14 Barb. 27 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1852
The laws of 1801 (vol. 1, p. 323, § 20) allowed an executor to apply for the sale of the real estate of the deceased, whenever he discovered, or suspected, that the personal estate was insufficient to pay the debts of the deceased; the executor also rendering an account of the personal estate, and of the debts, as far as he could discover the same. The surrogate was to order a sale of the real estate if he found that the personal estate was not sufficient to pay the debts of the deceased. The revised laws of 1813 (vol. 1, p. 450, 5 23) were substantially the same. The revised statutes of 1830 introduced some different provisions. They only authorized the application by the executor after he should have filed his inventory, and within three years after the granting of letters testamentary. (2 R. S. 100, § 1.) And the surrogate was authorized to make the order to show cause why the real estate should not be sold, only if it appeared to him that all the personal estate applicable to the payment of the debts had been applied to that purpose. He had no such power as he had before, of acting, if it appeared that the persónal estate was insufficient
The surrogate, in these cases, acted under a limited authority, and if he was not satisfied that the personal estate had been actually applied in the payment of debts, he had no authority to order a sale under the revised statutes. In these cases he had no discretion; so that if he found that the personal estate had not been applied, in fact, though it were insufficient to pay the debts, he could not order a sale. An amendment was made to this law by the law of 1837. (Laws of 1837, p. 531, §§ 40, 41, 42.) But it was suggested by the counsel for the appellant, that these sections apply only to contracts made by the deceased for the purchase of lands, and not to cases where he had a legal title to the lands. Section 40 authorizes the executor to apply for authority “ to mortgage, lease, or sell the real estate of their testator,” and “ for the sale of the interest of such testator in any land held under a contract for the purchase thereof,” whenever he discovers that the personal estate is insufficient to pay the debts. This clearly provides for two cases ; one the “ authority to mortgage, lease or sell the real estate of the testator,” and the other for the sale of his interest in any land held under contract. The contracts are not to be leased or mortgaged. They are only to be sold. The real estate may be mortgaged, leased or sold.
Then section 41 for the first time gives a discretion to the surrogate. It is that he “ may in his discretion order such mortgage, lease or sale to be made, although the whole of tho
• As seen before, without the aid of this section, giving a discretion to the surrogate, he had no power to order a sale until the personal was fully applied; so that if the executor does not, in this case, come within that section, and subject to that discretionary power, he has no right to ask for a sale.
In this case it was admitted, and the case clearly showed, that the executor had cash in hand, the proceeds of personal estate belonging to the deceased, amounting to $321,78, and that he also held three or four notes of H. L. Pierson, indorsed by E. Lord, which were inventoried as good and as worth $3572, each being for $893 and interest, payable in 1844,1845 and 1846. All this was personal estate applicable to the payment of the debts of the deceased, and it should have been so applied before re
It has been deemed proper to look into these claims, so far as to judge whether they are of such a nature as to entitle them to any further protection in the order to be made. The one due to the insurance company is under sea.1, and so cannot be barred by the statute of limitations : it needs no protection. The other is claimed by the executor. He is a son of the testator, and attended to his father’s pecuniary affairs from 1838 to June 8, 1843, when his father died; acting as his father’s agent, without any agreement for any compensation, until December, 1841, when his father signed an agreement to allow him $500 per annum from the time he first took charge of the business. For this he charges $2459 and expenses. There is conflicting testimony on the question whether the father was then competent to transact business. He also charges $3306 for medical attendance on his father from the spring of 1839 to December, 1842. He frequently, during this period, traveled from the city of Hew-York, where he was practicing as a physician, to Hackensack, a distance of about 12 miles, where his father resided, and attended to his father as a physician. Many of his visits were also made as agent, and as a son to a father, only; and one winter he passed there, with his wife, to improve his own health. He never presented a bill to his father, for those services, apparently kept no account of them in his books, and threatened some of his relatives to present such a claim, on account of their supposed ill conduct to him.
He had taken out letters testamentary on his father’s will, in Bergen county, Hew Jersey, as well as here; and after his father’s death applied for authority to sell real estate there,
Edwards, Mitchell and Roosevelt, Justices.]
Decree affirmed