279 Mass. 62 | Mass. | 1932
On September 9, 1930, the executrix of the will of J. Albert Brackett filed in the Probate Court an account purporting to be the first and final account of her testator as the special administrator of the estate of Charles S. Harris and purporting to cover the period from March 21, 1927, to May 3, 1928. Pursuant to G. L. c. 215, § 13, the judge of probate reserved and reported the case and all questions of law for the consideration and determination of the Supreme Judicial Court, upon an agreed statement of facts and requests for rulings of law. The parties agreed for the purpose of determining the questions of law involved, and without prejudice to the rights of the contestants and the accountant and the surety to contest
Harris died testate January 19, 1927, bequeathing all of his estate to Emily A. Fuller, one of the respondents, and nominated J. Albert Brackett to be executor without giving sureties on his official bond. The allowance of the will was contested and the order of the probate judge denying issues for a jury was affirmed by this court in Brackett v. Harris, 263 Mass. 334. On March 22, 1927, Mr. Brackett was appointed special administrator and qualified by giving bond with the respondent Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland as surety. Guy E. Healey, a witness to the will, was engaged by Mr. Brackett to act as counsel for the estate soon after Harris died, and acted as counsel in the will contest and in other matters connected with the estate. On July 22, 1927, the special administrator filed an inventory showing that substantially all the property in the estate consisted of liberty loan bonds with overdue coupons, a deposit in the Atlantic National Bank savings department, and a sum in cash. On April 16, 1928, the special administrator filed a petition for leave to pay specified claims against the estate, among which was one of Mr. Healey for legal services in the sum of $750, and another, his own claim, for services as special administrator in the sum of $250. This petition was approved by the court on the day it was filed without notice to any one. The claims thus authorized to be paid appear as items 1-13, inclusive, in schedule B of the account of the special admin
The special administrator’s first and final account was signed and sworn to by him on May 4, 1928, but not filed until September 9, 1930, about eight months after his death. The only items in dispute in this account are those numbered 12 to 16, inclusive, as follows:
“12. . . . [April 17, 1928] Guy E. Healey Legal Services 750.00
13. “ “ J. Albert Brackett Services as
special admr. 250.00
May 3 Turned over to J. Albert Brackett
Executor of Will of Charles S. Harris:
14. “ “ Amount on deposit at Old Colony Trust Co. $1669.71
15. “ “ “ “ “ “ Atlantic National
Bank, Savings Dept. 7782.74
16. “ “ U. S. Liberty Bonds 1500.00”
On May 10, 1928, Mr. Brackett or some one in his behalf exhibited a certificate of his appointment at the Old Colony Trust Company and the account was then changed from “Estate of Charles S. Harris, J. Albert Brackett, special administrator,” to “estate of Charles S. Harris, J. Albert Brackett, executor.” It was agreed that at that time there was no physical transfer of the assets by the bank from the old account into a new account of the executor. On June 29, 1928, Mr. Brackett filed in the Probate Court a paper purporting to be the executor’s inventory of the estate of Harris. This inventory contained the same list of liberty bonds which appeared in the inventory of the special administrator. It also included a deposit in the Atlantic National Bank savings department, and a deposit in the Old Colony Trust Company.
On April 11, 1928, the special administrator had sold all of these United States liberty bonds belonging to the estate and deposited their proceeds in the joint account of him
On May 7, 1928, before the title to the account in the Old Colony Trust Company had been changed, Mr. Brackett drew a check on that company payable to the order of the Old Colony Trust Company for $2,000, signing his name as special administrator. This check was given to the Old Colony Trust Company in payment of a cashier’s check issued by it to him in a like sum which was indorsed by him and his wife and deposited in their joint account in the same trust company, and they received the proceeds thereof. The check made payable to the Old Colony Trust Company by Mr. Brackett was charged by the bank to the account of the Harris estate, standing in the name of J. Albert Brackett, special administrator, and the amount of this check was never repaid to the estate.
On May 3, 1928, the balance in the savings department of the Atlantic National Bank was $5,882.74, as shown by the savings deposit book standing in the name of the estate of Charles S. Harris, J. Albert Brackett, special administrator. This account and the savings bank book which represented it and the records of the account in the bank continued to stand in the name of J. Albert Brackett, special administrator, from the time the account was opened until it was closed on December 1, 1928. The parties agreed that there is no record to indicate that Mr. Brackett’s letter of appointment as executor was shown to this bank, but that it may have been so shown.
After his appointment as executor Mr. Brackett withdrew at various times all the money in the savings department of the Atlantic National Bank giving receipts therefor signed in his name, “Executor Estate of Charles S. Harris.” The proceeds of these withdrawals were credited to the account of Mr. Brackett, executor, at the Old Colony Trust Company after he had deposited the same in that bank. On May 18, 1930, the administrator de bonis non
The question presented in connection with items 14 and 15 of the special administrator’s account is whether misappropriations made after Mr. Brackett’s appointment as executor are chargeable to him in his capacity as special administrator.
