81 Vt. 219 | Vt. | 1908
The petitioner prays for the removal of Sayles Nichols and Gardner S. Wainwright from their trust as executors of the will of Harriet C. Peck. The objections are aimed mainly if not wholly against the former. It is alleged that the executors have refused to pay to the petitioner’s ward an annuity given her by the will; that they have failed to marshal the assets and dispose of the income thereof as required by the will; that they have wasted and mismanaged the trust property by permitting E. W. Peck, the surviving husband and a principal beneficiary, to possess and use it for his personal convenience and advantage without obtaining compensation or protection; and that this misconduct is due to a special friendship for E. W. Peck and an unreasonable dislike of the petitioner’s ward, and to a pecuniary interest of the first named executor that is adverse to the performance of his duty in the respects complained of.
The court below has found in detail the circumstances attending E. W. Peek’s connection with- the handling of the estate, and has negatived all charges of mismanagement by-the executors in permitting it. It has found that in refusing to pay the annuities and to marshal the assets the executors acted under the advice of counsel, and that in the circumstances attending the settlement of the estate, and in view of legal proceedings, this advice was reasonable. It is further reported
It appears that E. W. Peck had made a will which gave Sayles Nichols a legacy of five thousand dollars; that about three months after the death of his wife he was considering the advisability of waiving the provisions of her will and that about a month later he executed a codicil to his will which provided that in case he should die seized and possessed of that portion of the estate of his wife allowed him by statute upon a waiver of her will, the legacy given Nichols should be increased to ten thousand dollars; and that not long after he informed Nichols of what he had done. Mr. Peck seasonably applied for and obtained an extension of the time allowed by the statute for waiving the will, and on the 12th day of December, 1904, and within the extended time, he filed the required writing. No action was taken on the waiver until January 23, 1907, when W. H. Clark, an annuitant and heir-at-law of Mrs. Peck, filed a petition asking for a hearing and determination of the matter of the pretended waiver and praying that the same be dismissed, for the reason, among others, that said Peck had elected to accept the provisions of the will, and to accept and receive the life estate provided for him therein, and that by reason of such election he was estopped from waiving the will. Such proceedings were had on this application that on the 23rd day of March, 1907, the probáte court found that Mr. Peck had so entered upon and continued in the possession and use of the estate that he had elected to take the provision made for him in the will, and therefore adjudged that his waiver was inoperative and void. The executors opposed the application and appealed from the decision, and have contested the case throughout. Meanwhile the executor Nichols refused to forego his claim to the additional legacy, and -insisted upon his right to receive it if the waiver should be established.
These findings are not conclusive as regards the effect^ of Mr. Nichols’ interest upon his right to continue as executor; but it will not be necessary to inquire as to the nature and extent of the interest that will require a removal, nor to enter upon a general discussion of the subject. An executor holds his office by virtue of the testator’s selection, and has a right to continue in the office if competent to perform its duties. When his competency is challenged on the score of interest, the question is to be considered with reference to the situation of the estate at the time. If his interest will not conflict with the duties still to be performed there is no occasion for removal. The matter in which it was claimed that the rights of the petitioner would be jeopardized has been disposed of. As already stated, the probate court held that E. W. Peck had elected to take under the will, and adjudged the waiver inoperative and void. The case was heard and determined in the county court on pleadings, and came to this Court on exceptions. It has now been finally adjudged that the waiver was effective without any action of the probate court, and that the matters relied upon by the petitioner constituted no impeachment of its validity. In Re Peck’s Est., 80 Vt. 469. This conclusion was reached upon a presentation of facts that cannot have been influenced by any wrongful effort or neglect or concealment of the petitionees. The case has been remanded in pursuance of an agreement of counsel, but it is hardly probable that the question of waiver will be raised again. If it is, it will present another case, that can be made the basis of a new petition. It must be remembered, however, that the action of the probate court upon such a petition involves an exercise of its discretion, and can be reviewed here only upon the'question whether the discretion was legally exercised. Holmes v. Holmes’ Est., 26 Vt. 536; Hilliard v. McDaniels’ Admr., 48 Vt. 122; Be Bellows’ Est., 60 Vt. 224, 14 Atl. 697.
The view we have taken of the subject presented by the exceptions disposes also of the petition for a new trial.