25 Gratt. 410 | Va. | 1874
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal from a decree of the Circuit court of Augusta county. The record discloses the following facts: Peter- Crickard, late of said county, departed this life on the 15th day of August-, 1857. He left a will, which was duly admitted to probate in the County court of said county, and which disposed of a large estate, real and personal. He appointed as an
On the 20th July, 1857, the executor, Henderson M. Bell, filed his bill in the Circuit court of Augusta, setting forth, that before the renunciation of the will by the widow they had sold a part of the real estate; but that before the expiration of twelve months after the probate of the will Mrs. Crickard had appeared in open court and renounced the provisions of the will made for her by her husband, and resigned her executorship of said will. He filed with his bill her agreement in writing, by which she stipulated that the said •executor should proceed, in execution of the will, to make sale of the real estate directed by said will to be
Under certain proceedings in this suit, the commuted cash value of the dower right of Mrs. Crickard was assigned to her, and an account of the transactions of the executor was settled before a commissioner of the court.
This account showed a balance in the hands of the executor of $9,543.48, on the 1st day of September 1859. Ho further proceedings connected with the matter now in controversy were taken in the cause until the 9th day of June 1863, when the executor filed the following petition: “ To Hon. L. P. Thompson, judge. Tour petitioner, Henderson M. Bell, executor of Peter Crickard, deceased, respectfully represents to the court, that he holds in his hands,
In accordance with this order the executor invested in the bonds of the Confederate States, bearing seven per cení, interest, the amount referred to in the petition and order. Whether the parties interested in this petition of the executor had notice of his application, or whether they were present, either in person or by counsel, the record fails to disclose. The presumption is that they had no notice, and were not present or represented by counsel, or the fact would have appeared.
Thus matters stood until after the close of the war, when, on the 10th of January, 1869, an order was •entered by the said Circuit court, directing the executor to settle before one of the commissioners of said •court an account of his administration of. the estate of Ms testator, Peter Crickard. Before any account
They further ask, that if the court deem it necessary or ProPer f°r the making up of a more formal issue, that a cross-bill should be filed, then they pray that their petition may be considered, received and read as a cross-bill, and that the said executor may be required to answer its allegations in due form, &c.
On the 6th July 1871, the cause came on to be heard on the papers formerly read and the petition above referred to; and thereupon a rule was awarded against the executor to appear on the first day of the next term to show cause, if any he can, why he should not pay over to the legatees of said Peter Crickard, the balances ascertained to be respectively due to each by Commissioner Hendren’s report, No. 2, filed August 13th 1859, and confirmed by a decree entered on the 30th Nov’r 1859. The executor filed his answer to this rule on the first day of the following term. In this answer he avers that he had fully paid off to all the parties entitled to receive from him the amounts ascertained to be due by the report of Commissioner Hendren, referred to in the order of the court, shortly after the confirmation of said report; that the parties to whom be did not so pay were not competent at the time to receive the amounts reported in their favor; that the amounts which he could not pay over were invested by him according to his best judgment and discretion in the management of his trust, and the interest paid over to the parties entitled, or to their use when they could not themselves receive the same; that the war coming on, these investments became, beyond the control of respondent, converted into Confederate money, and on the 9th day of June
In execution of this order, the commissioner, to whom the matter was referred, returned to the court several alternate statements, showing, according to the principles adopted by the commissioner in making each several statement, different balances due by the executor to the legatees. The one adopted by the court, as ascertaining the correct balances due from the executor to the legatees, and designated in the decree as “the first alternate statement,” rejected the investment made by the executive in Confederate States bonds, and holding him bound for the amount found due the legatees by commissioner Hendren’s report on the 1st September 1859, to-wit: the sum of $9,543.48, gives him credit by the sums paid to the legatees in Confederate money .at its face value (it being for interest and small sums accepted by the parties), and also recognized as a full settlement the compromises which had been made by the parties who were sui juris, reported the balances due to the legatees respectively, which still remained unsettled. The executor excepted to this report, upon the ground that the commissioner failed to credit the executor with the amount invested by him in Confederate bonds. This exception was overruled, and the court entered a decree directing the executor to pay over to the legatees the sums found due to them respectively by said report, except as to James Criekard and his children. Por them the testator had made the following provision in his will: “ 6th. I give and bequeath to my
As to this legacy, the court entered in its decree the following directions: “And James Crickard and. his children, who are entitled.to the fund created by the sixth clause of the will of Peter Crickard, deceased, having nominated Robert G-. Bickle as á suitable person to act as trustee and to take charge of said fund, and the court approving of said'nomination, it is therefore further adjudged and decreed that the said •H. M. Bell pay to said Robert G. Bickle $3,700.79; with legal interest on $2,561.10, part thereof, from ls.t day of June 1872, till paid. .But said ¡Robert G. Bickle shall not receive said fund .of said'Bell until he shall, have executed before the clerk of this court bond with good security in the penalty of $9,000, payable .to the commonwealth of Virginia, and conditioned for the .'faithful discharge of his duties in the preservation and management of said fund, according to the trusts imposed by. the. will of' said Peter Crickard; .deceased, and subject to, all future orders and decrees of .this court.”
