118 Tenn. 143 | Tenn. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The bill makes the following case:
Zebulon Hassell, Sr., died in Hickman county, this State, about 1865, leaving a will executed September 19, 1864, which was duly probated, and which contained the following provisions, viz.:
“First. I direct that all my just debts and funeral expenses be paid as soon after my death as possible, out of any moneys I may die possessed-of, or that may first come to the hands of my executors.
*146 “Second. I direct that a sufficient amount of my personal property he sold on a credit of twelve months in order to pay my debts, provided I should, not have money or debts owing to me sufficient to pay the same and other expenses without a sale as above directed.
“Third. I direct that my slaves, should I die possessed of any, be equally divided between my children, except my son Hassell, who is to have no part or portion of my estate, all the rest and residue of my estate, both real and personal, I direct to be sold as follows: The lands on a credit of one and two years, and the other property on a credit of twelve months, taking notes with good security, retaining a lien on land until the purchase money is paid, the proceeds of said sale to be divided amongst my children in the following manner:
“First, to my son Zebulon, six hundred dollars; my son Alfred Britton, six hundred dollars; to my daughters, M'ary Z. and Martha Selina, six hundred dollars each; the balance of said sale to be equally divided between all my children, except my son, Artin Hassell, who is to have nothing as above or before stated, but his son, Zebulon, to whom I bequeath the sum of one hundred dollars.
“Fourth. That portion of my estate which will go to my daughters, Nancy E. Sugg, Mary Z. Hassell and Martha Selina Hassell, I give to my friend, Josiah A. Bizwell, in trust for the benefit of my said daughters; for and during the lifetime of my said daughters, free from the debts, contracts or liabilities of their present,*147 or any future husband, and at their death to go to the children of my said daughters, . . . should they die leaving a child, or children, hut if not, then their portion to go to and he equally divided between the balance of my children, my son Artin Hassell, alone excepted.
“Fifth. I do hereby constitute and appoint my two friends, Josiah A. Bizwell and Solomon J. Gorge, my executors of this my last will and testament.”
That Josiah Bizwell, one of the executors named in the will, did not qualify as such, and refused to act as trustee. That the defendants Zebulon Hassell, Jr., and E. A. Dunn qualified as administrators with the will annexed, and took charge of the estate and proceeded to administer it, but without regard to the terms of the will.
That about June 19, 1871, in disregard of the terms of the will, the defendant Zebulon Hassell “and others” filed a bill in the chancery court of Hickman county to sell the said real estate for division of proceeds among all the children and heirs at law of Zebulon Hassell, Sr., including Artin Hassell.
That in the proceeding the land sold for $2,500, and was purchased by the defendant Zebulon Hassell, Jr., and the fund, after payment of costs, was distributed’ equally among the heirs at law of Zebulon Hassell, Sr., including the said Artin Hassell, who had been expressly disinherited in the will. That the sum of $386.36 was paid to W. L. Hardin, the husband of complainant’s
It is alleged that the real and personal estate which passed under the will were sufficient to create or raise the fund of $600 bequeathed to the mother of the complainant and her children.
The bill was filed April 10, 1905, to recover of the defendants five-sixths of the remainder interest in the fund which was bequeathed for the benefit of Mary Z. Hassell (Hardin) and her children, and interest thereon from the death of the life tenant.
A demurrer was filed, containing very numerous grounds of objection to the bill; but, as sufficient equity is disclosed upon the face ,of the bill to require an answer, we need not go into these matters specifically. In what we say in respect of the equity of the bill, we shall dispose, incidently, of such of the grounds of demurrer as seem to have- any bearing upon the case stated.
Under a true construction of the will, the executors were directed to sell the land and personal property for the purpose of creating a fund. This fund, after the payment of debts, was to be paid over to the legatees,
When the persons nominated executors refused to qualify and the defendants became administrators with the will annexed, the duty devolved upon them to sell the land and personal property and raise the fund designed by the will. Whether it then became their duty to apply to a court of equity to appoint a trustee to whom they might pay over the shares designed for the daughters, in place of Josiah H. Bizwell, who renounced the trust, or whether they had imposed upon them the duty of simply holding the fund to await the appointment of a trustee at the instance of the interested beneficiaries, we need not, since the death of Mrs. Mary Z. Hardin (formerly Hassell), consider. It suffices to say that, in failing to sell the land and personal property under the powers devolved on them by law, the defendant administrators with the will annexed breached their duty to the said Mary Z. and her children; and since, under the allegations of the bill, there was enough property to raise the sum of $600, they must be treated, in respect of the remainderman suing, as having that fund in hand, and as liable for it, with interest from the death of the life tenant. Of course, the statutes of limitation would begin to run only from the latter date (Carver v. Maxwell, 110 Tenn., 75, 83, 71 S. W., 752); and, suf-
A word or two further, and a reference to authorities in respect of some of the principles above enunciated, may not he amiss.
