12 Mills Surr. 298 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1914
The motion to confirm the report of the learned and painstaking referee has been resisted with such minuteness and wealth of authority as to present almost every fact found by the referee and conclusion reached by him for review by the surrogate. The oral arguments alone consumed some sessions of this court and the briefs subsequently submitted by counsel are elaborated and careful beyond precedent in my experience here. I can only hope that after so much industry and care on the part of counsel I apprehend and appreciate the force and scope of the various contentions submitted to me. If I do not review them all in detail, it is because I am persu’aded that it is unnecessary for me so to do, not because I have overlooked them.
One question is most prominent—the validity of the sale by the executors of the common stock of the Lord & Taylor corporation coming into their hands as executors. The facts more pertinent to the contention are that the testator died on the 20th of September, 1909. His will was duly admitted to probate by this court and letters testamentary were issued to Edward H. Titus, Wilson H. Tucker and Samuel H. Ordway, the executors named in the will. These executors have since filed an account of their proceedings, and legatees representing twenty-five forty-seconds of the personal estate filed objections to the account. The matter was then referred by this court in the regular course of procedure to a referee to hear and determine the questions raised by the objections to the account. The referee having filed his report, the executors and certain of the legatees haA7e filed exceptions to his findings, and the sufficiency of these exceptions is now before the court for its determination.
The first objection becomes immaterial in view of the fact that the executors still have in their possession all the preferred stock of Lord & Taylor which the decedent owned at the time of his death, and to which his estate subsequently became entitled. The legatees representing thirty-nine forty-seconds of the estate have filed a consent that this stock be distributed in kind, and as the executors are in a position to make such distribution the price at which they appraised it in their account is material only upon the question of their commissions. As the appraised value is less than the value placed upon the stock by the objectants, the findings of the referee upon the issues raised by this objection are sustained.
The second objection raises two questions: First, whether the will conferred upon the executors the power to sell the common stock; second, if they had such power, whether in selling it at twenty-seven dollars a share they acted with that prudence and intelligence which prudent men exercise in the conduct of their own affairs.
The determination of the first question requires an interpretation of the will of the testator for the purpose of discovering his intent as to the manner in which his estate should be distributed among his legatees. The will of the testator, after directing the payment of certain small legacies, provided as follows: “ Sec. 3. I divide the balance of my personal estate into forty-two equal parts, and of said balance I give and bequeath (a) six forty-seconds to my son Edward Hatch; (b)
Section 9 of the will reads as follows: “ I empower my executors, in their discretion, to retain any investment and investments which I may leave, to convert, reinvest and make investments of any funds entrusted to them under this will in any kind of securities they may approve ® * * ” The testator, it will be observed, does not direct his executors to deliver to the legatees any specific property. He merely directs that his personal property shall be divided by his executors into forty-two parts, and then he bequeaths to each of the legatees a certain number of those parts. It may well be that some of •his personal property could not be divided into forty-two equal parts. The number of shares of stock held by testator in the Lord & Taylor corporation could not be divided into forty-two equal parts without including a fraction of a share in -each part, and as the shares are not issued in fractions such a complete division would be practically impossible. The personal estate to which the testator refers in section 3 of his will is that part of his estate which would remain after the payment of all debts and administration expenses. Not having directed his executors to appropriate any particular part of his personal property for the payment of debts and expenses of administration, he could not have foretold what part of it would be sold for this purpose. It is improbable, therefore, that he intended that any particular shares of stock should constitute-
Executors have, for purposes of administration, an administrative title to all the personal property not specifically bequeathed either directly or by necessary implication. The tendency of modern law is to enlarge the administrative title of the executors of a will, not to restrict it, although express statutes may modify this tendency in some states. By virtue of their administrative title it has been long laid down in this state that executors may sell the personal property of then-testator for the purpose of paying the debts of the estate, the expenses of administration and distributing the residue among the legatees in the proportions prescribed by the will. 2 William Exrs. (7th Am. ed.), 120; Mills v. Hoffman, 26 Hun,
But it is contended by the objectants that even if the executors had the power to sell the testator’s personal property, their sale of the Lord & Taylor common stock at $27 a share
It may be, as the contestants contend, that the executors could have held on longer and retained possession of the stock until a more favorable proposition for its purchase was made to them, and it may be that they were unduly alarmed as to the possible consequence of the note brokers’ threatened abandonment of sales of the company’s paper; but the court cannot take into consideration possibilities which are merely speculative, nor can it characterize the conduct of the executors as imprudent under the circumstances disclosed merely because in the light of subsequent developments it might have been more advantageous to the estate if the sale had been deferred to a later period. Matter of Weston, 91 N. Y. 502; Matter of Mercantile Trust Co., 156 App. Div. 224; affd., 210 N. Y. 83; Marsden v. Kent, L. R. (5 Ch. Div.), 589. The criterion by which the conduct of the executors is to be determined is, Was it such conduct at the time as would be adopted by men of ordinary prudence and intelligence in the conduct of their own business? King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76; Thompson v. Brown, 4 Johns. Ch. 627; Matter of Mercantile Trust Co., supra. A careful perusal of the testimony taken before the referee leads me to the conclusion that the executors, in selling the shares of common stock of Lord & Taylor at twenty-seven dollars a share, in the manner they did, acted intelligently and prudently, under the circumstances disclosed, and that their conduct in the transacion was that of prudent and intelligent business men. I will, therefore, sustain the findings of the referee on this point.
Upon the hearing before the referee one of the executors, Mr.
On July 18, 1910, legatees representing forty-one seventieths of the estate, by an instrument in writing, directed the executors to release and discharge the said Titus from the payment of the said indebtedness, except the sum of $16,500, and to charge the interest of each subscriber with his or her pro rata share of the sum so released. As all the legatees did not join in this request the executors would not be warranted in releasing their coexecutor Titus. Besides, the legatees who did not join are entitled to their share of the estate with the item of $58,444.33 included as an asset. The instrument signed by the legatees for the purpose of releasing Titus from his indebtedness to the estate would not now justify the executors in deducting from the respective shares of such legatees their pro rata share of the sum of $58,444.33, as that instrument was executed for the purpose of releasing his indebtedness to the estate and not releasing the executors from their liability to pay the legatees their full shares. These legatees may, however, consent that their respective shares be diminished by their proportionate share of the $58,444.33, and such consent and release of the executors would justify the latter in making distribution accordingly. Unless the legatees file such a release before the settlement of the decree to be entered on this decision, the executors in making distribution of the estate will disregard the instrument already filed.
The executors Tucker and Ordway also except to the referee’s finding that the executor Titus be reimbursed for the expense of defending the action brought against him by one Hamilton, as receiver of Evans, Munzer, Pickering & Co. The record shows that on the 23d of April, 1902, the testator authorized Edward H. Titus to subscribe for 100 shares of the
| The executors, Messrs. Tucker and Ordway, ask that the ; costs of the reference be taxed against the contestants. The : objections filed by the contestants were material and raised questions of considerable importance. These questions were not entirely free from doubt. The objections, therefore, were neither capricious nor insubstantial, and the contestants should not be charged with the costs of the reference. Those costs should be paid by the estate. Matter of Edelmeyer, 157 App. Div. 773.
The right of the exeutor Titus to employ counsel and to have the remuneration of such counsel paid out of the estate will
Except as modified by this decision, the report of the referee is confirmed. Submit decree and tax costs on notice.
Decreed accordingly.