or after his death to his personal representative. If the testator had. made no provision for the defendant in his will and the
The judgment should, therefore* be modified by deducting the interest above mentioned and the extra allowance, and as modified affirmed, without costs.
Laughlin and Miller, JJ., concurred; Clarke and Scott, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
Hudson Hoagland died January 80, 1904, leaving a last will and testament executed November 16, 1903. The defendant was his niece. The plaintiffs are his executors. In his will he created a trust in the sum of $40,000, the income and profits to be paid to defendant for life and upon her death to revert to and become part of the residuary estate. She is also one of his residuary legatees. On October 19, 1907, the executors distributed $650,000 of the.residuary estate, of which $25,663.20 was defendant’s proportionate share; The executors gave her a check for $18,700.70 and delivered to her five notes of $1,000 each, drawn by her to the order of Hudson Hoagland, which, with the interest thereon as claimed, amounted to $6,962.50.
Subsequently the executors filed their accounts in the Surrogate’s Court and the defendant filed objections to the accounts in so far as they claimed a set-off of the $6,962.50 represented by said notes and interest against her proportionate share. Whereupon the executors brought this suit to obtain the judgment of the Supreme Court that they had the equitable right to offset said sum. The sufficiency of the complaint, which was tested by demurrer, was established. (Leask v. McCarty, 59 Misc. Rep. 565; affd., 130 App. Div. 877.)
On the 22d of February, 1899, the defendant was, and
“Api. 2, 1900.
“ Mrs. Emma McOarty:
“Madame.— Inclosed find check$1,000. Alsofindtwo notes for $1,000 each dated April 3, 1899, & April 3, 1900, which please sign & return, as I wish to keep them as a memorandum. Also affix 20cts. in revenue stamps to each note.
“Toms truly,
“HUDSON HOAGLAND,
“ per Geo. A. Aitken.”
She executed said notes and sent them to Mr. Hoagland by mail.
On April 3, 1901, she received Mr. Hoagland’s check for $1,000 and on May eleventh received a letter dated May 10, 1901, saying:
“Inclosed find note for signature dated April 3, 1901, at 1 day for $1,000, which please sign & return to me as I wish to have it as a memorandum for the money advanced on that date.
“ Tours truly,
“HUDSON HOAGLAND,
“per Geo. A. Aitken.”
On April 3, 1902, and on April 3, 1903, she received two further checks of $1,000 each, inclosed in letters containing notes due one day after date, all of which notes she executed and sent to Mr: Hoagland.
These five notes were foundhy the executors in testator’s effects after his death and are the notes for which an offset is claimed.
The appellant claims, first, that said notes were without con
This claim depends upon the fact of the agreement. There is no direct proof of such agreement. She could not, of course, testify as to any personal conversations with the decedent. . Mi-ss Rose, another niece of the decedent, testified that on February 23, 1899, “ Mr. Hoagland told me that he had arranged to have Miss McCarty leave the clerk’s office while he was in Dover, and I asked him how that Came about, and he said that Mr. Richards said to him, ' Before you build churches — he was about building a church in Dover— ' before you build churches, you had better take your niec'e from the Clerk’s Office,’ and he said, ' Well, I am willing to do it.’ He said, 'I have done it.’ I said, ‘ That is very nice.’ And then he went on to speak of Miss McCarty’s sister, Mrs. Richards, and he said, 'Well, Libbie will die happier for knowing I have taken her sister from the Clerk’s Office.’ In that conversation Hudson Hoagland stated what he had authorized George Richards to say to Mary Emma McCarty. He said that he asked Mr. Richards how much it would cost to have Miss McCarty leave her position, and he said, ‘ I don’t know; she is upstairs with my wife, I will get her;’ and he went upstairs and was gone a little while and he came back and said that Miss McCarty was willing to take a thousand dollars a year and give up her position. Hudson Hoagland further said, ‘ I have agreed to give her a thousand dollars and she is going to leave the office the 1st of April. ”
Appellant claims that upon that testimony, coupled with the fact that Miss McCarty did resign on February twenty-third, to
The difficulty about this claim, found by the court below and by us, is that dependence must he placed upon oral testimony of a conversation had eleven years before the trial, and upon inferences drawn, to destroy documents executed at the time of the occurrences and carefully preserved by the decedent. To destroy her written documents, which prima facie establish a claim against her in favor of the decedent’s .estate, she attempts to prove an ante mortem parol agreement with the decedent whose lips are closed. As to such an agreement the courts have recently and repeatedly laid down the rule that it must he established by clear and convincing testimony. We cannot say that the finding of the Special Term was against the evidence.
