49 N.J. Eq. 111 | New York Court of Chancery | 1891
In case the administration of an estate in the orphans court' be imperfect, or incomplete, and serious complications are presented, it is proper for the parties seeking relief to ask the aid of this court. It may be said that in case an injunction be necessary for the protection of the interests involved, there is no-exception to the jurisdiction of this court, whatever may be the-progress -towards final settlement in the inferior tribunal. In the case now under consideration it appears that the testator died, in November, 1869. In and by his last will he gave and devised to his wife the house in which he then lived, besides the-right which she would be entitled to in his real estate as bis-widow. He gave and devised all the residue of his real and personal estate to the children of his brothers and sisters, and to Nathan S. Read and Mary A. Read in equal shares. After the-death of the widow, that portion of his estate to which she was-entitled was to be divided as the residue was directed to be.
He authorized his executors to sell and convey any of his real estate at any time within five years. Henry Bechtold, one of the complainants, and Nathan S. Read and Wallace Lippincott,. two of the defendants, were named as executors. They proved the will and took upon themselves the burden imposed thereby..
At the time of his death the testator was indebted on several judgments, the amount of -which has not been very clearly established, but which was about $3,736. His other liabilities did not exceed $2,150. Thus, it appears that all the duties which devolved upon the executors, or all the difficulties which they had to encounter and dispose of, were, making sales of the personal property, collecting the said bond' due from one of their number, disposing of the real estate, discharging the said judgments and the other liabilities and the expenses of administering the estate, before the legatees could legally claim anything from them. Nothing is more manifest from these statements than that the obligations which the law imposed upon them were very few, very simple and easily comprehended by the plainest business man, and capable of being discharged in a very short period of time with very slight cost.
It should be distinctly noted and constantly kept in mind that within a year — that is, during the year 1870 — after the death of the testator the executors come to the conclusion that the estate was insolvent. However, notwithstanding this, no application was made by them to the orphans court with the view of a settlement of the estate by proceedings as in cases of insolvency until the year 1888, eighteen years after they became satisfied, according to their own testimony, that such was the condition of the estate which they had undertaken to manage, not only for
The will directed them to pay all debts as soon as they conveniently could. As intimated, there were several judgments unpaid which had been obtained against the testator in his lifetime. Levies had been made upon the personal property and upon the homestead of the deceased. But notwithstanding these things, instead of endeavoring to comply with the directions of the will, and of the statute, in such matters, they seemed to be quite, if not entirely, indifferent to their solemn obligations and to the rights of others, until the year 1872, when they offered a portion of the lands named for sale. They then became indifferent until the following year, when certain other lots were offered for sale. The fact that the sheriff sold the personal property which they had inventoried, and the homestead of the testator which he had devised to his widow, was not sufficient to spur them to reasonable diligence. In the years 1872 and 1873 a largo number of lots were sold and conveyed; in the latter year a number were conveyed without any consideration received therefor. The reason given for making title without compensation is that they tried in vain to get bids therefor.
In 1875 one of the legatees cited the executors to account. An effort was made by one of the executors to that end, but before his work was complete the pressure which moved him was withdrawn and his efforts ceased. Nothing further appears to have been accomplished in the way of a successful administration of this estate, or even undertaking, until the year 1885, when another citation was issued and an account was prepared by Wallace Lippincott and presented to the orphans court, which shows a balance in his favor of $524. It is this account, filed at this late day, which is sought to be a bar to the action of this court. In addition to what has already been presented, it need only be stated that in 1888 these executors actually commenced proceedings in the same orphans court for the purpose of having this estate declared insolvent, and proceeded so far as to offer a
But it has been alleged with more than ordinary zeal that the complainants have been guilty of laches, in delaying to file their bill for nearly twenty years after the death of the testator. A complete and unmistakable answer to this defence is found in the facts above given. Perhaps it ought to appear in this connection that the complainants were for all this period of time nonresidents. At the hearing it seemed reasonable to me that the accident of locality in a foreigu state could not reasonably be invoked as an excuse for laches, if any were demanded in this case; but the very highest authority makes it manifest that I was mistaken. Taylor v. Benham, 5 How. 278, 326. In the application of this doctrine of laches when the rights of oestuis que trust were involved and the trustee is charged with fraud, the latitude extended in favor of the oestuis que trust is very much more liberal than in other cases where the same defence is aclied upon. Taylor v. Benham, supra; Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. 563; Decouche v. Savetier, 3 Johns. Ch. 190, 216; S. C., 8 Am. Dec. 478, and notes. But there is a modification of this view applicable to the State of New York. See Kane v. Bloodgood, 7 Johns. Ch. 90.
