Gladstone v. Bank of Commerce & Trust Co.

281 Mass. 177 | Mass. | 1932

Lummus, J.

Paul Epstein, a dealer in electrical supplies in Boston, died February 18, 1925, leaving a will by which he gave his real estate and mortgages to his wife, Mary Epstein, and his business and business assets to his son Samuel Epstein, otherwise called Shepard S. Epstein. One Frank A. Epstein was appointed executor on April 9, 1925, and on May 7, 1925, was authorized by the Probate Court under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 195, § 7, to continue the business until April 9, 1926. He did continue the business as executor until his death on December 6, 1925. On December 12, 1925, E. Max Gladstone, son-in-law of the testator, was appointed administrator with the will annexed of the estate not already administered. The appraisal *179made January 8, 1926, showed personal property of $20,000, consisting of the stock, fixtures and accounts receivable of the business, and real estate of $90,000, consisting of the equity of redemption in nine new buildings begun by the testator and completed by the executor. The estate was represented insolvent on September 15, 1926, and commissioners allowed claims in the sum of $14,454.68 exclusive of claims incurred in the business and already satisfied as hereinafter stated.

The administrator with the will annexed of the estate not already administered negotiated, during February and March, 1926, an arrangement with Samuel Epstein, the legatee of the business, by which Samuel Epstein was to take over the business and pay its debts. These negotiations resulted, on June 14, 1926, in a conveyance of the assets of the business, including accounts receivable, to one A. Joel Cantor, a nominee of Samuel Epstein, upon the terms that Cantor should make no claim, for about $4,500 withdrawn from the business by the executor for the benefit of the estate generally, but should obligate himself with a chattel mortgage as security to pay all the debts of the business existing on June 14, 1926, amounting to more than $20,000, of which debts to the amount of $8,429.43 existed when the executor took over the business. Until the conveyance to Cantor the business continued in operation. All the business debts have been paid, or, in some cases, barred by the statute of limitations. The equity of redemption in the real estate netted only $5,936.96. With sundry expenses deducted from the assets, the first and final account of the administrator with the will annexed of the estate not already administered showed nothing for the creditors.

Upon a hearing on the account, the Probate Court treated the case as though Cantor had paid the accountant the sum of $20,000 in cash for the business assets shown as of that value in Schedule A, and the accountant had used that sum to pay the business debts, of which $8,429.43 antedated the taking over of the business by the executor. Of that $8,429.43 thus theoretically used in satisfaction of debts entitled to no preference, the accountant recovered *180$840.87 in some way from the trustee in bankruptcy of the corporation which Cantor formed to continue the business, leaving the net outlay $7,588.56. The Probate Court charged the accountant with that sum “as money paid out in preference of certain creditors . . . without prejudice to any right of accountant to subrogation to any pro rata payment to which those creditors may be found to be entitled in the settlement of the estáte of the deceased as insolvent.” Apparently the accountant did not comprehend that there was but one class of assets and one class of debts existing at the death of the testator. Cobb v. Muzzey, 13 Gray, 57. Jackson v. Wood, 108 Ala. 209. Certain other items of the account were modified by the Probate Court in ways not now material, the balance due from the accountant was fixed at $8,476.56, and the account as thus amended was allowed by decree entered March 24, 1931. The Bank of Commerce & Trust Company, a creditor, appealed, as did Edward Rose and the United States Trust Company, executors under the will of Frank A. Epstein, the executor. The evidence is reported, but no express findings of material facts were made. The question before us is whether the decree is plainly wrong upon the evidence, much of which was oral. Old Corner Book Store v. Upham, 194 Mass. 101, 106. Cook v. Mosher, 243 Mass. 149.

The appellants urge that the business assets were worth more than the $20,000 at which both the account and the decree fixed their value, and at which in substance they were sold. Although the books of the business and a petition signed by the accountant on March 18, 1926, state a higher value, there was evidence from the accountant that the actual value was much less than $20,000. The Probate Court justifiably accepted the accountant’s figure of $20,000 stated in. the account.

The appellants further contend that the accountant did wrong in continuing the business until the sale to Cantor on June 14, 1926, and should be charged with the loss incurred during his operation of the business. It is true that the books showed a loss of $7,387.04 from January 1, 1926, to June 14, 1926, although there was testimony from *181the accountant that there was no such loss in fact. But the judge was justified in finding that the loss in value of the assets that would have resulted from closing the business, so that it could not have been sold as a going concern, would have exceeded the loss incurred in its operation.

The accountant, although he claimed no appeal, now seeks to have the decree modified by striking out the sum of $7,588.56 for which he was charged as money paid out in preference of certain creditors. He directs attention to the fact that actually he paid no money to the creditors. If this contention is open on the appeals of adverse parties (see Harris v. Harris, 153 Mass. 439, Creed v. McAleer, 275 Mass. 353, 362; compare G. L. [Ter. Ed.] c. 215, §§ 9, 28, Kilkus v. Shakman, 254 Mass. 274, 280, Sunter v. Sunter, 204 Mass. 448, 455), we see no error. The accountant admitted in his account that the business assets were worth $20,000, and it is immaterial whether the accountant received their value in cash and distributed it among the business creditors, or conveyed the assets without receiving any cash, leaving Cantor to pay the creditors. In substance, the business assets were used to pay the business creditors. If Cantor failed to pay some of the debts, amounting to $8,429.43, existing when the executor took over the business, then to the extent of such failure the accountant did not obtain full consideration for his conveyance of the business assets, and it would have been as proper to charge him on that ground as on the ground that he had in effect received cash and paid it out improperly in preference of certain creditors.

Decree affirmed.

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