Court Opinion

ID: 6139409
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:31:04.942831+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:34.073417
License: Public Domain

The Surrogate.
The executor of Herman Le Roy deceased, in a suit in the Supreme Court, obtained a decree directing the executors of William Bayard deceased, to pay to the former the sum of $46,842, out of the estate of William. Bayard. This decree was entered on the first day of April, 1854, and an application is now made to compel an inventory, account and payment. The application is resisted by the executors of Bayard, on the ground of lapse of time, that no assets were ever received, and "that the papers relating to the estate have been accidentally destroyed by fire. Of course if no assets ever existed, there was nothing to inventory, or to account for. The testator died in 1826, so that twenty-nine years have elapsed since the administration of the estate commenced. I consider that a sufficient length of time under the circumstances to excuse a formal inventory and account. As to the debt claimed by virtue of the decree of the Supreme Court, that cannot be questioned before me, in a proceeding relating to the personal estate. If the statute of limitations was a good bar, it should have been set up before that tribunal; whether,or not it was pleaded I do not know, but it is enough to say the decree establishes a present existing indebtedness. The creditor then has a valid debt entitled to be paid in due course of administration, if there are assets wherewith to pay it. The executor is excused by lapse of time from filing a formal inventory and account, relating to transactions so remote. But it is alleged by the creditor that there are effects of the deceased and real estate properly applicable to the payment of this claim, and that moneys *230have been received within a comparatively recent period, as to which the executor is not excused from accounting. It often happens with old estates, that claims once esteemed worthless, turn out in progress of time to be valuable, and are ultimately realized. If such should have happened to be the case in the present instance, there seems to be no objection ' why the executor should not account for such assets. I understand the executors to deny any assets, at any time. If, however, the creditor seeks to examine into that point more closely, I see no good reason why the executors should not submit to a personal examination touching their administration of the estate and the existence of assets personal or real.