14 R.I. 495 | R.I. | 1884
This is debt on an executor's bond. The bond was given by the defendant Horatio N. Angell, executor of the will of Hardin Fiske, as principal, and by the other defendants as sureties. The action is prosecuted for the benefit of John Fiske, legatee for life under the fourth clause of the will. By said fourth clause the testator bequeaths $3,000 to Horatio N. Angell, "to be by him invested in his name as executor of my estate, and the interest that may accumulate thereon to be paid by him to my nephew John Fiske (son of Isaac Fiske), semi annually, during the term of his natural life," and gives the principal after the decease of said Fiske to other persons. One of the conditions of the bond is that Angell shall "well and truly administer" the personal estate of the testator which may come to his hands "according to law and the provisions of said will." The declaration contains several counts, in one of which breaches are assigned as follows: "The said defendant Angell has not paid to John Fiske, the person for whose benefit this suit is brought, the legacy devised to him in said will as therein directed, nor made the investment for his benefit as therein in said will it is provided, and for a part of said legacy said John Fiske has obtained final judgment of this court against said defendant Angell, which said judgment is in full force and not reversed, annulled, or satisfied." The defendants pleaded traversing the breaches assigned, concluding to the country. The plaintiff accepted the issue. The defendants also pleaded payment of the judgment alleged. The plaintiff traversed payment, concluding to the country. The defendants did the like.
In the court below jury trial was waived and the case tried to the court on law and fact. The trial was confined to the plea traversing the breaches assigned, no evidence being adduced to *497 show that the judgment alleged had ever been paid. It appeared in evidence that Angell had never invested the $3,000, bequeathed by the fourth clause of the will, in his name as executor, but had used it in his own business, having a large property, and that Fiske, knowing it was so used, made no objection. It also appeared that at one time Angell had claimed the right to charge Fiske for making the semi annual payments to him, that Fiske had demurred and taken some action in the Probate Court, and that the result was that Angell had waived the charge and paid the current rate of interest, to which Fiske assented. Fiske testified that he knew that Angell had not invested the $3,000 in his own name as executor, but had misappropriated it; that Angell had paid him at different times, semi annually, different sums of money; that he had talked with Angell about rates of interest, but had always supposed that the bondsmen were held, and that he had never done anything intending to release them or supposing that what he did would release them. Angell testified that at the settlement of his first account in 1877 he had been allowed by the Probate Court to charge off on his account, as paid to himself, said sum of $3,000, but that afterwards the court had required him to charge it back to himself as executor, claiming that the charging off was error, and that he had charged it back accordingly. It also appeared that, a few months previously, Angell had settled his account and resigned, turning over the $3,000 to an administrator with the will annexed. John Fiske claimed that the court had no jurisdiction to allow the "charging off," and that, so far as he was concerned, it was of no effect. He also claimed that he was entitled to judgment for the penal sum of the bond, and that the bond should be submitted to chancerization. The defendants, however, claimed that they were not liable on the bond for the acts of Angell in regard to the $3,000, because the $3,000 was given to him as trustee, because Angell had been allowed to charge it off in his account, and because Fiske, knowing of the non investment, accepted payments and conversed with Angell in reference thereto, as stated, the bondsmen being thereby released. These positions taken by the defendants were sustained by the court, and judgment was rendered *498 for the defendants for their costs. The plaintiff excepted to the rulings and judgment for error, and asks for a new trial.
We think it is clear that, under the pleadings, the testimony to the effect that Fiske knew of and assented to the non investment of the $3,000, and to its employment by Angell in his business, was irrelevant to any issue which was presented at the trial for determination; for, under the pleadings, the only issues were: first, whether the breaches assigned had occurred; and, second, whether the judgment alleged had been paid, the latter issue being permitted to go by default. The testimony ought to have been rejected, or at least ought not to have been permitted to have any effect, in the preliminary stage of the proceeding. Whether after judgment for the penal sum, the testimony would have been admissible in chancerization, is another question, on which we do not care to express our opinion, until, if ever, it is formally presented.
The question, then, is, whether the defendants are entitled to judgment because Angell took or retained the $3,000 as trustee, or because he was allowed to charge it off in his account by the Probate Court. We do not think Angell can be held to have received the money originally as trustee, but on the contrary we think he must be held to have received it, as he received the rest of the personal assets, in his representative capacity as executor. The law in this particular is excellently elucidated by Chief Justice Shaw in Newcomb v. Williams, 9 Met. 525. When personal estate is bequeathed in trust to some person other than the executor, the executor remains liable for it on his bond until he turns it over to the trustee. When the bequest is to the executor himself, then it is sometimes difficult to say, especially if the bequest be pecuniary, when the executor ceases to be an executor and begins to be a trustee. It is settled, however, that the change must be evinced by some open and notorious act and cannot be effected by a mere mental determination; and, in Massachusetts, where trustees are required to give bond before assuming the trust, it is held that the executor will remain liable as executor until he gives bond as trustee. Dorr v. Wainwright, 13 Pick. 328; Prior v.Talbot, 10 Cush. 1; Miller and Wife v. Congdon, 14 Gray, 114; Probate Court of Newport v. Hazard,
We think, on the authority of these cases, that Angell cannot be held to have discharged himself from his liability as executor for the $3,000, for the direction of the will is that he shall invest it in his name as executor, which clearly imports that at least until such investment he shall hold it as executor. And see particularly Hall v. Cushing, supra. The only reason for doubt on this point which we see is that the bequest is in the outset directly to Angell; but, notwithstanding this, we think it is clear that Angell was intended to take simply as executor, for he is directed to invest the $3,000 in his name as executor, and to pay the interest to Fiske for life, and after the decease of Fiske the principal is given, regardless of the bequest to Angell, directly to the remainder men. The testator merely does by express bequest what the law would have done had he omitted it, namely, gives the money to the executor for the purposes of the will. If this be so, the defendants are, of course, liable on the bond. Elliott v. Sparrell,
Exceptions sustained.