
    Matter of the Estate of Francis Dwight Porter, Deceased.
    
      (Surrogate’s Court, New York County,
    
    
      September, 1908.)
    Witnesses—Disqualification on death or incompetency of party to COMMUNICATION OB TRANSACTION—PARTIES DISQUALIFIED—EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS—ADMINISTRATOR TESTIFYING IN SUPPORT OF HIS CLAIM.
    Where in an administrator’s account the claim in his favor against the estate is fully set out and no objections to the account are filed, he is not disqualified from testifying in support of his claim, nor required to object to his own testimony, by the provisions of section 829 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
    Proceeding upon the accounting of an administrator.
    Brownell & Patterson, for administrator; Willard A. Mitchell, for Waldorf-Astoria.
   Beckett, S.

The administrator’s claim was set out in the account in itemized form as fully as in the claim presented. All other parties in interest, after due notice, defaulted, and no objections were filed to the account. Upon the hearing before the referee appointed to examine said account and to hear and determine said claim under section 2731, Code Civil Procedure, the administrator offered himself as a witness, giving testimony which was, in my judgment, together with additional proof, amply sufficient to establish his claim; the referee, however, disallowed the major portion of the claim, holding in effect that the administrator’s own testimony should be disregarded by the court. The result of his decision is that the personal representative is bound to object under section 829, Code Civil Procedure, to his own testimony offered in support of his own claim, although no other party objects to the account, and even although no one else appears in the proceeding. I cannot so find. The learned referee seems to rely upon Keller v. Stuck, 4 Redf. 294, and although that case has been occasionally cited I can find no case where it has been cited, referred to or followed in regard to this precise point. Under the circumstances as here presented the questioned testimony was entitled to have been considered under the sanction of the authorities that hold that such testimony is not offered against the legal representative; also under another line of authorities where the objection is not specifically raised such testimony becomes proof in the case which the court is entitled to consider. McLaughlin v. Webster, 141 N. Y. 76; Hoag v. Wright, 174 id. 39; Hickok v. Bunting, 6 App. Div. 560. If parties are silent surely it is not the court’s duty to raise this objection, and how can we reason that the law, which provides specifically in what manner the legal representative may prove his claim as the last of all the creditors, and then only as it results with exceptional notice to the parties interested, in addition to all this places the affirmative duty upon him to raise this objection against himself ? The administrator’s testimony was not prohibited by the language found in section 829, for it was not offered against an administrator or other person therein specified, and while the weight that should be given to it may be lessened by his interest it cannot be said to be inadmissible. Upon this point the referee very fairly says in his opinion: “ In conclusion it seems proper for me to state that my disallowance of the major portion of the administrator’s claim is dictated solely by the legal reasons which have seemed to me controlling, and that nothing in the testimony or that has otherwise come to my attention has caused the slightest suspicion of the bona fides of the administrator’s claim.” Accordingly the exceptions to the report are sustained and the claim is allowed.

Decreed accordingly.  