Citation Numbers: 68 N.Y. St. Rep. 692
Judges: Calder
Filed Date: 4/15/1895
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
— The petition for the judicial settlement of the accounts of Michael A. McOwen and Thomas Manaban, as executors of the last will and testament of Charles Winslow, was presented on the 28th day of December, 1892, and thereupon a citation was duly issued, directing that all parties interested be and appear at a surrogate’s court, in the city of Utica, on the 16th day of January, 1893. The executors’ account was filed Decern
The opinion of the former surrogate was expressive of his views upon the questions in controversy, and directed that findings in harmony with his conclusions be proposed for settlement. No findings of fact or conclusions of law were made, and nothing was done upon which a proper decree could be entered. That the surrogate did not consider that he had filed anything more than an opinion was clearly indicated by his concluding directions. An opinion contains the views of the judge in relation to a given subject. A decision embraces the findings of the court, upon which a decree or judgment may be entered. Section 2545 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the surrogate must file in his office his decision in writing, which must state separately the facts found and the conclusions of law. The repeal of section 1033 is immaterial, as that did not apply to the practice in surrogate’s court. Hartwell v. McMaster, 4 Redf. Sur, 392. What a decision should contain is well settled, and the questions in relation thereto have been frequently passed upon. Angevine v. Jackson, 103 N. Y. 470; 3 St. Rep. 643; In re Falls' Estate, 29 St. Rep. 769; In re Peck, 39 id. 234; In re Kaufman, 39 id. 236 ; Hartwell v. McMaster, supra. A case on appeal will be remanded when it appears that no decision has been filed containing findings of fact and conclusions of. law. In re Falls' Estate, supra. No decision in this proceeding was, therefore, filed, as provided by the Code of Civil Procedure.
In what manner and from what point can the present surrogate proceed ? Three ways are suggested : First To file findings of fact and conclusions of law in harmony with the opinion of the former surrogate. Second. To take up the matter de nova. Third. To take up the proceedings at the close of the evidence, hear additional testimony that any party interested may offer, and upon the whole evidence file a decision which will contain findings of fact and conclusions of law.
I do not believe that the first or second method is the proper practice to follow. To sign findings based upon the opinion of the former surrogate would not make them his, for he did not formulate them; and, to be his, he should sign them. Neither would they be the findings of the present surrogate, predicated upon what he believed to be the correct interpretation of the evi
The Code provides (sections 2513, 2500) that the surrogate, in his discretion, may appoint and at pleasure remove a stenographer', and that every deposition, petition, report, account, voucher or other paper must be carefully preserved, and that he shall deliver to his successor all papers and books kept by him; that said stenographer (section 2541) must, under the direction of the court, take full stenographic notes of all proceedings in which oral proofs are given, and the testimony must be legibly written out at length from the notes; that the minutes, after being properly authenticated, must be filed. The above sections, taken together, make the minutes records in the surrogate’s office, and it is, therefore, unnecessary to take testimony again. Where testimony on the probate of a will has been commenced before the surrogate, and his term of office expires before it is completed, his successor in office need not take the testimony de nova. Reeve v. Crosby, 3 Redf. Sur. 74. The same principle in laid down in Re Martinhoff, 4 id. 286, and in Re Espie, 2 id. 446.
The ithird proposition I believe to be the correct one to follow. Section 2481, subd. 8, provides that a surrogate has power to complete any unfinished business pending before his predecessor in office, including proofs, accountings and examinations. This is unfinished business, and is an accounting, and the statute is
An order may, therefore, be entered reopening the case, and giving any party interested the right, upon proper notice, to produce additional proofs, after which, at a time to be agreed upon, the case may be submitted.
Ordered accordingly.