Appellant’s next claim is that if the decedent did knowingly require of her the said notes, his knowledge of her circumstances was such that he did not and could not have expected her to repay him the sums advanced, and, if he took the notes, they were kept as mere evidence of advancements, and as they were not alluded to in his will, in which he left a trust fund of $10,000 for her benefit, and in which he made her one of his residuary legatees, the amount of such advancements cannot he deducted. For this proposition she relies upon Bowron v. Kent (190 N. Y. 122).
The will of Hudson Hoagland was before this court for construction in Leask v. Richards (116 App. Div. 274; affd.,
In Bowron v. Kent (supra) Haight, J., quoted from 1 American and English Encyclopaedia of Law (2d ed. p. 760, § 1): “An advancement is defined to be ' a transfer of property from a person standing in loco parentis toward another, to that other, in anticipation of the share of the donor’s estate which the donee would receive, in the event of the donor’s dying intestate.’ Section 2. ‘If the donor disposes of his whole estate by will, the doctrine of advancements has no application, unless the will specifically refers to advancements and defines what previous gifts shall be so considered. Even if the will expressly states that the property is to be distributed according to law as in cases of intestacy, it is still a will, and the doctrine of advancements does not apply,”’ and held that, as the will under consideration contained no provision with reference to the deduction of advancements, the subsequent making of the will under the circumstances disclosed indicated an intention on testatrix’s part to cancel any obligation which might otherwise arise from the advancement.
That the testator was aware of said doctrine is apparent from the 20th clause of the will, in which he provided: “ I give and bequeath to my cousin, Maria B. Dalrymple, of Dover, New Jersey, the sum of Ten thousand dollars ($10,000); any moneys which I have advanced or paid to said Maria Dalrymple in my lifetime to be regarded as payment on account of this legacy and to be charged against the same.”
With this knowledge, and having made these, five payments to the defendant, and having" taken her notes, if we assume that they came into his possession with knowledge, he thereafter, months subsequent to the last payment,' executed his will in which he left her the trust fund of $40,000 and made her one of his residuary legatees without providing for the deduction which he had been so careful to make in the case of Mrs. Dalrymple. As some corroboration of this point of view, I may refer to the letter of May 10, 1901, in which the note of April third of that year was sent to her, in which, writing by Aitken, he said: “Which please sign & return to me as I. wish to have it as a memorandum for the money advanced on that date.”
Taking all the circumstances together, eliminating from consideration any question of a contract or agreement with his niece, taking simply his knowledge of her circumstances, the fact of her resignation from her employment, the fact that at that time he began a yearly payment to her of $1,000; that he subsequently made for her the specified provisions in the will cited, with knowledge on his part of the doctrine of advance
The third claim is that the learned Special Term committed error when it found that the receipt executed by the defendant when she received the payment of $18,700.70 and the five notes was an accord and satisfaction of her claim. We agree with that contention. The executors stood in a fiduciary capacity to her; they were not dealing at arm’s length; and while they were performing what they conceived to be their duty in the premises and were not guilty of fraud, deceit or misrepresentation, we do not think that under the circumstances disclosed she is estopped by her act in receiving part of the money which was due her and by the execution of the receipt. (Adams v. Cowen, 177 U. S. 471, 483.)
It follows, therefore, that the judgment appealed from should, be reversed, with costs and disbursements to the appellant.
Scott, J., concurred.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion, and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.