Bolton v. Myers
Bolton v. Myers
Opinion of the Court
Upon the accounting of the executors of Ann Bolton, deceased, Mrs. Myers and Mrs. Littlewood, her daughters, appeared as contestants, and filed objections to the accounts rendered. Thr decree of the surrogate was adverse to them, as to various items, and we are now to determine whether any of their overruled objections were well taken.
Our jurisdiction is more limited than that of the surrogate and of the supreme court, as we can consider only questions of law presented for our consideration ,t¡y proper exceptions. While, after careful examination, we find no error of law in this record, we are not without some misgivings that injustice may have been done to the contestants in the settlement of the accounts, but we see no remedy for it here. Mrs. Bolton died in November. 1882, leaving two sons, the executors, two daughters, and an adopted son, William H. Birchall. From a period anterior to 1880 down to the time of her death, she owned certain real estate occupied by a manufacturing establishment, upon which, for many years, the business of bleaching, dyeing, and printing had been carried on. On the 1st day of March, 1880, she leased to her two sons and adopted son this real estate, with all the machinery thereon, for the term of ten years, for an annual rental, and they carried on the business there under the name of the Bronx Company. Shortly before the expiration of the lease, the real estate was talren by the city of New York, by condemnation proceedings, for the Bronx park, and an award was made therefor to the owners thereof, which was paid and distributed. The lessees continued to occupy the real estate and the machinery until a short time before August 31, 1891, when they were ordered by the city to surrender the possession of the real estate and remove the machinery. They then advertised, and on that day sold by auction, the machinery belonging to the estate of the deceased, for $592.82. Most of the machinery was purchased by Mr. Birchall, and thereafter taken to West Farms, a distance of two or-three miles, and there put into other buildings, and used in the same business by the Bronx Company.- It was claimed before the surrogate, and is now claimed by the contestants, that the machinery, at the time of the sale, was worth over $52,000; that the sale thereof was improvident; that the machinery was really purchased by the Bronx Company, and for it, by and through Birchall; that the Bronx Company had had the benefit of the purchase; and that, therefore, the executors, who were two of the three members of the Bronx Company, should be charged with the value thereof. We .are inclined to
Thomas Bolton, Sr., for the purpose of protecting his real estate against his creditors, executed a mortgage thereon, without any consideration, to Mr. Birchall; and he immediately assigned that mortgage, without any consideration, to Mrs. Bolton, the deceased. The mortgagor died in January, 1879, leaving a will by which he gave all his property to his wife, Ann Bolton, and he appointed his son, Henry B. Bolton, his executor. After his death, Ann Bolton, for the purpose of cutting off the creditors of her husband, foreclosed that mortgage; and upon such foreclosure, and the sale in pursuance thereof, she obtained against Henry B. Bolton, as executor of his father, a deficiency judgment of upwards of $20,000. Her executors made no attempt to collect that judgment, and hence the claim is made that they should be charged with the amount thereof. Assuming that the judgment was enforceable against the estate of the mortgagor, it is a sufficient answer to this claim that there was no proof that the judgment was collectible, or worth anything, inasmuch as the mortgagor died insolvent. There was, therefore, no basis for making any charge on account thereof against the exedutors.
The Bronx Company were the brokers and financial^ agents of Mrs. Bolton, and the executors claimed credit upon their accounting for divers sums of money paid for her in her lifetime, and the contestants objected to the allowance of many of these items. The answer to these objections is that there was evidence quite satisfactory that all these payments were made at the request of Mrs. Bolton.
What we have thus far said covers the principal points made by the appellants upon this appeal, and a'careful examination of the whole case brings us to the conclusion that there was no legal errors committed by the surrogate, to the prejudice of the appellants, and that the judgment must be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except Bartlett, J.: not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- In the Matter of the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Henry B. Bolton, as Executors, etc. Henry B. Bolton, Resp'ts v. Sarah L. Myers App'lts
- Status
- Published