Court Opinion

ID: 6141852
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:40:56.312137+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:40.834283
License: Public Domain

The Surrogate.
I think the fact that a decree was made on accounting in October, 1877, fixing the amount due to Mead at $500, and according to him a pro rata share of the personal estate, on that basis, and which was paid to and receipted for by him, precludes him, in this proceeding, from the recovery of a larger sum. It is true, the administrators stated, in their account of proceedings, that he had presented a claim for $1,000 and interest, but had some collateral security, and had compromised as to his demand against the personal estate at $500, reserving his right to go against the real estate, if his collateral security should fail to pay his demand in full. With whom did he make this compromise ? The administrators could make no arrangement affecting the realty, and there were two minor heirs, who could not bargain or be bound by any like agreement. It seems to me his plain duty was to have presented his whole claim then, and, if there were sufficient funds to pay it, to have thereupon surrendered his col-laterals ; and, if not, then to have held them, in order to secure the deficiency. He cannot thus, at his own option, divide up his claim and place so much as a demand against the personalty, and so much as against the realty. The rule is that personalty is to be first applied to the payment of debts, and when that is insufficient and shall have been applied pro rata, then, and not until then, the real estate may be *554resorted to. The personalty, on the accounting, with his claim fixed at $500, paid a dividend of 71 per cent., or $355 on this $500, leaving a deficiency of $145. Had his claim been fixed at $1,000, the dividend would have been 50 per cent., or $500 of this $1,000. If he had a right to so divide his claim,, it will result in charging the real estate with $145 more of it than if this had not been done.
The amount divided among creditors on the accounting was $995.36, and the amount of the claims was $1,401.92. Aside from the deficiency of $145, on Mead’s claim of $500, it left a further deficiency of $361.56 on the other claims established, none of which have been presented before me in this proceeding. If the other creditors have been paid their claims for deficiency, or abandoned them, then this debt, if allowed, as against the realty, would be $645, and interest, instead of $500, and interest. But it was held, when this case was formerly before me (4 Redf., 352), that it was unnecessary for the petitioner to set forth the outstanding debts, as they were determined by the decree on the accounting, which must precede his application. That decree having fixed the amount of the outstanding debts, they cannot now be adjudged larger than they were then, although they may be fixed at Jess, as having been reduced by payments, or the like. The applicant bases this proceeding upon the fact that there had been an accounting, and he must abide by its result,
In Skidmore v. Romaine (2 Bradf., 122), Surrogate Bradford well said: " It would be an anomaly to allow a greater debt against the real estate than can . *555be demanded or has been established against the personal representatives. The personal estate is the primary fund, and the. measure of recovering against the realty cannot exceed that against the personalty, though it may be less.”
It is insisted by counsel for the heirs at law that, in a case like this, the application should be. made within a reasonable time, without regard to the question of the statute of limitations; that the _ applicant’s claim should be rejected, because of his unreasonable delay in making an attempt to enforce its recovery. The Court of Appeals held, in this case (95 N. Y., 31), in substance, that the running of the statute was suspended until the account was actually rendered by the administrators, under .the provisions of § 406 of the Code, which, in terms, applies only to “ actions ; ” and that the neglect of the creditor, after the lapse of eighteen months from the date of the letters, to exercise his right to an accounting, would not affect such suspension. It does not become me to question or criticise the correctness of the position; but if the statute of limitations cannot be successfully interposed against the claim, then it could not be properly resisted on the ground that an effort to recover it, had not been-made within a reasonable time.
The claim of the applicant is fixed at |145, together with interest thereon from the date of the decree on the accounting, October 17th, 1877. -Of course, if he shall be paid the amount so fixed as due to him, there can be no reason on his part for further prosecuting this proceeding. No costs are allowed.
Decreed accordingly.