It seems to me that the doctrine of laches should never be applied to oestuis que trust until a reasonable time has elapsed .after the trustee has performed the duties and discharged the obligations required of or imposed upon him by the law or instrument under which he is acting. If the estate which he has in charge, or any branch of it, be unadministered, so that the rights of the legatee or devisee are unascertained and uncertain, so that a suit in equity or an action at law will not lie therefor, it does not become the trustee to charge such legatee or devisee with laches, unless it can be shown affirmatively that the legatee or devisee has, with a full knowledge of all the facts and an
In this case, one of the executors presented his account in 1885, and it was then audited and passed by the court-. The bill in this case was filed on the 29th day of August, 1889. In the year 1888, as above stated, the executors made application-to the same orphans court to have the estate declared insolvent. On the question of laches, these facts must satisfy the most critical. If more be required, let what appears hereafter be considered.
Therefore, it is established that these executor’s must account in this court. For what must they account? To answer this-question, we must ascertain what assets of Samuel Bechtold, Jr.,, came to their hands. The inventory shows personal estate of the value of $8,525.50. They should be charged with all of this, and credited with so much thereof as was actually disposed! of in the payment of debts and the proper and necessary expenses of the settlement of the estate. In such credits they should be allowed for those articles which had been seized upon and sold by the sheriff by virtue of sundry executions.
It is claimed that the executors should only be charged with-$5,000, the amount in cash actually received' by them upon the
It is true that some effort has been made by the executors to show that the mortgaged premises were not worth more than $5,000, if so much. But this testimony was offered more than
With respect to the transaction in the collection of this bond and mortgage and the loss resulting therefrom, all the executors are alike responsible. They are to be charged with the whole amount of the check given by the company to Weeks, less the commissions which they paid, which I believe was $280: When the executoi’s, Bechtold and Read, joined in- that assignment and committed the completion of the negotiations to Read,, the mortgagor and obligor, they became responsible for all consequences which might ensue. They trusted him at their peril-. He being the debtor, it was their duty to superintend the collection of this bond and mortgage. It is not necessary to discover how Read was benefited; it is only necessary to- point to- the fact that, by their negligence, the estate has sustained a loss. -Generally speaking, each executor has the right to make collection of assets-without his co-executor being liable for any loss resulting therefrom. Fennimore v. Fennimore, 2 Gr. Ch. 292. But it is very manifest that, in such cases as we are now dealing with, it must be regarded as extreme negligence for co-executors to allow one-of their number, who is largely indebted to the estate, to compromise the interest of the estate as has been done here. Laroe
In the next place, it is to be considered how much real estate come to the hands of the executors with which, or with the proceeds of the sales thereof, they should be charged. The testimony shows that a large number of village lots were offered for sale by them and were actually sold to bona fide purchasers. For many, if not all, of these that were so sold Nathan S. Read, one of the executors, received the consideration either in cash or in the promissory note of the purchaser upon the delivery of the deed. Many, if not all, of the notes so received by him were delivered to Wallace Lippincott. The latter should be charged with the amount of these notes, and the former with the cash which he actually received, whether upon the delivery of the deeds or afterwards, upon the maturity of any of the notes which he may not have passed over to Mr. Lippincott.
They likewise will be required to account for all the moneys received upon the sales of lots known as the Burk lots. It appears that the testator in his lifetime conveyed a large number of lots to Burk, and that Burk paid for them by giving his bond and two mortgages, one for $17,000 and one for $10,000, and that the executors agreed with Burk to surrender the mortgages, and to accept the deed from Burk conveying to them all the lands covered by the mortgage, in satisfaction of the mortgages. So far as sales have been effected to bona fide purchasers of these lots they will be sustained and the executors held accountable for the consideration. If any of these Burk lots remain unsold they will be dealt with as others similarly situated in a manner hereinafter indicated.
