26 N.Y. St. Rep. 81 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1889
The defendant, at the time the order was served upon him, had a contingent interest in the action against the railroad company; and the injunction order, which was to continue “until further order in the premises,” was sufficiently broad to enjoin any transfer of sucli interest. The proceeding was concluded, but not in consequence abandoned, discontinued, or dismissed. Code, § 2454. The new proceeding attempted-to be commenced was therefore properly set aside by the special term judge. The transfer to Hirshfield effectually passed to him whatever interest, actual, contingent, or expectant, which the defendant had or might become entitled to in or from his son’s estate. See cases collated in 2 Bliss, Code, Pl. p. 250, subd. b, tit. “Expectant Estates;” Story, Eq. Jur. § 1040 et seq. It was executed while •the injunction was in force, and before the attempt to commence the new proceeding was made. It had not been superseded at the time, as was the case in People v. Randall, 73 N. Y. 416, which is in consequence inapplicable.. The effect of the transfer was to impede, impair, and prejudice the remedies of the creditor. It could not operate otherwise. It prevents the defendant and his judgment creditor from realizing anything from the son’s estate, and makes the assignee the sole beneficiary thereof. The making of the transfer, as a necessary consequence, constitutes a violation of the injunction, and its result a contempt of court. The amount of the fine to be imposed must next be determined. The damages collected by the defendant, although declared by statute to be exclusively for his benefit as the next of kin, are not exempted from his creditors. His right thereto is subject, however, to the payment of “all debts” of the deceased and the expenses of administration. Code, § 1903. Although, conditionally, the property of the defendant, it does not become absolutely his until the surrogate has ascertained what the debts of the decedent and the expenses of administration are, and until he, by the decree to be made on the final accounting, determines how much the defendant is to retain as his own property. The decree cannot be obtained until some time next year, and the questions to be determined by the surrogate must remain undisposed of until then. They cannot be determined here. At common law no recovery could be had by anyone for injuries resulting in death, and the statute gives the only remedy in respect thereto the next.of kin have. This right could be enforced by the defendant, as the next of kin, only after procuring letters of administration, and then in his representative, not in his individual, character. The fund collected must be held by him in his representative capacity until he has accounted, and the surrogate, after passing on the amount of the debts and expenses of administration, has specifically decreed that the balance is his. His representative character then ceases, and the right to the money decreed to be his becomes for the first time judicially established. The right of his assignee becomes fixed, and effect may then be given to the assignment by directing the moneys coming to the assignor to be paid to his assignee. The rule in regard to subsequently acquired property does not apply, because the right to the fund accrued in 1884, when the letters of administration were first issued. The compromise of the judgment against the railroad company was merely the formal discharge of a prior obligation existing at the time the injunction was served. This court cannot decide, in advance of the surrogate’s decree, what the debts presented or expenses incurred will amount to, nor what sum will be finally awarded to the defendant, and paid to his assignee. It will probably exceed the plaintiff’s judgment, which is for $621.57, and it may possibly be less, so that the amount of the judgment does not necessarily furnish the correct measure of-damages to be applied in disposing of this motion. See Gallagher v. O'Neil, 3 N. Y. Supp. 126. They cannot be definitely fixed or accurately assessed at the present time. The probability that the sum which will eventually go to the defendant or his as