: It was from, this decree that an appeal was allowed to, .this .court. .
. The court is of opinion that there is no! error in the ■decree of the Circuit court.' . •
.The law makes it the duty of an. executor, after he
If the legatees are so situated, or from ahy other cause, there is no hand to receive the legacies from the executor, then it is his plain duty to invest the fund in safe interest-bearing securities to await the time when the same can be paid over to the legatee. If the executor fails to do this, and retains the fund in his own hands, he thereby becomes a debtor to the legatee, chargeable with legal interest, and he can no more than any other debtor discharge his debt in a depreciated currency when he received a sound currency, but must pay it in the same currency which came into his hands, or in one of equal value.
In the case before us the executor (according to the report of commissioner Hendren, not excepted to, and confirmed by the court,) had in his hands for distribution among the legatees, the sum of $9,543.48, on the 1st day of September 1859. For nearly two years before the commencement of the war this fund was in his hands. Why was it not paid over before there was any change in the currency? Or if some of the parties were infants, or so situated from other causes as not to be in a condition to receive their legacies, why was not such portion invested for them in some safe interest-bearing securities, which might have prevented loss both to him and to them? But in June 1863, nearly five years after the fund came into his hands, and which was paid to him in gold or its equivalent, he brings into the Circuit court, in Confederate currency, $7,000, and upon an ex parte order, made without notice to the parties interested, leave is obtained from the court to invest • that amount in Confederate bonds, for the benefit of the legatees, who
The executor, both in his petition and answer to the rule, says that he asked leave of the court to make this investment under the provisions of the act of assembly passed March 5th, 1868. The act relied upon has no application to such a case as this. It has already received judicial construction by this court more than once. See Campbell’s ex’ors v. Campbell’s ex’or, 22 Gratt. 649, and Mead v. Jones, supra 347. In the first named case, the president delivering the opinion of the court says, p. 648: “ The act expressly provided that whenever a fiduciary had in his hands -moneys received in the due execution of his trust, which from the nature of his trust, or any cause whatever, he was unable to pay over to the parties entitled thereto, it should be lawful for him to apply by motion or petition to any judge, &c. The money was required to be in hand, and to have been received in the due exercise -of his trust, and he for some cause must be unable to pay it over to the parties entitled.” These three conditions must concur. In the case before us none of these conditions concur, but all are wanting. The money he received for the legatees was not in hand; for that was gold or its equivalent. The Confederate •money he proposed to invest in Confederate bonds was not received in the due exercise of his trust. The ■conversion of gold which he received nearly five years before into Confederate currency, was, no matter how converted, an undue and illegal exercise of his trust, and as to those parties who, from infancy or other causes, were not in a condition to receive it, it was the plain duty of the executor to have made investments
But it is ai’gued by the learned counsel for the appellant, that independent of the act of March 5th, 1863, which is wholly relied upon by the executor in answer' to the rule, the court had the authoi’ity to make the order of investment entered June 9th, 1863. “That,” to use the language of the petition for appealj “ either by nature of the inherent powers of courts of 'chancery, or in accordance with the spirit if not the letter of the 24th section of chapter 132, Code 1860, it appearing to the court from the report filed and its own decree, that the moneys specially mentioned in' the petition filed on the 9th June 1863, were in the executor’s hands, the court had power and jurisdiction to order said moneys to be paid into court, to be invested or loaned out, or to make any order respecting the same which to such court might seem proper. And it is insisted that the order having been' entered in a pending cause, to which the legatees were parties, and having been made by a court of competent jurisdiction, having the parties before it, and having ■control of the fund, must stand until set aside upon a petition for re-hearing and review, or reversed upon ■appeal. *
