99 Mo. 427 | Mo. | 1889
At the November term, 1883, of the probate court of Boone county, the respondent, executrix of George R. Jacobs, deceased, filed in said court her account for final settlement, to which the appellants took exceptions, and thereafter filed nineteen objections to the approval of such final settlement, all of which were either abandoned on trial, 'or overruled by the court, except 18 and 19, which were partially sustained, and both parties appealed to the circuit court. The case coming on for trial in the circuit court, the plaintiffs stated “that they abandoned all their exceptions except those numbered 2, the item of $1,302.86, mentioned in exception' 17, and the items in exceptions 18 and 19, relating to commissioners for the sale of real estate, and taxes paid by defendant' on the John P. Jacobs real estate, and penalties on delinquent taxes; and all attorneys’ fees in final settlement, and the Caulfield note, mentioned in exception 2;” and, in connection with this statement, read exceptions 2, 17, 18 and 19, there: tofore filed in the probate court.
The circuit court overruled plaintiffs’ exception number 2, their objections to the credit item of $1,302.86 in the executrix’s first annual settlement, objected to in exception 17; sustained exceptions 18 and 19, as to the items of credit for taxes paid by the executrix on the
I. Plaintiff ’ s exception number 2 to the executrix’s account for final settlement is as follows: “2. Befend.ant has failed to account for a balance of the inventoried note of G. B. Caulfield and Panny Beaver, with interest thereon, — the said balance being, as shown by inventory and the collection reported on said note in defendant’s first settlement, twelve thousand, four hundred and fifty seven dollars, which sum should be charged to defendant, with interest thereon, at ten per cent., compound, from April 16, 1878.”
The note of B. G. Caulfield and Panny Beaver, referred to in this exception was dated August 1, 1867, for twenty thousand dollars, payable to the testator, George R. Jacobs, three years after date, with interest
Mr. Price testified: “We employed Gen. Odon G. Guitar to act as counsel for us in the administration of the estate, and he and I both made a careful examination as to the nature, character and value of the real estate included in the deed of trust, and the solvency of the makers of this note. I thought it best, and Gen. Guitar, as our attorney, advised us to compromise and settle this debt, by releasing Mrs. Fanny Deaver and her property from all liability on the note, upon her paying to us eleven thousand dollars, being the one-half then due on the note, and taking a new note, executed by Mrs. Laura Caulfield and. B. G. Caulfield, for the balance, with a new deed of trust on the same property, belonging to Mrs. Caulfield, embraced in the first deed of trust; this we did, and the property was afterward sold under the new deed of trust, and the proceeds accounted for. We had John Byrne, Jr., & Co., one of the best real-estate firms in St. Louis, to assist us in making the compromise and settlement with Mrs. Deaver; I was in St. Louis three or four days looking into this matter.”
Cross-examination: “I did not make any personal examination of this matter myself, but had confidence i'n John Byrne, Jr., & Co., and the man they employed to examine the title and condition of Mrs. Leaver’s real estate; I consulted with and acted under the advice of John Byrne, Jr., & Co., and Gen. Guitar.”
Mr. Hay del testified: “At the time the compromise-was effected by which Mrs. Deaver was released from her indebtedness to Dr. Jacobs, I was acquainted with her financial condition, having examined into her affairs with a view to this settlement, and from this,
Gen. Guitar testified: “I was employed in 1877 by Mr. Price and Mrs. Jacobs as their counsel and attorney in winding up and administering the Jacobs estate; I have been acting as their counsel ever since; I was requested by them to investigate the solvency of the parties, and the nature and character of the real estate, covered by the deed of trust given by Fanny Deaver and Laura Caulfield, to secure the note in controversy; and after making a full investigation of all the facts, and after fully informing myself as to the solvency of the parties, and the kind and value of the real estate embraced in the deed of trust, I advised my clients, Mr. Price and Mrs. Jacobs, to compromise with Mrs. Deaver by her paying one-half of the note, and their releasing her from all further liability on the note, and by the other half due on the note being secured by a new note, executed by Mrs. Laura Caulfield and her husband, B. G. Caulfield, secured by a deed of trust on the same real estate belonging to Mrs. Caulfield, embraced in the first deed of trust; they acting under my advice, settled the note in full on this basis, and the Caulfield property was afterward sold under the deed of trust, and the proceeds accounted for. * * * By reason of the endorsement on the note, made after it became due, extending the time of payment, I advised my clients that Mrs. Caulfield’s property in the deed of trust was released; and that was one of the reasons for my advising, and my clients accepting, the compromise settlement; the
It is not pretended that the executrix has not accounted for every dollar that has been realized upon this asset, but it is urged that she could and ought to have realized the whole amount of the principal and the interest of said note, which confessedly she did not. There is some contention as to the amount which she fell short, but in the view we take of the evidence it is not necessary to determine definitely that amount.
At the time the compromise of this debt was made there was no statutory enactment, as now, authorizing an executor or administrator with the approbation of the judge of probate to compound with a debtor to the estate who was unable to pay all his debts, and give him a discharge on receiving a fair proportion of the same. R. S. 1879, sec. 242. “At common law the arbitration, compromise or release of a debt or claim due the estate, was regarded as a waste on the part of the personal representative, if it resulted in loss to the estate, * * * as to compromise, however, later qualifications were admitted, which in good reason apply to either act, which the court of chancery saw fit to insist upon, and which, as to either compromise or arbitration, are now usually insisted upon. The executor or administrator who compromised a debt so as to receive less than its full amount was still held answerable for the whole, yet if he could show in exculpation that he acted therein for the benefit of the estate he stood excused. The universal test for modern times should be whether, in compromising or submitting to arbitration, the representative acted with fidelity and due prudence.” Schouler on Executors & Administrators, sec. 386. ■
II. The objection to the item of $1,302.86, in. exception 17, was properly overruled, as it appears from the record that although the voucher for that credit was not allowed as a demand against the estate, yet at the time credit therefor was taken by the executrix in her settlement, such proof thereof was produced to the probate court as would have enabled the claimant to
III. The attorney’s fees paid by the executrix, and allowed by the probate court for legal services, rendered in the settlement of the Caulfield note, are not unreasonable, and was a proper charge against the estate. Nor do we find any error in the allowance made by the circuit court to the executrix for attorney’s fees in defending her final settlement in the probate and circuit court. Such allowance is for legal advice and service, snch as is contemplated'in the statute. R. S. 1879, sec. 229. If executors and administrators of estates who have faithfully discharged their duties, and, in the main, rendered a true account of their trust, are to be required at their own individual cost to defend their settlements, in protracted and expensive litigation, from every attack that may be made upon them, few responsible and competent persons will be found to take charge of estates for the modest compensation the law allows for the service. 2 Woerner Am. Law of Adm., sec. 515 ; Pinckard v. Pinckard, 24 Ala. 250 ; Smyley v. Reese, 53 Ala. 100; Sterrett's s Appeal, 2 Penn. 419; Schouler’s Executors and Administrators, sec. 544.
IV. The items in exceptions 18 and 19, relating to commissions for the sale of real estate, are as follows, in second settlement:
O. Guitar, Com. on Sales of Real Estate....... $349 20
In Final Settlement amount paid J. M. Carpenter, Com. on Sales of Real Estate.......... 350 00
And for Am’t paid Ed. Jacobs, Com. on Sales of Real Estate.......................... 100 00
The probate court disallowed these credits, but they Avere allowed by the circuit court and plaintiff’s objections thereto overruled. Revised Statutes, 1879, section