Judges: Sexton
Filed Date: 6/15/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
On the return of the citation in a proceeding to sell real estate for payment of debts, a cited creditor, William
In a proceeding of this character the rights of creditors are confined, after becoming parties, to presenting their claims, or objecting to those of other creditors. Code Civ. Pro., § 2755 ; Matter of Campbell, 66 App. Div. 478.
In this proceeding the surrogate has jurisdiction to- determine' the validity of all claims against the estate. Matter of Haxtun, 102 N. Y. 157.
Upon the trial, the claims of J. U. Pickett, C. O. Boff, corporation tax and school tax were disallowed by consent and the claim of Whitesboro Water Works was allowed by consent at seventeen dollars and eighty-eight cents, so that the only question to be determined is whether the said claims of Ella E, Theeringer^ Margaret and William F. Eider, who are the children of the deceased, are valid claims against the estate.
The evidence shows that said Ella E. Theeringer, the administratrix, and her said brother and sister received $1,00'I) from insurance upon the life of their mother, which they shared equally and all of which they pooled to pay off a real estate mortgage and two promissory notes, matured obligations of the deceased. They now seek reimbursement out of the estate on the theory that, by paying these claims, they succeeded to the rights of the creditors of the estate whose claims they had paid.
It is claimed by the contestant that all of these payments were voluntary and cannot be recovered back, and that this estate cannot be charged with the amount so jpaid.
The administratrix testified that she personally paid the mortgage with the equal contributions of herself, brother and
“ No person can make himself a creditor of another by voluntarily discharging a duty which belongs to that other to perform, and no debt can be implied in law from a voluntary payment of the debt of another.” First Nat. Bank of Ballston Spa. v. Board of Suprs., 106 N. Y. 488.
It is an elementary principle in such actions that money voluntarily paid out by one for another cannot be recovered hack. 1 Pars. Con. 471 ét seq. In order to support such an action, it is essential that a request on the part of the person benefited, to make such payment, either expressly, or fairly to be implied from the circumstances of the case, must be proved. Add. Cont. 1055; Wright v. Garlinghouse, 26 N. Y. 539; Wellington v. Kelly, 84 id. 546; City of Albany v. McNamara, 117 id. 168; Matter of Hotchkiss, 44 App. Div. 615.
I, therefore, hold and decide that the payment of claims against this estate by Ella R. iTheeringer, Margaret Rider and William F. Rider were voluntarily made, hence are not legal claims against this estate and are disallowed.
i' Decreed accordingly.