
    Matter of the Application for Letters of Administration upon the Estate of Julia Smith, Alleged to be Deceased.
    
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, New York County,
    
    
      May, 1912.)
    Evidence—Presumptions—Death.
    Death—Absence as Raising Presumption op—Proof of Time of.
    The surrogate may presume the death of the person whose estate is to be administered, where it is established that such person being in ill health and of dissipated habits disappeared more than seventeen years ago, and has never since been heard of by those who would be likely to hear if the person were living, a diligent search and publication being also established.
    The presumption of death applies as to an unexplained and continued disappearance for more than seven years the same as to an established departure and absence unheard of by those, if any, likely to hear.
    The presumption of death does not necessarily fix the exact time of death.
    Where the person who disappears is unmarried and childless such conditions are presumed to continue in the absence of proof to the contrary.
    
      Application for letters of administration upon the estate of a person -alleged to be deceased.
    George M. Welch, for petitioner.
    
      
       See Note, Presumption of Death III Mills 392.
    
   Fowler, S.

This is a direct application upon an allegation of death for letters of administration upon the estate of Julia Smith, who disappeared many years since and never again has been heard from. Citation has been duly served by publication pursuant to an order of this court. In Matter of Matthews, 75 Misc. Rep. 449, the surrogate declined to presume the death of Julia Smith, one of the next of kin of John Matthews, on the ground that such a presumption should be made only in a direct proceeding, and that it should be confined to the death of an intestate whose estate is to be administered.' Such is the rule in other like jurisidictions which are charged with the administration of estates of intestates. Matter of Goods of Amelia Clark (1889), 15 Prob. Div. 10. The same rule, it is conceived, is as applicable here, as a matter of correct procedure, as it is elsewhere. But if it is not strictly binding here, it is certainly a convenient and orderly rule of procedure, calculated to save the rights of third persons, and conducive to the protection of parties who may be interested in the administration sought. A direct proceeding necessitates a bond as security for due and orderly administration and distribution in conformity with the statute regulating the administration of the estates of intestates. It protects the surrogate and it presents the question of death in a direct proceeding in rem after a citation published, and with all the binding force and efficacy which attaches to a direct proceeding in rem. If the presumption of death is applied collaterally, the person thus presumed dead is simply passed over. No bond is required of those who take his inheritance, and his estate is distributed without reference to his rights, if any. This does not strike me as orderly or proper procedure in this court. See Matter of Matthews, 75 Misc. Rep. 449.

Upon the return of the citation duly issued in this proceeding, the matter was regularly brought on for hearing before me and proofs were taken in the orderly course. In the Matter of Matthews the surrogate declined to consider the content and application of the presumption of death of Julia Smith, as the issue was conceived to be not then properly or adequately before the surrogate in that proceeding to administer the estate of John Matthews. On several occasions where an estate has been divided after a collateral presumption of death, the person presumed dead has appeared to find his inheritance squandered by the next of kin who received it. I shall try to prevent this in this court if it can be done, and, if it cannot, the responsibility will not be upon the surrogate.

In Matter of Matthews I distinctly stated that the content of the presumption of death was not then before me and that I would not then consider it at large. In this proceeding it is before me, and it must be considered. It is stated by a careful writer on the law of evidence (Jones, § 61), that in this country the presumption of death has been applied only to those who were absent from their home. See Eagle v. Emmet, 4 Bradf., 117, 122; Hyde Park v. Canton, 130 Mass. 505. Even Professor Thayer says in several places that the presumption assumes absence not heard from (Thayer Prelim. Treat. Ev., pp. 319, 348) although not in another (ibid. 542; see McKelvey on Ev., 86). A comment by an English author is more discriminating. He states, “ It is frequently said that this presumption of death only arises where the person in question goes abroad and is not heard of for seven years.”' See note to Cockle Lead. Cas. Ev. (2d ed.), 24. But in Nepean v. Doe, 2 M. & W. 894; 46 R. R. 789, in 1837, Lord Denman stated the presumption generally, “ that a person who is not heard of for seven years, by those who would be likely to hear of him, if living, is dead.” Considering this case Mr. Cockle remarks, “ The presumption of death must be stronger where the person has not gone abroad, as he is in such case more likely to be heard of, and the absence of news of him would still more strongly suggest his death.” Jones on Evidence in summing up the cases, English and American, on the presumption, states the presumption, I observe, in the terms of Lord Denman (Jones, Ev., § 61), although his context relates only to a presumption applied to a continuous absence from home founded on a known departure. But there is really no discrepancy between the juridical theories contrasted by text writers in their several statements of the presumption of death. One version of the presumption turns on a continuous disappearance, and the other is predicted of a departure, with intent to depart and a continuous absence for more than seven years, unheard of by those who would naturally hear. Lord Denman’s statement of the presumption in question is that now generally accepted in England. Prudential Co. v. Edmonds, 2 App. Cas. 487. But there was nothing new in Lord Denman’s statement, for in one of the early cases where this presumption was applied (Doe d. George v. Jesson, 6 East. 80) Lord Chief Justice Ellenborough had said, “ As to the period when the brother might be supposed to have died according to the statute, 19 Car. II. c. 6, with respect to leases dependent on lives, and also according to the statute of bigamy (1 Jac., 1 c. 11), the presumption of the duration of life, with respect to persons of whom no account ccm he given, ends at the expiration of seven years from the time when they were last known to he living.”