■ ■ The conclusive answer to this position is, that the petition filed by the legatees, which is the foundation of all the proceedings against the executor, must be •treated as it is in effect a petition to review and set aside the order of June 9th, 1863. The very object of that petition was to get rid'of that order, which alone
We would not do the slightest injustice to the executor, and therefore will not fail to notice any ground upon which he rests his defence. In his answer, he says “ that the amounts which he could not pay over
The executor does not inform the court, though required to do so by its order, in what manner he invested the funds in his hands, which he declares in his answer “were invested by him according to his best judgment and discretion in the management of his trust;” nor does he offer any explanation of how “ these investments became, beyond his control, converged into Confederate money.” One of two things is certainly true; and in either event the executor is equally responsible. He either retained the money in his own hands, paying interest to the parties entitled, and regarded it as an investment in his hands for them; or he loaned it out upon securities of some sort. If he retained it, he became the debtor of the legatees'; and having received gold, cannot discharge his debt in a depreciated currency. If he loaned it out he had no right to receive it in • Confederate currency, depreciated in June 1863 to one-tenth of its face value. And if he changed the investment he had made, and suffered safe and solvent securities to become “converted into Confederate money,” he committed a devastavit, for which the law will hold him responsible.
In any and every view we can take of the case, the loss consequent upon the investment in Confederate bonds must fall, not on the legatees, but on the executor, who caused this loss by failing to do that which both the law and the will of his testator required at his hands.
In coming to this conclusion, we do not mean in any manner to impute to the executor any fraudulent purpose or misconduct. His high character and standing, well known to this court, as well as his conduct since the loss occurred, in seeking to repair it, and taking upon himself a part of its burden, all repel any such idea.
We mean only, without reference to the motives or ■conduct of parties, to fix the responsibility where the law places it, and to lay the burtheu of the. loss upon him who caused it.
There is one other assignment of error which must be mentioned briefly; and that is, that there is error in the decree in appointing a trustee to receive that portion 'which was due from the executor to James ' Crickard and his children. It is objected, that inasmuch as the will appointed the executor trustee for these legatees, the court had no power to remove him and appoint another. The record shows that seven if not all of the parties interested, filed a petition to the court asking that Kobert G. Bielde might be appointed a trustee to take charge of and manage for them the trust fund created for their benefit by the sixth clause of Peter Crickard’s will. The court
The court is of opinion that there is no error in this order. A court of chancery having trust funds under its control, may make such orders as may in its opinion be necessary-for its safety and proper administration. The manner of doing this must be left in a great degree to the discretion of the court having-charge of the fund. If the parties interested desire the appointment of another trustee, and the court thinks it necessary to a proper management of the trust fund, this court will not interfere, although it might think such an order unnecessary. It must be left to the discretion of the court of chancery having control of the fund and charged with its safety and proper administration.
' It may be observed, too, that the will did not in terms appoint Bell the trustee; but simply directed him as executor to carry out the provisions of the will in making the investment for James Crickard and his children. So that in point of fact there was no removal of the trustee and appointment of another.
The court is therefore of opinion that there is no error in the decree of the Circuit court of Augusta, and that the same be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.