37 Barb. 520 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
By the Court,
This was an action brought in the name of the people, upon an administrator’s bond, against the defendant as one of the sureties. Letters of administration were granted on the estate of Beuel Clapp, deceased, to William Gr. Howard and Huldah M. Clapp, the widow of Beuel Clapp. An application was made by one of the parties in interest to compel an accounting. The accounting was had before the surrogate of Albany county, and resulted in a decree against Howard the administrator, charging him separately with a large amount as acting administrator, being the whole estate. A considerable portion of the amount charged upon Howard was for losses to the estate by reason
Several questions arose upon the trial of the cause, which require examination. It is insisted by the defendant that the accounting before the surrogate was only a final accounting of one of the several administrators of the estate, and hence the surrogate had no jurisdiction in the premises. Although the decree recites that the citation was issued on the petition of Howard the administrator„yet it appears that the administratrix was present during the proceedings, and took part in the accounting, and that all the parties interested were represented. It also appears from the decree itself and from the evidence adduced, that Howard was the acting administrator in the settlement of the estate, and was held accountable for the whole estate of the deceased by the surrogate. It appears to me, therefore, that the accounting was a final settlement of the whole estate; an entire proceeding and not a partial settlement of the accounts of one of its representatives. Hor was it necessary that both the administrator and administratrix should make an application for a final account. A citation had been previously issued against both, and upon its return one or both of them had a right to ask for a citation which would bring in and conclude all the parties. (2 R. S. 92, § 52. Id. 93, § 60.) This was done, and as they participated in the proceedings I see no force in the objection.
It is claimed that the decree is fraudulent upon its face as against the defendant, as one of the sureties on the administration bond. The decree provides for the payment of a large amount by the administrator, which it charges upon him separately, by reason of an alleged neglect in not collecting certain demands existing against the defendant, which were lost to the estate in consequence of such neglect. While it exonerates the administratrix from neglect on her part, it makes
The decree being valid upon its face, do the facts connected with the accounting, as developed on the trial, necessarily show that it is invalid as against the defendant for fraud and collusion ? This was the principal question litigated, and presented to the jury, on the trial. It is true that it appeared that the administrator assented to the decree against himself alone, and there are circumstances tending to establish a collusive and fraudulent arrangement by which the decree was permitted to be made, with the express design and ultimate object of compelling the defendant, as one of the sureties on the bond, to pay the amount of the alleged claim against him. It also appears that a considerable portion of the large claim presented and allowed against the administrator was not very strongly contested. Without entering upon a discussion of the evidence on this subject, it is sufficient to say these circumstances were sought to be contradicted, and the evidence
I think the action was properly brought in the name of the people. (The People v. Norton, 5 Seld. 176. The People v. Law, 3 Abb. 450. The People v. Cram, 8 How. Pr. B. 152.) Nor do I find any valid grounds for the motion made by the defendant to dismiss the plaintiff’s complaint.
The defendant’s counsel, upon the crossrexamination of the witness Calanan, proved that the witness had a conversation
The defendant’s counsel offered to prove by Horace Wyman, for the purpose of rebutting the plaintiff’s testimony on that subject, that he, Wyman, drew the decree which was entered by the surrogate, exclusively from the skeleton draft furnished by Schenck, one of the counsel, and,that he inserted from that the particular sums which appear in the decree. Calanan, one of the plaintiff’s witnesses, swore on his direct examination that he thought Schenck drew a form of a decree, and that Wyman had something to do with it, and he drew some part of it. It was clearly proper to show all the facts in regard to the drawing of the decree. It was deemed material to the issue on trial, and I think the defendant had a right to show that Wyman was merely acting under the direction of the persons engaged in transacting the business .before the surrogate, and that the amounts were furnished by them. I cannot therefore arrive at any other conclusion than that this evidence was improperly excluded by the justice on the trial.
The remaining offers of evidence made by the defendant on the trial deserve a careful consideration. They comprised testimony which seriously assailed the plaintiff’s claim, and the good faith and fairness of the proceedings before the surrogate. The decree was mainly founded upon an alleged demand against Howard, the administrator, for neglecting to prosecute the defendant. With a view of characterizing the transaction, to rebut the proof given by the plaintiff, and for the purpose of showing that the claim against Townsend was a false and pretended one, without any foundation whatsoever, the defendant offered to prove that certain property
First. Was the evidence cumulative and not rebutting ? The defense to the plaintiff’s action was principally upon the ground that the decree of the surrogate had been procured by fraud and collusion, by a conspiracy and combination to reach the defendant as one of the sureties on the bond. The defendant, for the purpose of establishing the allegation of fraud, introduced the evidence of Howard taken by virtue of a commission issued in the cause,, in which he swears, substantially, that the decree of the surrogate was entered and made by the consent of the parties, for the purpose of reaching the defendant as surety on the bond, under an arrangement that it was not to be enforced against him, Howard. The testimony of Edward T. Schenck, who was also sworn as a witness for the defendant, was mainly to the same point. He however testified as' to the items which composed the amount charged against Howard as administrator, which it was alleged was lost to the estate by reason of Howard’s neglect to prosecute the defendant, and generally as to the proceedings, before the surrogate. The defendant then rested. The plaintiff called James Oalanan, jun., and several other witnesses, to contradict the defendant’s evidence. A considerable portion, however, of the plaintiff’s evidence was for the purpose of showing that the demands against Townsend, for which Howard had been charged, in the decree, by reason of his neglect to prosecute, were substantial claims, in favor of the estate, and that the parties acted in good faith upon the accounting. The surrogate’s minutes of the evidence were also introduced, containing the testimony of Howard and Mrs. Clapp. It appeared that Howard, when he was first examined, only testified generally as to the alleged demands against Townsend, and that Mrs. Clapp’s evidence was the same in substance as Howard’s. Upon being recalled,
Second. Was the evidence properly excluded because it involved the merits of the original claim and not the immediate question of fraud and collusion in the proceedings ? The defense was of a character which admitted of a wide and extended field of inquiry—the largest latitude of evidence. Fraud at all times opens a door for the most rigid scrutiny, the most searching investigation. Although, ordinarily, an
Bogeboom, Potter and Miller, Justices.]