Robert v. Morgan

The Surrogate.

Henry Morgan and Edward Morgan, testamentary trustees under the seventh, article of this decedent’s will, having filed their account as such, and petitioned for its judicial settlement, the general guardian of the infant céstuis que trustent interposed certain objections thereto in writing. The account in question showed that $30,000 of the funds of this trust, and $5,000 of the funds of another, had been loaned, at five per cent, interest, to one Joseph B. Bigot, and that for such loans the trustees held security in the form of a mortgage upon the borrower’s undivided one fourteenth share and interest in certain real property in this city known as the New York Hotel.

Upon the filing of the said objections, the Surrogate directed a reference, and accordingly on December 16th, 1884, an order was entered, providing that the “said account and the objections thereto and the issues raised thereby be submitted to Mr. Ogden, for examination as referee,” and further providing that such referee should “ proceed to take testimony as to the said issues, to examine the account rendered so far as it is affected thereby, to hear and *150determine all claims, questions, and other matters, relating to said accounts properly before said referee, which the Surrogate has power to determine, and to make report thereon,” etc. In the course of the trial that ensued before Mr. Ogden, Mr. Edward Morgan, one of the accounting parties, was" produced and examined. Certain questions were put to him by contestant’s counsel, as to whether, on the day of the loan of $30,000 to Mr. Pigot, he (Mr. Pigot) paid a like sum to Henry Morgan, or to Morgan and Sons (a firm whereof both the accounting trustees were members), and as to whether the moneys loaned to Mr. Pigot did or did not ultimately reach the hands of the trustees, and as to whether it was or was not their real purpose, in the whole transaction, to acquire for themselves from the trust fund the amount of the Pigot loan.

These questions the witness refused to answer, and he persisted in his refusal after he had been expressly instructed to answer by the referee. It had already appeared from his testimony that the property, which was the subject of the mortgage in question, had been conveyed to Pigot by Henry Morgan, and that, in the mind of the witness, there was no doubt that Henry had made such conveyance for the very purpose of enabling Pigot to borrow money of which he (Henry) could make use in the business of Morgan’s Sons.

Under these circumstances, it seems to me that, if the propriety of the Pigot investment can justly be said to have been put in issue by the contestant’s objections, the witness was bound to answer all the interrogatories that were addressed to him by contes*151tant’s counsel (Lathrop v. Clapp, 40 N. Y, 328). The present proceeding is one wherein he is required to show cause why, for his several refusals to answer, he should not be punished for contempt.

It is contended by his counsel that the referee was given no authority, by the order under which he acted, to inquire into the facts and circumstances connected with the Pigot loan, as no objection had been interposed thereto in behalf of the contestants.

Section 2533 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that the Surrogate u may at any time require a party to file a written petition or answer containing a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting his claim, objection or defense, and a demand of the decree, order or other relief to w7hich he supposes himself to be entitled. ..... A party who fails to comply with such a requirement may be treated as a party in default.”

The 8th Rule of the Surrogate’s court of this county is based upon the above cited provision of the Code. It declares that a party desiring to test an account “ shall file specific objections thereto in writing,” and that the contest of such account shall be confined to the items or matters so objected to.”

In the case at bar, the instrument which purports to set forth the contestant’s objections is divided into four paragraphs. Admittedly, the first three have no relation to the Pigot investment. The fourth and last paragraph is in words following : She ” (i. e., the guardian) “ asks an explanation of the investment of May 20th, 1884, with liberty to approve the same if it shall be to the interests of the minors.”

*152It seems to me that, within the meaning of § 2533 and Rule 8, the words above quoted cannot, for the purposes of this proceeding, be regarded as constituting an objection” to the Pigot investment. Those words, indeed, contain a very distinct implication that the guardian of the infants is in doubt whether, upon a discovery of all the facts, it may not prove to be for the best interests of the infant to affirm rather than to repudiate the action of the trustees in respect thereto. In such a situation, the guardian might very properly, had he chosen so to do, have applied, under § 2735, for an order requiring one or both of the accounting parties to attend before the Surrogate and be examined under oath touching the matter of this investment, preliminarily to the filing of objections (Rule 8, supra ; Geer v. Ransom, 5 Redf., 578).

If such an application had been made and granted, and if a referee had thereupon been empowered to take the testimony of the accounting party and report the same to the court, I think it plain that such questions as are here under review would have been clearly material, and that a refusal to answer them would have been justly punishable as a contempt. But under the circumstances here disclosed, the motion to impose such punishment must be denied.