41 N.H. 355 | N.H. | 1860
The true rule to be applied in charging administrators with interest is well settled. In all cases where the administrator, without any just reason or excuse, retains the money in his own hands unemployed, when it ought to be paid over, in all cases where he receives interest for money which belongs to the estate, and in all cases where he applies money belonging to the estate to his own use, he ought to be charged with interest. Stearns v. Brown, 1 Pick. 530; Wyman v. Hubbard, 13 Mass. 232; Griswold v. Chandler, 5 N. H. 497 ; Mathes v. Bennett, 21 N. H. 199; Wendell v. French, 19 N. H. 205.
The auditor finds in this case that the appellee had collected and deposited in bank, prior to October 20, 1858, the sum of $3,000 in his own name; that he drew $1,400
Nor can he be charged with the interest upon the second ground, that he had actually received interest upon the money more than he had been charged with; because, if he testified truly that he had actually kept a large amount ($1,000 or $1,500) on hand for tbe purposes stated, he was probably charged with about the amount of interest actually received. Nor does the evidence show that he had used any more of the money belonging to the estate in his own business, than he had kept of his own in readiness to meet the contingencies stated. He would not seem to be chargeable upon either of the grounds stated in the rule above given. The auditor finds that it Avas not for the interest of the estate for the administrator to collect the moneys which were safely deposited and drawing interest, and deposit them in a bank where no interest was allowed upon them, and upon that ground charged him with interest. But these facts may all be as stated, and yet afford no good reason for charging the appellee with interest. It
Tbe auditor finds that the ,items of account specified in tbe second, third, fourth, and fifth reasons for tbe appeal, were, under tbe circumstances, properly allowed; but upon the facts stated by him, we are forced to a different conclusion as to tbe second, third, and fourth items. Tbe items mentioned in tbe second and third reasons for appeal, stand substantially upon'the same grounds. We do not understand that any thing is charged or allowed for Mrs. Brown’s services at Nashua, though she, with Mrs. Lund, the appellee’s wife, made the arrangements at the mother’s house for the funeral; nor do we understand that any charge is made for the services of Mrs. Lund in that behalf. But the charge is, in case of Brown, for paying his and his wife’s fare to Nashua and back to attend the funeral of Mrs. Brown’s brother; and in case of the administrator, the charge is for fare of himself and his wife to Nashua and back to attend the funeral of his own brother, and also for services at the rate of two dollars per day during September 8, 9, and 10, 1858, — the days when the administrator was attending himself, and was bringing his sister to attend, at the death-bed of an unfortunate brother, and awaiting there to see him die; in procuring his
Now it seems to us that these were services to the performance of which true affection would always prompt, without any expectation or desire of pecuniary remuneration. Economy would suggest that if mourners must be hired at a funeral, it would be better to procure those as near by as possible, and thus save paying their fare1; and it would seem to be much more in accordance with the common notions of propriety, if men must be procured for pay to perform such services, that indifferent strangers be selected, rather than brothers and sisters. Tears that flow to order, and are shed for a price, should find no place when men stand around the death-bed or the coffin of parents or children, brothers or sisters. We think these items in the administration account should be disallowed, even though the auditor found that after the funeral was over the administrator did settle and pay some of the expenses of .the funeral, though it does not appear what or how many bills he paid.
The charge for a monument is .also, we think, too high. If all the heirs had consented, there could have been no impropriety; but, on the other hand, there might have been a marked propriety in thus adorning the final resting-place, not only of the intestate, but of his parents and sister; and it would seem that this expense was incurred, probably as much on account of the father and sister, as the son and brother. But administrators are to act in good faith to the heirs, for whom they hold the property of the intestate in trust, and should administer estates economically ; and should only furnish such plain and substantial monuments as shall be proper for them to erect with the property of others, without their consent. However proper and commendable it might be for the remaining children to erect beautiful and costly monuments to the memory of their departed parents and friends, yet the offering should be voluntary on the part of all concerned.
The statute gives no authority to administrator’s to purchase monuments or gravestones of any kind, where the expense of them shall come out of the creditors of the estate; for it is only in cases where the estate is actually solvent that any such authority is given, and even then, where the expense is to be borne in the end by the heir, the administrator is only to be allowed the reasonable expense of a suitable monument. In this case, to be sure, there are no children, nor is there any widow; but this does not make the property any more that of the administrator than as though there were. He holds it for the legal heirs, whoever they may be; and although he might be justified in exercising a larger discretion in the one case than in the other, yet in both he should be held to such reasonable expenditure as will be sufficient for plain and substantial gravestones or monuments; and we think thqt in estates of the amount of this, a proper rule should be, that the administrator should furnish stones or monuments at an expense varying from fifteen to thirty dollars — not to exceed the latter sum in any case; and that this is all that should be allowed in the present case. When administrators wish to go beyond this in estates no larger than the present, they should procure the assent of the legal heirs; and then there can be no objection to a monument such as their taste or liberality may suggest. The fence,
As to tbe item of commissions mentioned in tbe fifth reason for appeal, we see no occasion to interfere with it, as allowed by the judge of probate; nor was it material whether this item, or that of interest, was or was not entered upon the account of administration as originally presented for settlement, or at the hearing. "We understand that it is the usual course, in presenting accounts of this kind for settlement, that these two items are either omitted altogether, or are merely entered beneath the other items of debt and credit, and the amounts left blank; and in either case to be entered, or the amounts carried out, as shall be found just and reasonable by the judge of probate, upon striking the balances and considering all the circumstances of the case. ~We see no objection to this course of procedure. So far as these two items are concerned — the interest and the commissions — we think no injustice has been done to any one, and that these items in the account must remain as settled by the judge of probate.
In accordance with these views, it follows that, from the amount found in the administrator’s hands on settlement, including the interest, which sum was $3,232.67 there must be deducted as follows:
Funeral charges, Charges of last sickness, Paid for gravestones, Expenses of administration: Cash paid out,
Personal services, Commissions,
$50.25
120.75
30.00
49.30
29.50
44.00
Making in all, 323.80
Leaving a balance in the hands of the administrator, December 28,1859, of 2,908.87