73 Md. 442 | Md. | 1891
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This appeal is from an order of the Orphans’ Court for Cecil County, dated the 10th of September, 1890, directing S. Kennard Miller and Isaac D. Davis, the executors of Joseph Miller, to bring into Court the sum of $1200, with interest thereon from the death of Rebecca Miller, and to state an account distributing this sum and interest, according to the will of Joseph Miller, to the parties now entitled thereto.
By his will the testator directs that the “sum of $1200 out of my estate be placed at interest on first mortgage, or that one of my executors shall retain that amount in their hands, and pay over to my said wife, Rebecca, the interest thereof at six per cent., for each and every year of her natural life, and after her death the said sum of $1200 * * * is to fall back again into my estate, and disposed of according to law by my executors, and equally divided amongst my heirs.”
The testator died in December, 1882; his widow, Rebecca, died on the 1st of July, 1889; and on the 1st of July, 1890, the parties now entitled to this money filed the present petition asking that the executors be required to bring the same into Court and distribute it. The executors, in their answer, allege that on the 5th of
Davis, one of the executors, says that he and his co-executor, Miller, invested $1100 of this legacy, as such executors, in the mortgage from Cantwell and wife under this clause of the will, and he is the only witness who testifies on this subject. By reference to the mortgage itself, we find that it is dated the 25th of August, 1883; that it is given to Miller and Davis as individuals; that no mention is made of them as executors of Joseph Miller, or that the money loaned was part of his estate, and that it makes no reference whatever to his will. It recites that Cantwell stands indebted to Miller and Davis in the sum of $1100 “in the following manner, viz., to Miller in the sum of $550 and to Davis in the same sum, and by the defeasance clause the mortgagor is required to pay these separate sums to each of them individually, with interest from date on or before the 25th of August, 1885, and the interest is made payable on the 1st of May in each and every year during the continuance of the mortgage. It contains a power of sale in case of default, and both the mortgagees, Miller and Davis, made affidavit that the consideration was true and bona fide as therein set forth. Now, if this was an investment under the will, and the money loaned came in fact from the estate of the testator, it is almost inconceivable that the mortgage should have been so drawn. We find it impossible to reconcile the mortgage in this form with an honest and faithful discharge by the exec
But besides this, on the 26th of January, 1885, less than seven months before the maturity of the mortgage, Miller and Davis assigned it to Mary and Jane Partridge as collateral security for payment of a promissory note of Davis, Keys & Co., (of which firm Davis and Miller were partners'), for $1100 “of even date herewith and payable one year after date.” This note, though due and payable on the 29th of January, 1886, was not in fact paid at the time the order appealed from was passed, and the mortgage was not then released from this hypothecation. The excuse alleged for this delay in payment of the note is that the executor of Miss Mary Partridge, who died in the summer of 1890, had not qualified when the money was tendered to him, and that the money is now waiting for him in hank and has been there for some time. This assignment of the mortgage by Miller and Davis, as security for their own individual’ debt, is an unqualified assertion of their individual ownership of it, and is utterly inconsistent with the idea that they then supposed they held it as executors, or that they were hound to deal with it under the will of their testator. They dealt with it as their own property and just as the face of the instrument gave them the right to do.
Again, Cantwell made default in payment of the interest on the mortgage due May 1st, 1885, and became insolvent. If they were then acting as executors, it was their plain duty to sell the property under the power in
The fact is, upon the assumption that in these transactions they used this legacy, and not their own money, these conveyances conclusively show that they appropriated and used it for their own benefit, and not for the purpose of performing their duties • as executors under the will. They took the mortgage in their own names, they pledged it as security for their own debt, and they bought out the equity of redemption and took the fee to themselves as individuals. Having thus dealt with the money and property, they cannot now turn in to the estate the proceeds of the property in discharge of their duties as executors under the will. Such return is no defense to the order aj)pealed from, and we are clearly of opinion the order is correct and should he affirmed.
Order affirmed, and cause remanded.