73 Neb. 307 | Neb. | 1905
On the first day of December, 1895, John Wier departed this life testate in the county of Olay and state of Nebraska. H. E. McDowell, the plaintiff in error in this cause of action, was named as executor in the last will and testament of deceased, and duly qualified and entered on the discharge of his duty as such executor. The deceased was possessed of considerable property, both real and personal, at the time of his death, and was also largely indebted to numerous creditors. Among other items of his indebtedness was a note to the Commercial State Bank of Clay Center for $1,789.45, drawing 10 per. cent, interest, in which Adam Wier was principal and deceased was security. This note was allowed as a claim against the estate on the 29th day of June, .1896, the amount of the note and interest then being $1,895.81. Other claims Avere filed and allowed against the estate, among them the claims of the First National Bank of Sutton for $3,000 and the Union State Bank of Harvard for $1,000, and also notes to the Commercial State Bank for individual money borrowed by deceased. On the 5th day of December, 1896, the Commercial State Bank took a judgment against Adam Wier, principal on the note filed and alloAved against the estate of John Wier, in the district court for Clay county, for the sum of $1,972.85, the amount then due on the note and interest. At the time this judgment was rendered, Adam Wier Avas the owner of 240 acres of land situated in the county of Clay, on which the judgment became a lien, and in AAdiich the interest of Adam Wier, according to the evidence, was sufficient to pay and discharge the judgment in full. In Avinding up the estate of the deceased, it proved to be insolvent. Dividends, hoAvever, Avere made on the claims allowed by the order of the court as folloAvs: March 4, 1898, 12| per cent.; November 5, 1898, 32-J per cent.; March 27, 1899, 11 per cent. From these dividends there was paid to the Commercial State Bank from the estate
The complications arising in this case are singularly illustrative of the wisdom of the scriptual lesson: “No man can serve two masters, for either he will hate the one, and love the other, or else he will hold to the one and
We are also unable to say, from an examination of the bill of exceptions, that the evidence is not sufficient to sustain the finding of the trial court that the moneys expended for attorney’s fees and costs in the effort to procure his final release as executor, and in pretending to prosecute the suit against the Commercial State Bank, were not expended for the benefit of himself and the bank, rather than for the benefit of the estate. We admit, as contended by counsel for plaintiff in error, that where an executor in good faith expends money in prosecuting a claim for his estate, either in the payment of costs or in the employment of counsel for a reasonable consideration, he is entitled to be reimbursed for these expenses, although his suit may have been unsuccessful. But, on the other hand, the authorities are uniform that if the executor or administrator expends money for attorney’s fees or costs for his own benefit, or for the benefit of others whose interests are antagonistic to the estate, he is not entitled to recover for such advances against his estate.
It is also further contended, and we think with much weight, that the court exceeded his authority, under the issues involved in the controversy, when he found the executor personally liable for all the money and interest that had been paid by the estate on the note on which deceased was surety. We think there is no pleading in the record sufficient to warrant the trial court in surcharging the claims of the executor for the money and interest paid on the note in controversy. The proper measure of the liability of the executor of the estate would be the loss, if any, which the estate sustained by reason of the failure of the executor to promptly and diligently prosecute a suit in its behalf against the bank as directed by the order of the district court.
We therefore recommend that the judgment of the district court be modified by reversing so much thereof as adjudged the executor, H. E. McDowell, personally liable to the estate of John Wier in the sum of $1,052.11 principal, and $367.45 interest, and that the judgment as so modified be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is modified by reversing so much thereof as adjudged the executor, H. E. McDowell, personally liable to the estate of John Wier in the sum of $1,052.11 principal, and $367.45 interest, and the judgment as so modified is affirmed.
Judgment accordingly.