
    In the Matter of the Estate of Sophia Lynch, Deceased.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed December 14, 1894.)
    
    Executors, etc.—Discovert or assets.
    A proceeding to discover property of a decedent must be dismissed, where the party cited flies an answer stating that he is the owner of the property, or is entitled to its possession by virtue of a lien, etc.
    Appeal from an order, directing the examination of a person as to property alleged to be withheld from the administrator.
    
      W. Wickham Smith, for app’lt; Horace Graves, for resp’t.
   O’Brien, J.

This proceeding was brought under §§ 2706-2714 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by chapter 686 of the Laws of 1893. The petition of the administrator sets forth that there were in the possession of one John H. Lynch and the appellant, George W. Lynch, and wrongfully withheld from him, the following classes of property: (1) Household furniture and carriages; (2) stock certificates of the Fulton Market Fishmongers’ Association; and (3) a stand in the Fulton fish market. “The appellant interposed awritten answer,duly verified, which set forth: (a) As to the household furniture and carriages, that they were not and never had been, in his possession, (b) As to the stock certificates of the Fulton Market Fishmongers’Association, that he was entitled to the possession thereof by virtue of a lien thereon and special property therein; and he also set forth the nature and circumstances of his lien, and, upon information and belief denied that Sophia Lynch was the real owner thereof at the time of her death, (c) As to the stand in the Fulton fish market, that he was the owner thereof. Upon the interposition of this answer, appellant .moved to dismiss the proceeding, but his motion was denied, and an order was made directing his examination as to the shares of stock of the Fulton Market Fishmongers’ Association only. From this order the appeal is brought to this court.”

The Code provides a means for the discovery of the property ■of a decedent held by a third person, and, upon a proper petition, authorizes the citation and examination of such person touching •such property. It further provides that, upon the attendance of such person, he must be sworn to answer questions touching the inquiry prayed for in the petition, and he may be examined fully and at large respecting any money or other property of the decedent of which the decedent had possession at the time of or within two years before his death. It is further, provided, however, that: “If the person cited shall interpose a written answer, duly verified, that he is the owner of said property, or is entitled ■to the the possession thereof by virtue of any lien thereon or special property therein, the surrogate shall dismiss the proceedings as to such property so claimed.” Code Civ. Proc. § 2710.

Here the person sought to be examined interposed a written" answer, duly verified, alleging that he was entitled to the possession of the shares of stock of the fishmongers’ association concerning which a discovery was sought, and concerning which the surrogate directed his examination by virtue of a lien thereon and special property therein, setting forth the particulars of such claim. By the express language of the Code, the interposition of such an answer required that the surrogate should dismiss the proceeding. The construction of this section has been involved in several cases in this court, and that contended for by appellant has been consistently followed. Thus in Doyle v. Doyle, 15 St. Rep. 318, it is said: “Section 2710 of the Code provides, by the amendment of 1881 (Laws of that year, c. 535), that in case a person cited as one having property of the deceased shall interpose a written answer, duly verified, that he is the owner of the property "the possession of which is charged upon him, or that he is entitled to the possession thereof, by virtue of any lien thereon or special property therein, the surrogate shall dismiss the proceedings as to such property so claimed. Such an answer was interposed on this application, and it became the duty of the surrogate to dismiss the proceedings, in accordance with the provisions of thp section to which reference has just been made. He had no power to investigate the verity of the denial thus made, and the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.”

And in Re Cunard's Estate, 27 St. Rep. 128; 7 N. Y. Supp. 553, it is said: “The petitioner entirely misconceives the purpose and scope of sections 2706 to 2714 of the Code of Civil Procedure. These sections were not intended as a substitute for ordinary civil remedies in cases where the latter are alone appropriate. The object was to provide a summary means of discovery, and, in case of a mere naked possession of the decedent’s ‘money or other personal property,’ to compel delivery to the legal representative. "* * * Even where there is a withholding, the statutory proceeding must be dismissed upon the filing of a duly-verified answer, setting up ownership or possession by virtue of a lien or special property. Section 2710.”

In regard to language so clear it is unnecessary to multiply authorities. Here the appellant set forth the particulars of his lien, and he was entitled to have the proceeding dismissed, His answer showed, not a naked possession, but a lien upon, and special property in, the stock referred to, and it was not within the province of the surrogate to pass upon the validity, sufficiency, or extent of this lien. As said in Re Knittel, 5 Dem. Sur. 371: “Those sections were designed to afford a simple and summary procedure whereby the executor or administrator of a decedent might obtain an order for the surrender and delivery of such money or other property belonging to such decedent’s, estate as should be discovered to be in the hands or under the control of some person or persons not lawfully entitled to the possession thereof.”

We think that the order was wrong, and should be reversed, with $10 costs and disbursements. All concur.  