Henry C. Yan Duser, who as a creditor of Stokes Potter, obtained' the decree for the payment of his debt, now appealed from, is conceded to be a creditor, as stated in the decree. No objections are taken to the proceedings by which the widow and administratrix of Stokes Potter, deceased, was called to an account by Yan Duser. On such account, as rendered, no assets were admitted to exist for the payment of said debt, but the existence of any assets was denied. Yan Duser then contested such account and charged the administrators with certain assets received, but not embraced in the account. The charge was sustained as to the widow and admin-istratrix, and a decree made for the payment of Yan Duser’s debt, eighty-six dollars and ten cents, together with thirty dollars costs.
*600So far as tbe administratrix was charged with $1,000, as assets belonging to the estate, she claims she has been wronged, and asks for a reversal of the decree.
The facts out of which such $1,000 was realized are briefly as follows: In 1880 intestate owned a contract for the purchase of lands, on which about $800 was unpaid. In that year he sold said contract and all his interest 'therein to one Morey, subject to the payment by Morey of the balance of purchase-money, for the sum of $1,800. Morey and intestate went to the owners of the land, to whom Morey paid $500 of the $800 purchase-price then, xinpaid, surrendered the Potter contract and procured a new contract in lieu thereof, to be issued to Morey for balance of purchase-price, about $800. This new contract was assigned by Morey in March, 1880, to intestate, to secure him for the $1,300 which Morey had agreed to pay him. In July, 1881, intestate was owing the wife of John C. Yine (now one of the administrators) about $200, and this contract was assigned to John C. Yine, as the surrogate finds, as collateral security for that debt. About the 14th or 15th of September, 1881, John O. Yine had obtained an assignment of Morey’s interest in the contract, and on the last-named day he paid up the balance (about $347) due upon the Morey contract and took a deed of the land in his own name. Five days afterwards Stokes Potter died. In October, Yine conveyed the land to the widow of deceased, receiving therefor a mortgage for $600, which was intended to repay Yine the amount of his wife’s debts of $200, and. the amount paid by him, $347, to get his deed, together with interest thereon. Stokes Potter never received anything for the $1,300 owing him by Morey, nor anything for his assignment of Morey’s contract to Yine, except so far as his debt to Yine’s wife was paid by the $600 mortgage given after his death.
In short, Stokes Potter being the owner of Morey’s contract as collateral security for the payment of $1,300 due from Morey, assigned the same to Yine as collateral security for $200, due to Yine’s wife. Yine gets Morey’s remaining interest in the Morey contract, pays the balance due on it and takes the deed. Afterwards Yine is repaid by Mrs. Potter’s mortgage for all his advances, and deeds the property to her. It is not clear whether this deed was given before or after Stokes Potter’s death ; the surrogate finds it *601was before, while Yine thinks the deed was acknowledged in October, after the death.
On this state of facts Mrs. Potter clearly held the title to the land as Stokes Potter originally held it as security for the $1,300 Morey debt and for Stokes Potter’s benefit. The assignment to Yine had been canceled, as also the unpaid purchase-price by Mrs. Potter’s mortgage to Yine. His advances having been repaid to Yine, and Morey’s contract having been merged in the deed to Yine, the deed from Yine to Mrs. Potter was for the benefit of the estate of Stokes Potter. When it was sold in 1883, the assets were applicable to the payment of debts. The title to the property was taken by Mrs. Potter in payment of Morey’s debt, and she held it as trustee for the estate. It was not real property belonging to Potter’s estate, but a debt owing by the real property in Mrs. Potter’s hands due to the estate and payable when the land was sold.
Such a claim is within the jurisdiction of the Surrogate’s Court to hear and determine. (Code of Civil Pro., § 2739.) Indeed, it is 'the ordinary case of assets belonging to the estate coming into the hands of an administratrix for which she must account. She had paid nothing for this $1,000 thus acquired. The property by her mortgage had paid all advances. The residue represented Stokes Potter’s security for Morey’s debt, and that was the only plausible reason for her procuTing the deed from Yine.
The case of Richardson v. Root (19 Hun, 473) is not in point. That was a transfer by the husband to his wife. Here the transfer was made without the knowledge, so far as appears, of the husband, and very likely after his death. (Gardner v. Gardner, 7 Paige, 112 ; reversed in 22 Wend., 526, but not affecting the principle for which it is cited.) Boughton v. Flint (74 N. Y., 476); Shakespeare v. Markham (72 id., 400); Kyle v. Kyle (67 id., 400 and bottom of page 408); Kearney v. McKeon (85 id., 136); Baucus v. Stover (89 id., 1), sustain the jurisdiction of the surrogate in this case.
We conclude the surrogate had jurisdiction to hear and determine the issue between this creditor and the administratrix, and that the order was proper under the facts found.
A further question is presented by the respondent. No exception has been taken to the decree or to the -facts and law therein and thereby found, nor has any case been made or settled as is required *602by Code Civil Procedure (§§ 2545, 2576, 994-7, Laws of 1881, chap. 40.) In the absence of a case made and settled, as required by .above section 2576 and Laws of 1881, or of exceptions as required by the other sections cited, we think the decree cannot be reviewed unless upon the facts found by the surrogate (if at all). That is inferentially decided in Mills v. Hoffmam, (92 N. Y., 181); French v. Powers (80 id., 150 and 151).
The evidence called out from Yine, under appellant’s exception, if illegal, was afterwards proved by Nathan C. Rider without • objection or exception.
We think the decree just, and no reason is given why it should be reversed.
Decree affirmed, with costs against appellant.
LeáRNEd, P.. J., and Bocees, J., concurred.Decree affirmed, with costs against appellant.