68 Vt. 225 | Vt. | 1896
In October, 1868, Brainard Flint died, testate, leaving a widow, Mary Flint, but no issue. By his will, which was duly proved, Mary Flint was constituted his executrix, and was appointed by the probate court, accepted the trust.and duly qualified, and acted as executrix. The personal and real estate of Brainard Flint was appraised at $1,743.24 by the appraisers appointed by the probate court. She waived her rights under the will, and demanded her rights in the estate under the law of distribution. June 19, 1869, after due notice, she settled her account as executrix in the probate court. By this settlement, it appeared that the personal estate was not sufficient to pay the debts and the expenses of administration by the sum of $88.79, which sum in this settlement was treated as a balance due her as executrix. The residue of the estate so far as appeared at the settlement, was the real estate appraised and inventoried at $1,100. On the same day, the probate court assigned to her, as widow, a homestead in the real estate, of the value of $500, and decreed to her the remainder of the estate
Mary Flint died testate in February or March, 1892. Her will was duly admitted to probate, and George T. Eastman, named therein as executor, was appointed executor thereof by the probate court, and accepted the trust and qualified, and is acting as such executor. After-the decease of Mary Flint and the appointment of her executor, a petition was preferred to the probate court by some of the heirs of Brainard Flint, setting forth that in her life, she received as such executrix a large sum of money belonging to Brainard Flint’s estate for which she never accounted in her life, and praying to have her executor cited before the probate court'to further render her account as executrix, and that her estate be held to account for such money. On hearing, the probate court denied the prayer of the petition that her estate account for such money, and from this denial an appeal was taken to the county court. In the county court the petitioners asked and were granted leave to make George B. Davis, administrator de bonis non of the estate of Brainard Flint, a co-petitioner, and he entered as a co-petitioner. To this being allowed to be made a party, the appellant excepted.
The county court found that April 7, 1869, Mary Flint received as assets of Brainard Flint’s estate, $1,086.90, the amount of a note he held at the time of his decease against R. B. Flint, and that in her life, she never accounted for the same as executrix, but on the contrary, at the time of the settlement and distribution, June 19, 1869, she declared in the presence of the heirs present, that there was no estate except what she then accounted for.
In Atherton, Admr., v. Fullam, supra, the plaintiff as
“ The probate court is not debarred from proceeding in this matter by the lapse of time. No mere lapse of time can prevent that court from enforcing the settlement of an estate. Executors and administrators hold the property of the deceased as direct trustees for the persons entitled to it, and are liable to account to the probate court for the benefit of such persons until the estate is wholly administered. A period of limitation will not commence to run in favor of trustees of this character until the trust relation is terminated or repudiated. 99 Am. Dec., 389, note; Kimball v. Ives, 17 Vt. 430; Bigelow v. Catlin, 50 Vt. 408 ; Drake v. Wild, 65 Vt. 611. The settlement of an estate on what purports to be a final account is not necessarily a termination of the trust. It assets remain in the hands of the accountant undisclosed he continues to hold them in his fiduciary capacity. It cannot be said that this executrix ever repudiated the*232 trust relation. She fraudúlently kept from the heirs the knowledge which might have given her conduct the effect of repudiation.”
The facts in respect to the concealment of the fact, by the executrix, that at the time of the settlement of June 19, 1869, she had received $1,086.90 on the R. B. Flint note belonging to her husband’s estate, and for which she should then have accounted, are substantially the same in the case at bar as they appeared in that case. A party setting up the statute of limitations must prove such facts as bring the case within' it. To make it operative in this case, the appellant must establish that the heirs of Brainard Flint knew at the time of said settlement or at a period more than six years and thirty days next before the death of Mary Flint, that she had received this money, and claimed it as her own, repudiating the trust and the right of the estate or the heirs to the money. So far as the case discloses, the appellant failed to do this, and the statute of limitations is no bar to the accounting.
Judgment reversed, and judgment that the appellant as executor of Mary Flint, deceased, accountfor $1,148.20, as the amount for -which she is in arrears as executrix of the last -01111 of Brainard Flint, and that the same be enrolled as a valid claim and charge against her estate, to be paid and satisfied out of the assets therefore, the same as other debts and charges against it. The appellant to recover his costs in this court, and the appellees to recover their costs in the court belo-w. To be certified to the probate court.