150 Mass. 304 | Mass. | 1889
The will of Allen H. Goss was proved on September 18, 1882, and Jeremiah P. Jones was appointed executor. He, as executor, purchased with the assets of the estate a share of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, and it was transferred to him as executor, and he held it as such under the
Mo trustee has been appointed under the will, but it was necessary that at least the personal property of the estate should be held by some person who should act as trustee during the life of the widow of the testator, because, by the terms of the will, she is to be supported out of the estate, and on her death the residue of the estate, with its accumulations, after the payment of the debts, legacies, and the expenses of administration, is to be divided between the two daughters of the testator. Regularly, the executor, after the expiration of two years from his appointment, and after paying the debts, legacies, and expenses of administration, should have settled his accounts as executor, and paid over the money in his hands to a trustee appointed by the Probate Court. Daggett v. White, 128 Mass. 398. White v. Ditson, 140 Mass. 351.
After the debts and legacies and the expenses of administration had been paid, the executor must be considered as in fact holding the estate as a trustee for the benefit of the persons entitled to it under the will, and he is liable to them for any mismanagement of it, in the same manner and to the same extent as a trustee would be liable. It is not denied that the executor, acting as such before the debts, legacies, and expenses of administration had been paid, would have had power to sell and transfer this certificate; but it is said that, after the lapse of time shown in this case, it must be presumed that all these things have been done, and it appears in the agreed statement
The will contains no specific bequest of any personal property, and this share of stock was not a part of the estate which the testator left. It is one of the ordinary powers of an executor to sell and convey the personal property of the estate in his discretion, subject to his liability to account, and it may be argued, with a good deal of force, that, in the absence of any limitation of this power in a will, or of any specific bequest of the property, he retains this power while he holds the personal property as executor, although he in fact is acting as a trustee. See Hutchins v. State Bank, 12 Met. 421; Crocker v. Old Colony Railroad, 137 Mass. 417. An executor as such, except under special provisions of statute, has nothing to do with the real estate of his testator. If real estate, or a power over real estate, is devised to him as executor, he takes it as a devisee, and not in his general capacity as executor.
We prefer, however, to assume in this case, that, as the executor held this share of stock for the.purposes of the trust created by the will, his right to sell and convey it is precisely that of a trustee appointed in due form under the will. If land is given in trust to collect the rents and profits for accumulation, or for other purposes, a power to sell the land is not to be implied. Unless such a power is affirmatively given, it does not exist. When personal property is given in trust, a power in the trustee to sell it and to reinvest the proceeds may, however, sometimes be implied from the nature of the property and of the trust, when the same power would not be implied if the property were land.
There is no indication in this will that the personal property is to remain in the form in which the testator left it; and some of it must have been disposed of in the administration of the estate. The provision that the residue of the property is to remain and accumulate until the decease of the wife of the testator, is not a direction that it shall remain in the form in which the testator left it. It is the duty of the executor, as trustee, to furnish out of the residue of the property a proper and suitable support for the widow during her life, and she is still living.
The St. of 1884, c. 229, has no application to the case, for, without considering whether it relates to certificates of stock in foreign corporations, it plainly was not intended to affect the power of an executor or trustee to sell and convey property.
The case is submitted upon an agreed statement of facts, which waives any objection to the form of the action. It appears in this statement, that “ the plaintiff waives all claim or right to the share in question, and offers to transfer the same to the defendant”; and it is agreed that, “if on the'foregoing facts the plaintiff is entitled to recover, judgment is to be entered in his favor for the sum of one hundred and fifteen dollars, and interest from the ninth day of July, 1887.” The plaintiff, upon executing such a transfer, and filing it with the certificate in the Superior Court, may have the judgment rendered in his favor affirmed.
/So ordered.