In re Dunn

The Surrogate.

This case is not affected by § 758 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The note having been made in 1868, the rights of the parties are to be determined by the law as it existed at the time of the transaction (Randall v. Sacket, 77 N. Y., 480). The obligation being joint, upon the death of Moses Dunn, his debt at law was discharged, and his estate was only liable in equity, and not in equity unless the petitioner is unable to collect the debt from the survivor (Pope v. Cole, 55 N. Y., 124; Hauck v. Craighead, 67 N. Y., 432). The petitioner must not only be unable to collect the debt of the survivor, but must be unable' to do so because of want of property.

In this case, the question of solvency of the survivor is not mooted, but it appears that the petitioner in these proceedings, in an action brought by him, in 1886, nearly sixteen years after the death of the testator, against the survivor upon the note, was defeated by the statute of limitations, and is thus unable to collect the note of the survivor. The estate of the deceased cannot by the laches of the petitioner, be made to suffer the loss of its right to have the note collected from the survivor, not even if the survivor be now insolvent (Bloodgood v. Bruen, 8 N. Y., 362, 374). And the same principle seems to be held in Lawrence v. Leake (2 Denio, 585).

If these views are correct, the petition in this case should be dismissed, unless the payments made by the executor have in some way revived' or kept alive the obligation against the estate; and it is claimed on behalf of the petitioner that such is the case. I *127think the effect of these payments is determined by the answer to the question whether, at the time of making them, the note was a subsisting obligation against the estate, for while an executor may, by making payments on claims which are at that time valid, create a legitimate inference of an acknowledgment of the claim and promise of payment, so as to keep it out of the statute, he cannot, however, by so doing revive a demand which has once expired, or create a liability where, at the time of making the payments, none existed (McLaren v. McMartin, 36 N. Y., 88; Barry v. Lambert, 98 N. Y., 300, 308).

The counsel for the petitioner refers to the case of Barry v. Lambert as sustaining his position, but, as I read that case, the admissions made by the executrix were held to be only an acknowledgment of the validity of a subsisting claim, and the proof of such admissions established a claim which otherwise could not have been proved. The obligation as to the estate was discharged at law by the death of the testator, and the petitioner has never established a liability in equity. The executor could not, therefore, make a valid acknowledgment or promise of payment of the debts.

I, therefore, direct an order to be made, dismissing these proceedings.