30 Me. 204 | Me. | 1849
— In the year 1831, Benoice Johnson made his last will and testament, and therein appointed Samuel Weston, Esq. his executor, “ with the power to do and perform all the acts and duties, and be subject to all the liabilities, which the law imposes upon executors.” By the second item, the testator was to have a decent Christian burial, at the expense of his estate; and by the third item, the debts which might exist against the estate, at the time of his death, were to be paid by the executor as soon as practicable after his decease. The fourth item is in the following words, — “I give and bequeath to Samuel Weston, the executor of this my last will and testament, the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, in trust always, and it shall be the duty of the said Weston, to let out upon interest, the said sum of seventeen hundred dollars upon good security, and it shall be his duty also to collect the interest on said sum, and to pay the same to my beloved wife Charlotte, yearly, for and during her natural life, and after the decease of said Charlotte, I order and direct, that the said sum of seventeen hundred dollars, together with any additional sum which arises from the interest on the same and which may remain unpaid, shall be divided into two equal parts; one part thereof I order my said executor to pay to the heirs of Sally Tuttle of said Cornville, and the other part thereof, I order my said executor to pay to the heirs of George Loomis of said Corn-ville, within one year after the decease of my said wife Charlotte ; and I direct that the said Weston shall give a special bond to the Judge of Probate for the faithful performance of his duties under this item.”
In the item next following, the testator made a bequest to Benoice Tuttle of another sum in trust, to be disposed of in the same manner, and the interest to be paid yearly to the wife of the testator; and a special bond was also ordered to
The will was duly proved, approved and allowed on February 7, 1832. Samuel Weston, the executor named, having given a bond as executor, and received letters testamentary with the will annexed, entered upon his duties as executor; and died before the complete administration of the estate. It does not appear from the case or from any probate records put into the case, whether he gave the special bond provided for in the fourth item of the will or not; or whether he accepted or declined the trust or not, as therein directed.
On Dec. 3, 1839, the defendant was appointed administrator de bonis non, with the will of Benoice Johnson annexed, and gave bond as such according to law. On the settlement of an account of administration, in the probate office on the first Tuesday of March, 1848, a balance of $1569,53, was found in his hands, belonging to the estate. This suit was commenced on April 17, 1848, after a demand of payment of the sum claimed in this action, by the said Charlotte and her husband, to whom she was married after the death of Johnson, against the defendant, as administrator de bonis non, for the recovery of one half the interest on the said sum of seventeen hundred dollars bequeathed in trust by the fourth item of the will, from August 26, 1843, to August 26, 1847.
Is the defendant liable to the plaintiff in his capacity of executor de bonis non, with the will annexed ? That he holds in his hands, as administrator, the sum of $1569,53, is conclusively shown by the probate records, unless it has been wholly or partly absorbed since the settlement of the account, which does not appear. The account from which it arose, has been passed upon, by the competent tribunal, from which no appeal was taken or claimed.
By the will, Samuel Weston was not only the executor charged with all the liabilities and duties appertaining to that office, but he was also a legatee in trust, with the peculiar duties prescribed in the will. The whole of the personal estate
But it was competent for Weston, if he chose so to do, to decline the acceptance of the legacy, and the trust under it, notwithstanding he might have entered upon his duties as executor. He could not be considered as having fully accepted the former, till he had given to the Judge of Probate, a bond satisfactory to him. And if he gave no bond as trustee, it was for the Judge to determine, whether or not he had declined the trust. Groton v. Ruggles, 17 Maine, 137. What would have been his liabilities, if he had neither accepted or declined the trust, in his capacity as executor, we are not called upon to decide.
If he did give the bond, and the legacy of seventeen hundred dollars, in trust, was accepted by him, so far the estate has been administered, and his bond as trustee, is the security of the rights of the cestui que trust. But if he gave no such bond and did not accept the trust, and was not considered by the Judge of Probate as declining it, and made no charge to the estate for the amount of this legacy, as passed to him as trustee, the administration was not completed, and that sum was in his hands as executor, if sufficient assets for the purpose were in his possession.
When the defendant was appointed and qualified as administrator de bonis non, with the will annexed, and undertook the trust, he could have no power over matters, which had passed from the executor as such, and was under no liability therefor. If he had assets of the estate in his hands as administrator, he is accountable to whomsoever they belong, in that character. By being administrator, he cannot become substituted for Samuel Weston, in his capacity as trustee, under the legacy in trust. To become such, he must accept the trust after it is tendered to him by authority competent to make it. He cannot be treated as a trustee, until he has receiv
This case differs essentially from a class of cases in Massachusetts, where executors were holden to perform duties as trustees under the will, which were specially required of them in their capacity as executors, and from the nature of those duties, they could not be performed by any others. They were under the testamentary provisions, administration duties, necessary to be done in settlement of the estate in probate; and hence it was held in one case, that if the executor appointed had declined the trust of executor, or had not completed the administration, the same powers and duties would devolve upon an administrator rle bonis non, with the will annexed. Saunderson v. Stearns, executor, 6 Mass. 37; Prescott v. Pitts & al. 9 Mass. 376; Hall v. Cushing & al. 9 Pick. 395; Dorr v. Wainwright, 13 Pick. 328; Towne v. Ammidown, 20 Pick. 535.
If Weston had never accepted the trust under the legacy ; and had not administered the estate so far as the legacy to him is concerned, and the assets now in the defendant’s hands are subject to this legacy, it is not perceived that the defendant has any power to put out that sum upon interest. To require this of him without the bond provided in the will, would be the sanction of a proceeding, which the testator did not contemplate, and which he manifestly intended to prevent. The putting out the money upon interest, and the annual payment of the income to the cestui que trust, was made by the will a special duty to be performed after the administration was so far completed, that there was this fund to be appropriated in that manner. This duty was not made an administration duty. The defendant has not been appointed a trustee of this fund, nor has he assumed the trust by giving the bond, or by any act in disposing of the money received by him as was required in the will of the legatee in trust; neither does it
By extracts from the probate records in the case, it appears that in February, 1840, the defendant filed his account in the probate office, in which he charged himself with the sum of $ 1700, out of which the money, that was subsequently in his hands, arose. On the first Tuesday of March, 1848, he settled another account with the Judge of Probate, in which he is charged with the sum of seventeen hundred dollars, and is allowed certain claims, leaving the balance, before mentioned, and the records introduced show that he was not then charged with interest, “ there being no adjudication thereon.”
If a trustee, duly appointed to take charge of the sum bequeathed to Samuel Weston, should call upon the defendant as administrator for the money now in his hands, and it should appear by the will and the condition of the affairs of the estate be subject to such a call, his duty would require the payment. Not being entitled to delay after a. proper demand therefor, on account of its being let out upon interest, if such