The presumption of death is a very modern presumption. Professor Thayer traces the rise and the development of the rule into a presumption de jure. Prelim. Treat, on Ev., 319, 324. Stephens in his Digest of the Law of Evidence (art. 99), finally gives the presumption in the more modern version, and he lays no stress on a departure from home and a continuous absence abroad: “ A person shown not to have been heard of for seven years by those (if any) who, if he had been alive, would naturally have heard of him, is presumed to be dead, unless the circumstances of the case are such as to account for his not being heard of without assuming his death.” Such is Mr. Justice Stephen’s version. The cases when compared, and it is to the cases we must look, do not disclose a discrepancy as it seems to me, but the application of the presumption to different states of facts. In some of them absence from home, unheard of by those likely to hear, is a material element of the presumption. In others, disappearance is the predominating element of the presumption. The truth is that when one departs from home and is never again heard of by those, if any, who would most naturally hear, the presumption is applied, unless circumstances shown make it inapplicable. So when one disappears, mysteriously, without cause, and is never again heard of by friends or relatives, if any, who would naturally hear, the presumption applies even without proof of departure to foreign parts, unless circumstances rebut the presumption.

In the State of New York the adjudications seem to conform to the modern common law rule on this point. They support the presumption of death from a mere disappearance, when the person so disappearing is never again heard of by those, if any, who would naturally hear of him, and more than seven years have elapsed since the disappearance established. Eagle v. Emmet, 4 Bradf. 117, 120; Karstens v. Karstens, 20 Misc. Rep. 247; Matter of Davenport, 37 id. 455; Matter of Wagener, 143 App. Div. 286, 287.

In this matter the petitioner has established that Julia Smith, once a resident of this city, was sixteen years ago a single woman of dissipated habits and in very poor and feeble health when last seen in the place of her abode. She was so last seen some sixteen or perhaps seventeen years ago in this city. She then stated that she was ill and about to go to an hospital. From that time to this Julia Smith has never been heard of by any friend or relation. The public administrator has caused public advertisements and an elaborate search to be made for her, with no result. That Julia Smith was poor and miserable, in very feeble health and of dissipated habits when she disappeared, are facts to be considered in the application of the presumption of death from a sudden disappearance after seven years have elapsed. Stouvenal v. Stephens, 2 Daly, 319; Cambreleng v. Purton, 12 N. Y. Supp. 741. In this matter it appears from the evidence that due search has been made for Julia Smith, by public and private authority, and that the hospital records have been searched in vain. Her disappearance was abrupt, and for sixteen years or more it has been complete and uninterrupted. It would therefore seem that this is a case where the presumption of death may be applied. The fact that the public records do not disclose the death of Julia Smith is not conclusive. Her name may have been wrongly given or taken by the authorities. She was almost a vagrant in a great city, where 'such disappearances are not unprecedented. She probably now rests among the nameless dead, those unfortunates who leave no record behind.

At the time of her disappearance Julia Smith was unmarried and childless, and the presumption of fact is that she died urn-married and childless in the absence of any contrary proofs. Doe d. Banning v. Griffin, 15 East, 293; McComb v. Wright, 5 Johns. Ch. 263; Matter of Harding (1891), May 28; Karstens v. Karstens, 20 Misc. Rep. 247, 251.

The application of the presumption of death after an established disappearance for more than seven years does not necessarily involve the exact date of death. The presumption of death relates only to the fact of death, and as said in Nepean v. Doe, 2 M. & W., 894; 4 Wigm. Ev., § 2531; 1 Phil. Ev., 640, whenever it is material, the time of death must be the subject of distinct proof. Nepean v. Doe; Jones Ev., § 62 and cases cited; cf. Matter of Davenport, 37 Misc. Rep. 456. But this particular point is not here, and I will not consider it.

It seems to the surrogate that the evidence given in this proceeding is sufficient to establish, in the absence of any proofs to the contrary, that Julia Smith is dead.

The letters of administration will issue, as prayed, upon the giving of a bond in the usual form in double the amount of the estate. Decree accordingly.

Decreed accordingly. 
      
       So in official series. Ed.
     