Opinion
No. 41/749.
05-02-1919
Albert I. Drayton, of Jersey City, for defendant Miners' Smelting Co. Gilbert Collms, of Jersey City, amicus curiæ.
Bill by Albert C. Wall, as substituted administrator, etc., in place of Arthur P. Heintze, etc., against the American Smelting & Refining Company and another. Bill dismissed.
Albert C. Wall, of Jersey City, and Franklin Bien, of New York City, for complainant.
Treacy & Milton, of Jersey City (John J. Treacy, of Jersey City, of counsel), for defendant American Smeltiug & Refining Co.
Albert I. Drayton, of Jersey City, for defendant Miners' Smelting Co.
Gilbert Collms, of Jersey City, amicus curiæ.
GRIFFIN, V. C. This bill is filed by an ancillary administrator to impress a trust upon certain stocks, bonds, and a royalty contract entered into with the Silver King Coalition Company (hereinafter called the Silver Company), pledged by the intestate to the American Smelting & Refining Company (hereinafter called the American Company), and to have it declared that he succeeded to the ownership thereof, subject to the lien of the pledgee. F. Augustus Heintze, the pledgor, died at Saratoga Springs, N. Y., on November 14, 1914, intestate, and on the 5th day of November, 1914, his sister, Mrs. Fleitman, was appointed administratrix by the surrogate of Saratoga county, N. Y., and duly qualified.
The American Company is a corporation of New Jersey, with authority to transact business in the state of New York, and is transacting business therein. The stocks and bonds in question were issued by corporations created under the laws of states other than New York or New Jersey. These, together with the royalty agreement with the Silver Company, a corporation of Nevada, were pledged and delivered to the American Company in the city of New York to secure loans; the last pledge being made about March 10, 1914. The stocks, bonds, and royalty agreement, since the date of the pledge (excepting certain bonds which had been for a short time in the West in a reorganization scheme), were continuously kept in the state of New York, and are still there, and, since the date of the pledge, have at no time been physically in New Jersey.
Proceedings were taken before the surrogate of Saratoga county to remove Mrs. Fleitman as administratrix, and she was so removed by an order dated August 23, 1916. Edwin Gould, as a judgment creditor in upwards of $1,000,000 initiated the proceedings about November, 1914, which resulted in her removal. On March 16, 1916, a petition was presented, praying that the administratrix file her account.
At this time it is quite apparent that Mrs. Dieitman was satisfied that she would be removed. Thereupon Mr. Arthur P. Heintze, the brother of Mrs. Fleitman, procured waivers for Mrs. Fleitman, as guardian of the intestate's infant son, and as administratrix, and also that of another brother, dated March 21, 1916, and on March 27, 1916, presented them to the surrogate of Hudson county with an application to be appointed ancillary administrator, and he was so appointed. Mr. Arthur Heintze somewhat advised and assisted his sister in her administration affairs. He is a member of the bar of the state of New York.
In his forty-first finding of fact, the surrogate of Saratoga county found that she had inventoried certain stocks and bonds which correspond to those described in the bill, but the number in the inventory is in excess of that in the bill. This finding also states the number of stocks and bonds pledged. And in his forty-second finding he finds that she did not account for these securities, claiming that they were the property of the Miners' Smelting Company, a corporation of the state of Maine. She did not inventory or disclose the beneficial interest in the Silver Company royalty agreement (finding No. 26) until after the hearing on March 1, 1916.
On April 4, 1916, Mr. Heintze, as administrator, filed his bill in this court, ostensibly for the purposes above stated; whereas it is reasonably deducible from the facts that he was endeavoring to procure the administration of these properties in New Jersey in order to avoid the lien of the Gould judgment, to the end that the claims of the Western Development Company—a corporation of Arizona, which represents his (A. P. Heintze's) creditors, and of which he is president—and Mrs. Ruth Noyes Heintze, his wife, a resident of Long Island, might share with Mr. Gould in the distribution. Accordingly, in order to sustain his appointment as administrator, the claims of the Western Development Company, for part of its alleged debt, were assigned to the United Copper Company, a corporation of New Jersey, in December, 1916, more than eight months after the bill was filed, which latter company presented its claims to Mr. Heintze, as administrator, who indorsed them "Filed Dec. 22, 1916,"and the claim of Mrs. Heintze, for part of her alleged debt, was also, in December, 1916, assigned by her to the United Copper Company, which presented its claim to Mr. Heintze, who indorsed it "Filed Dec. 22, 1916."