In respect of the duty of administrators with the will annexed to sell the land of the testator: In Shannon’s Code, section 3976, carried into the Code from Acts 1851-52, p. 193, c. 141, it is provided: “ . . . All ad-' ministrators with the will annexed shall have the same power and authority as the executors had by the will of the testator, and may sell laud if the executor possessed that power.”
Construing this section, this court said, in McElroy v. McElroy, 110 Tenn., 137, 73 S. W., 105:
“This section was carried into the Code from Acts 1851-52, p. 193, c. 141. Shortly before that act was passed, at the September term, 1848, it was decided by this court, in the case of Armstrong v. Park’s Devisees, 9 Humph., 195, 206, that where a will gave discretionary powers to executors to sell, lease, or dispose of real estate in any way they might think best for the estate, a personal trust was conferred, and was confined to the executors, and could not be exercised by the administrator with the will annexed, but by the advice and consent of the chancellor.
“In Harrison v. Henderson, 7 Heisk., 315, 350, it is said that the general rule, before' the passage of the pro*151 vision above quoted, was that the executor, as such, by virtue of the power contained in the will, might dispose of the real estate of the testator for the payment of debts, the payment of legacies, or any other purpose specified in the power, but that even then it was held that the power was personal, and could not be exercised by an administrator with the will annexed, and that the statute was passed to change the latter part of this rule, and confer all of the powers on the administrator, by virtue of his office, that belonged to the executor by virtue of his, yet that the statute did not interfere with or change the principle laid down in Armstrong v. Park’s Devisees, supra; that it simply authorized the administrator with the will annexed to sell when the executor, as such, simply by virtue of his office, and in that character alone, had power to sell, but not when the party, though executor, held the two-fold character of executor and trustee, and the power to sell was confided to him as a personal trust, to be executed by him as such trustee, and not as executor. See, also, for comparison, Andrews v. Andrews, 7 Heisk., 247, 248, 249; McElroy v. McElroy, 110 Tenn., 143, 144, 73 S. W., 105.”
Under the present will the power to sell was given to the executors only as such, and not to Josiah A. Biz-well as a discretionary trustee, is clear from the fact two persons were named as executors, the said Josiah A. Bizwell and Soloman J. Gorge, and only one of them was made trustee to hold the funds of the daughters after the sale should be made. The power of sale was
In Harrison v. Henderson, supra, the terms of the will, under which it was held that the administrator with the will annexed might sell land, were as follows:
“ T do will, devise and bequeath, that all my lands and slaves, and all the property not herein otherwise fully disposed of, be sold by my executor, and the proceeds of the sale, together with all money on hand at my death, and the proceeds of all choses in action coming to me at my death, after paying my funeral expenses, my just debts, and the costs and expenses of executing this will, and after providing for the pecuniary bequests herein named, be disposed of as follows: One-fifth to each of my children; one-fifth to be set apart in the hands of my executor, and held by him subject to the trusts, etc., of the $4,000 named in the ninth item of this will’ — that is, in favor of complainant.”
He then appointed Samuel Henderson executor, and, should he fail to qualify, named two others as executors. The court continued:
“We think it clear that the power of sale here given was to the executor as such, by virtue of his office, and that such power might be rightfully exercised by the*153 administrator with the will annexed, under the section of the Code above referred to. We therefore hold the sale of the land was not void.”
In Caruthers v. Caruthers, 2 Lea, 264, it was held that “the administrator with the will annexed had power to sell real estate, when the testator by his will, directed Ms debts to' be paid as soon as possible out of any moneys he might be possessed of, or which should first come to the hands of his executor, and gave the executor ‘full power to sell and convey’ any of the testator’s property, ‘real or personal,’ for the purpose of paying debts and supporting his children.” McElroy v. McElroy, 110 Tenn., 145, 73 S. W., 105.
It is true that the will before us does not say, in express terms, that the executors shall sell; but the rule is that: “If the will directs the estate to be sold without naming a donee of the power, it naturally and by implication devolves upon the executors, if they are charged with the distribution of the fund, . . . and the question whether the executors are to distribute the fund need not be found settled in direct terms on the face of the will, but is to be determined from the whole scope and context of the will, by necessary implication, as well as by express 'designation.” McElroy v. McElroy, 110 Tenn., 145, 73 S. W., 105, citing Parker v. Sparkman, 2 Shannon’s Tenn., Cas., 544, 545. And see Bedford v. Bedford, 110 Tenn., 204, 75 S. W., 1017, where the subject is fully discussed.
It is sufficient, for the purposes of the present case, that it was the duty of the administrators with the will
It results that the demurrer must be overruled, the decree of the chancellor affirmed, and the cause remanded for answer and further proceedings.