The transactions respecting the William Leach mortgage must be governed by a like principle. The testator in his lifetime executed and delivered a deed of conveyance for a large number
It is perfectly clear that Mrs. Bead had not the shadow of a right in law or equity to this bond and mortgage. Whatever may have been the desire or express intention upon the part of the testator in his lifetime, he never manifested either, in any way, that could be recognized as binding by any court. This is especially enforced when the fact is considered that he died leaving a last will, in and by which all of his estate; real and per
The transaction with respect to the Barnes judgment must necessarily be marshaled under the same legal principle. By virtue of an execution issued in the lifetime of the testator upon a judgment against him, certain lands of the testator were advertised and sold. They were bid off to Barnes for about the sum of $600. Mr. Lippincott, one of the executors, made an arrangement with the attorney of Barnes by which, in consideration of paying and advancing upon the price to be paid by Barnes equal to the amount due upon the judgment, which was between $800 and $900, he (Lippincott) took the title from the sheriff. He knew before the land was sold the sheriff would offer the property for sale. The place of sale was near by his residence. He did not attend at the time and place when the property was so advertised for sale, notwithstanding his interest therein as executor, but did attend at the time and place when and where the deed was to be delivered, and then and there entered into the negotiations which resulted in his taking the title. His excuse for making the purchase is that Mrs. Beehtold, the widow of the testator, urged him thereto in order that she might have a home, his impression being that since she had an interest in the lands as widow he would be justified in taking this course to satisfy or protect such interest. The court cannot recognize or sanction any such private arrangement, however desirable it might appear to the parties interested. The law points out the method by which the rights of individuals in such cases may be ascertained, adjusted and settled. But it should be stated that the complainant insists that the amount due upon the Barnes judgment was only $420.
The testimony shows that certain lands were sold in October, 1873, to one Henry R. Lewis, for the consideration of $450. The executors all joined in the execution of that deed. They were alike responsible and must account for this sum, unless it can be shown that one or the other of them received it.
The same rule with respect to the liability of these executors must be observed in regard to the lands conveyed to the colored' servant, A. P. Taylor; and to the lands which were conveyed to-one Rhodes, and by him to said Wallace Lippincott; and the lot known as the three-cornered lot, conveyed to Mary A. Read, wife of one of the executors, and the lot conveyed to one “ Joe-Mitch,” through Mary A. Read, in case the title to the last-named lot was in the testator at the time of his death. In case-any of these lands have been conveyed to bona fide purchasers, the executors will be chargeable with the fair market value-thereof, with interest from the 1st day of April, 1875. If any of the grantees above named still hold the said lands, or if they be held by others with knowledge, it will be decreed that they hold the same in trust for the legatees. If substantial and permanent improvements have been made, the grantee will be allowed the present value of such improvements.
The conclusions above arrived at are based upon the rule laid down by the court of errors and appeals in the case of Marshall v. Carson, 11 Stew. Eq. 250. In that case, the lands which, came to the hands of the executors to be disposed of were charged
It may be said that the foregoing principle governs every branch or phase of the case now in hand. But if anything further be necessary to control the various transactions of these-executors in having the title to the lands, which they held in trust, conveyed to themselves or to others, in conflict with the-rights of the legatees, such necessity has been met by the same court of errors and appeals in the support given to the principles above laid down in the cases of Shoemaker v. Bassett, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 538; Carter v. Burr, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 135; S. C., 2 Dick. Ch. Rep. 599, and in McCormick v. The Ocean City Association, 18 Stew. Eq. 561; S. C., 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 599. In the first of these cases the sale was made by an executor to his wife through a third person. Although the sale was at public auction, it was not allowed to stand. In the next case, one-executor at a judicial sale, made upon the foreclosure of a mortgage, had the property bid off in the name of his son, to whom the title was conveyed by the sheriff. In that case, it was held that the trust was a continuing one in the hands of the executor who effected the sale, notwithstanding the conveyance to the son,
If it appears that any of the real estate of the testator was allowed to be sold for taxes, as is alleged, and that such sales were not for a full and a fair consideration, the executors must account for the difference between the actual consideration and a fair consideration. In other words, they must account for the fair market value of the lands so sold for taxes, less the amount of the taxes.
The principles above expressed will apply to all the real estate of the testator which the executors were bound to account for, and which may not have been included in any of the references heretofore made, whether the title remains in the executors or in third persons; if in the executors or in any one with knowledge, then such lands will be decreed to be held in trust for the legatees; but if in the hands of strangers, then the executors will be required to account for the value thereof.
For all lands conveyed to bona fide purchasers before the 1st day of April, 1875, the executors will be required to account for all principal not properly expended, with interest from the 1st day of April, 1875.
A reference will be made to a master with directions to state the account of these executors in accordance with the foregoing views. For the sake of greater completeness and certainty, directions will be given to include in said accounting and to .charge the said executors with all personal property which came
They will be charged with the consideration money at which-they sold real estate to bona fide purchasers.
The master will also be directed to report what lands remain, unsold, and what lands were conveyed to the said Lippincott,. which were offered for sale under the Barnes judgment, and in whose name the title to the said lands now is, and, if any portion-of the said lands be now owned by bona fide purchasers, what portion. The like directions will be given as to all the other-lands above referred to.