Judges: Millard
Filed Date: 4/15/1909
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
There is apparently no dispute as to the correctness of the account filed in this matter by the administrator, but the question involved is as to the distribution of property left by the deceased and who is entitled to share therein.
Elizabeth Schlosser died, intestate, in the county of Westchester, on the 27th day of October, 1906. She left her surviving Erancis Schlosser, Louis S'chlosser and Bernhard Hoff, first cousins, and Lawrence Schlosser, Clara Schlosser, Marie Hicks, Ralph L. Raymond, Cortland S'. Raymond and Marie A. Zuber, children of deceased first cousins of the said Elizabeth Schlosser.
The claim is made by the administrator that the estate is distributable to the first cousins, only,' and that the last mentioned,
By the Revised Statutes of the State of Hew York it was provided, and this provision was afterward incorporated into section 2732 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 12, “ that no representation shall be admitted among collaterals after brothers’ and sisters’ children.”
This statute was passed upon by the Court of Appeals in Adee v. Campbell, 79 N. Y. 52, which was a case similar in all respects to the one under consideration; and the court there unanimously held that the first cousins took the whole estate to "the exclusion of the second cousins and that the children of brothers and sisters referred to are the brothers and sisters of the intestate. The statute continued in exactly this condition until 1898, when the Legislature struck out the then existing subdivision 12, above referred to, and substituted the following in its place: “ Representation shall be admitted among col-laterals in the same manner as allowed by- law in reference to real estate;” and .this provision was passed upon by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Davenport, 172 N. Y. 454; but by this ■decision the former decision is in no way affected, but, in so far as it is in any way useful in deciding the matter before me, it follows a similar line of reasoning and intimates that the former decision would be adhered to if the same conditions existed. This subdivision 12 was again changed in 1905 and now reads: “ 2To representation shall be admitted among col-laterals after brothers’ and sisters’ descendants.”
The present law, therefore, is exactly the same as the original Revised Statutes and the original subdivision 12 of section 2732 of the Code, except that the word “ descendants ” has been substituted for the word “ children.”
The counsel for the second cousins in this proceeding claim that, by subdivision 5 of section 2732 of the Code, the whole surplus of an estate shall be distributed to the next of kin of
Decreed accordingly.