The Assets Development Company, a corporation of New Jersey, also presented a claim to Mr. Wall, as substituted administrator, on July 22, 1918. Mr. Arthur P. Heintze is president of this company, and made the proof. This claim was assigned by one Calvin O. Geer, a citizen of New Jersey, who was in the employ of the intestate in his lifetime and was intimately associated with corporations in which the Heintzes were interested, and in a number of which he (Geer) held office. This claim consists of a stock note, dated New York, April 28, 1909, in the sum of $10,000, payable on demand, upon which the following indorsement appears:
"May 11, '09. Rec'd from F. A. H. $6,000 on within note—$1,500 on sale of collateral. Pay, July 11, 1918, Assets Development Co., or order. C. O. Geer."
Mr. Geer also filed with Mr. Wall, on June 21, 1918, a claim for part of his salary as employe of intestate for the month of October, 1907, $175. The property described in the bill, and the above alleged creditors, are the only properties or creditors asserted by the complainant to be within the state of New Jersey.
An application was made by Mr. Fullerton (who was appointed by the surrogate of Saratoga county, N. Y., in the stead of Mrs. Fleitman) to the orphans' court of the county of Hudson for the removal of Mr. Heintze as administrator, and the court did remove him, and appointed Mr. Wall and Mr. Fullerton as substituted administrators in his stead. From this decree an appeal was taken to the Prerogative Court, which sustained the orphans' court in its removal of Mr. Heintze, but vacated the appointment of Mr. Fullerton, thus continuing Mr. Wall as sole substituted administrator.
Mr. Heintze, as administrator, took out an order to limit creditors on September 27, 1916; and on June 28, 1917, a decree was entered barring creditors.
The American Company filed an answer in lieu of a plea, raising substantially three objections to the bill, viz.:
(1) That the appointment of Mr. Heintze as administrator by the surrogate of Hudson county was illegal, null, and void; and the orphans' and Prerogative Courts were without jurisdiction to appoint or continue substituted administrator or administrators.
(2) That the appointment was procured by fraud.
(3) That there were and are no assets or creditors of the intestate in New Jersey.
In considering objections 1 and 2, it may be presumed that the subject matter of these objections, in a degree, at least, was considered by the orphans' court and Prerogative Court, by whose decrees Mr. Wall was made and continued substituted administrator. The Prerogative Court had full jurisdiction of the subject-matter. The decree was signed by the ordinary. I should therefore hesitate to consider the question of jurisdiction, and, in effect, undertake to sit on appeal from such decree. It is not necessary, however, to pass upon this question, because the case may be disposed of under the third objection.
Upon the death of the intestate the title to this property vested in the primary administrator; the property was physically in the state of New York; the pledgee, while a corporation of New Jersey, had authority to transact business in New York, and was actually doing business therein, and was therefore liable to be sued in the courts of that state; the debt to secure which the pledge was given has its situs in New York, and the sit of none of the things pledged are in New Jersey. Under such circumstances, it seems quite clear that the ancillary administrator is not entitled to their possession. Pisano v. Shanley, 66 N. J. Law, 1 (7), 48 Atl. 618; Banta v. Moore, 15 N. J. Eq. 97; In re Election of Cape May, etc., Nav. Co., 51 N. J. Law, 78, 16 Atl. 191; Merrill v. New England Ins. Co., 103 Mass. 245, 4 Am. Rep. 548.
In Dietz's Case, 41 N. J. Eq. 284, 7 Atl. 443 (1886), where testator died a resident of New Jersey, with stocks, bonds, and the like located in New York, in the possession or under the control of two of the respondents, the orphans' court, in a contest touching the validity of a will, ordered these two respondents to turn over to the administrator pendente lite, appointed by said court, the securities in their possession belonging to the testator, and to give access to the safe of the testator to the administrator, so that the contents might be taken into the administrator's possession. The ordinary, in affirming the decree, said:
"It is argued that the court had no jurisdiction to make the order. It had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties. Speaking generally, the order was a direction (it was an authorization also) to pay and deliver over property of the estate to the person entitled by law to the custody of it. There is no conflict of jurisdictions. The order directed the parties to do nothing which it was not their plain duty to do without it."
The distinction between the Dietz Case and the present is quite apparent. In the former, the administration in New Jersey was primary, and the title to the property, although outside of this state, was vested in the administrator appointed here; and there was no conflict of jurisdiction, in this, that apparently there was no administrator in the city of New York. Here, however, the anciliaryadministration is in New Jersey, with no right to administer property, unless it can be taken within this state. It is quite clear that this court could not lawfully make an order that the property mentioned in the bill be brought within the state of New Jersey to be administered (it being made to appear that there is primary administration in New York, where the assets or the evidence thereof are located); yet this is substantially the only form of decree which would aid the administrator here. Any decree made by this court declaring that, as between the estate of the intestate and the Miners' Smelting Company, no trust is impressed upon the stocks, bonds, etc., in favor of the estate, would have no force and effect in the state of New York, where the primary administration exists and the property is physically situated, as there is no privity between the primary and ancillary administrator. Pisano v. Shanley, supra; 11 R. C. L. § 531, note 11.
A decree will be advised, dismissing the bill.