143 N.Y.S. 1027 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1913
One Jacob Post, who died in the year 1835 or 1836, and the plaintiff owned a farm as tenants in common, and after Post’s death a suit was brought in the Court of Chancery for a partition or sale thereof. Post left a widow and three children, and two grandchildren, being the children of a deceased daughter, Sarah Brown, as his only heirs at law and next of kin. They were parties to the action. Final judgment, under which the premises were sold and the proceeds, with the exception of that part representing the interest of the grandchildren, were distributed, was entered in 1838. The grandchildren were Jacob Levi Brown and Mary Elizabeth Brown, and they were then five and seven years of age respectively. The proceeds of the sale representing their interests were deposited with the register of the court and subsequently transferred to the chamberlain of the city of New York, and were thereafter duly transferred by orders of the Supreme Court and of the Appellate Division to the custody of the Treasurer of the State of New York to the credit of this action, subject to the warrant
The petitioner applies for this fund on the theory that said grandchildren are dead, and he shows that nothing has been known of, or heard from, them by their relatives since the final decree of the court in 1838. Letters of administration on the estates of the two grandchildren were duly issued to the petitioner on the 10th day of March, 1913, by the Surrogate’s Court of the county of New York. It is not at all clear that that was even an adjudication binding on this application that the grandchildren are dead (See Carroll v. Carroll, 60 N. Y. 121; Marks v. Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, 122 App. Div. 661, and cases cited); but in no event was it an adjudication with respect to the time of their death, and it was incumbent upon the petitioner to show death at a time which would give him title to the fund. (Eckersley v. Curran, 158 App. Div. 440.) It is conceded that the fund when first deposited in court remained real estate, but under the authorities it became personal property if the infants lived and attained their majority. (Horton v. McCoy, 47 N. Y. 21; Matter of McMillan, 126 App. Div. 155.)
The petition to the Surrogate’s Court for the appointment of administrators of the estates of the deceased grandchildren was made by their first cousins and first cousins once removed on their mother’s side, and it is shown by the petition and by the affidavit of the attorney for the administrator that the records and proceedings in the partition suit show that the grandchildren, whose interests are involved in this proceeding, at the time of the final decree in the partition suit were living with their grandmother, the widow of their grandfather, from whom they inherited the estate, in the city of New York. It further appears by said petition and by the affidavits of two of the petitioners, none of whom, however, ever knew or heard of the deceased grandchildren, that their grandmother with whom it otherwise appears, as already stated, the grandchildren resided in 1838, continued to reside, from the earliest recollection of the affiants, one of whom was seventy-two years of age in 1912, with her son, their unole, at Uniontown near
The learned Deputy Attorney-General contends that on these facts there is a legal presumption that the infants died within seven years of the final proceedings in the partition suit, and he cites as authority therefor the cases of Barson v. Mulligan (191 N. Y. 306) and Matter of Benjamin (155 App. Div. 233). Those decisions establish the rule that the death of a person disappearing from home or where he resided without communicating with relatives or friends, and without anything being heard from him, or discoverable on reasonable inquiry, will be presumed after the lapse of seven years. The facts were somewhat different in the proceeding at bar, for there is no evidence that the grandchildren ever left the place where they were living in 1838. That, however, I think, rather strengthens than weakens the case, for it would seem to be a reasonable inference that, if they were living in this vicinity, .their cousins, who appear to have been on intimate terms with their grandmother, would have some recollection of or information concerning them; and, as one of the cousins was born in 1840, she would probably have some knowledge or information on the subject had they been living as late as 1845. However, it is not necessary to decide whether or not, on these facts, it is to be presumed that they died within seven years after 1838. It is sufficient to defeat the application if there is a presumption that they died before attaining the age of twenty-one years. Had they lived, one would have become twenty-one in 1852, and the other in 1854. One of the cousins who makes affidavit was twelve years of age in 1852, and if the grandchildren were then living with their grandmother, it is reasonable to infer that she would remember the fact. It was, as already stated, however, incumbent upon the petitioner to show that the grandchildren lived to attain their majority, for otherwise.
The learned counsel for the respondent attempts to support the order on the further ground that all of the heirs at law and next of kin of the grandchildren on their mother’s side, who were of full age, excepting those representing a one-eighth interest, joined in the application to the Surrogate’s Court for the appointment of the administrator, for the sole purpose of collecting these moneys. The order cannot be sustained on that ground, for there is no assignment of the interest of the heirs at law and next of kin to the administrator.
There is, however, another fatal objection to the order. Counsel for appellants contends that the interest of the deceased grandchildren descended to their, father, who survived them and appears to have been living until 1845, at least, and the only evidence tending to show his death at or about that time is hearsay, and not even family tradition, for it was not shown that the individual who so stated to the attorney for the petitioner was related to the decedent. It is contended by counsel for the appellants that, although the property descended to the decedents from the grandparent on the mother’s side, their father took the entire estate because the inheritance did not come to them on the part of their mother, since it came, not from her, but from the grandparent, and he cites in support of that contention the statute (Decedent Estate Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 13; Laws of 1909, chap. 18], § 84), which provides in part: “If the intestate die without lawful descendents, and leave a father, the inheritance shall go to such father, unless the inheritance came to the intestate on the part of his mother, and she be living.” It is, however, provided by subdivision 2 of section 80 of the same law that “ The expressions ‘ Where the inheritance shall have come to the intestate on the part of the father ’ or ‘ mother,’ as the case may be, include every case where the inheritance shall have come to the intestate by devise, gift or descent from the parent referred to, or from any relative of the blood of such
It follows that the order appealed from should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and the proceeding dismissed, with ten dollars costs.
Ingraham, P. J., McLaughlin, Clarke and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and proceeding dismissed, with ten dollars costs.