G. L. c. 193, § 16, provides, in part: “Upon the granting of letters testamentary or of administration, the powers of the special administrator shall cease. Upon the termination of his powers, the special administrator shall forthwith deliver to the executor or administrator or to such person as is otherwise lawfully authorized to receive it all the estate of the deceased in his hands.” The conditions required to be incorporated in the bond of a special administrator are, in part, “that he will, whenever required by the probate court, truly account on oath for all the property of the deceased which may be received by him as such special administrator, and will deliver the same to any person who may be appointed executor or administrator of the deceased, or may be otherwise lawfully authorized to receive the same.” G. L. c. 205, § 1, cl. 3. The delivery of property required by the bond, when a person holding it in one trust capacity must show that he has received it in another, requires something more than his decision to transfer title accompanied by a change, made upon his order, in the name in which the account is carried at a bank. In Hall v. Cushing, 9 Pick. 395, 409, Dorr v. Wainwright, 13 Pick. 328, Conkey v. Dickinson, 13 Met. 51, 54, Hardy v. Yarmouth, 6 Allen, 277, 281, Daggett v. White, 128 Mass. 398, White v. Ditson, 140 Mass. 351, 354, Welch
The accountant contends that this rule is grounded on the statutory duties of an executor, and does not apply to a special administrator. But in none of the cases is it intimated that the requirement rests on the statutory duties of an executor.
In Lanman v. Lanman, 206 Mass. 488, the court held that though the guardianship may have ceased as to the person of the ward by his attainment of majority, the trust as to his property would continue as long as such property remains in the guardian’s possession and management. The court held in Hardy v. Yarmouth, 6 Allen, 277, that a transfer of property by executors to themselves as trustees under the same will did not change the status of the property and the liability of the executors to be assessed therefor in the town where they were theretofore assessed. The court said at page 280: “. . . the estate had not been legally transferred by the executors until their account had been duly filed, allowed and approved in the probate court.” In Welch v. Boston, 211 Mass. 178, 185, the court said that where an estate is “given to the same person or persons as trustees, who are also executors, there must not only be some definite, unequivocal and final act of transfer from the executor to the trustee, but such act before it can become ‘authoritative and notorious’ (Newcomb v. Williams, 9 Met. 525, 535) must be shown by an account duly filed and allowed by the Probate Court.” In White v. Ditson, 140 Mass. 351, 354-355, the court stated that the requirement that every trustee give a bond “contemplates that, where the same person is executor and trustee, there shall be a distinct transfer of property to him in the latter capacity by authority of the Probate Court ....
The conclusion to be drawn from the cases and supported by reasons grounded in sound public policy is that wherever property is to be transferred from one in one fiduciary capacity to himself in another, for the protection of those in whose behalf the capacities are assumed, the transfer to be effective must be accomplished by some notorious and authoritative act which ordinarily would require the approval of the Probate Court in some form. In the case at bar the funds had been misappropriated before the account of the special administrator was filed in the Probate Court and no effective transfer of the assets from the special administrator to himself as executor had been made. The change of title in the Old Colony Trust Company from special administrator to executor on Mr. Brackett’s order was not an act which in and of itself could relieve him from continued responsibility as special administrator.
The contention of the accountant is that the payments represented by items 12 and 13 having been made with the approval of the judge of probate cannot be disputed at a hearing on the allowance of the special administrator’s account.
G. L. c. 193, § 14, provides that a “special administrator may by leave of the probate court pay from the personal property in his hands the expenses of the last sickness and funeral of the deceased, the expenses incurred by the executor named in the will of the deceased, or by any other person presenting the same for probate, in proving the will in the probate court or in sustaining the proof thereof in the supreme judicial court and also, after notice, such debts due from the deceased as the probate court may approve.” A decree of the Probate Court is good until set aside and cannot be attacked collaterally. Farquhar v. New England Trust Co. 261 Mass. 209, 213, 215. It would seem, however, that the leave of the Probate Court referred to in the statute at least when given without notice to parties interested does not have the full force of a decree of that court within the meaning of the rule stated in the cases referred to. The statute does not in terms require notice as a prerequisite to the approval of the payments referred to therein except when they are payments of “debts due from the
So far as the charges of Mr. Healey appearing in item 12 are concerned, the parties agreed that they are fair and reasonable if he, being a witness to the will, could act as attorney in defending it and make a charge for his services to the estate. There is no statute in this Commonwealth prohibiting an attesting witness to a will from acting as attorney for any party interested in sustaining the will, and no principle óf the common law which would preclude an attorney from rendering such services chas been brought to our attention. The issues which the contestant sought to have tried by a jury were whether the deceased was of sound or unsound mind and whether the execution of the will was procured by fraud or undue influence of a person named Fuller. It does not appear that the formal execution of the will was in dispute or whether Mr. Healey was called upon to testify in the case, and the rule prohibiting an attorney who becomes a witness in a case from making an argument in the same case would not deprive such person of the right to perform other duties as an attorney therein. Mr. Brackett being named as executor of the will had a duty to petition for its allowance in the Probate Court. Fulton v. Umbehend, 182 Mass. 487. Clifford v. Taylor, 204 Mass. 358, 361. Reasonable expenses, incurred in connection with the petition for its allowance, are properly chargeable to the testator’s estate.
The question presented in connection with item 13 is whether, when the whole conduct of the special administrator, including his misappropriation of the funds of the estate, is considered, he is entitled to be paid for his serv
It follows that item 12 should be allowed, and all other items in dispute, namely, those numbered 13 to 16 inclusive, should be disallowed. Because of the conclusion reached it is unnecessary to deal in detail with the contestant’s requests for rulings. In accordance with the terms of the report the case is remanded to the Probate Court for a determination of the amount of the improper withdrawals and the amount, if any, of any set-offs or counterclaims to the same, and for a restatement of the account not inconsistent with this opinion.
Ordered accordingly.