137 A. 329 | Vt. | 1927
The defendant was the executor of the will of Harriet C. Barnes, late of Pittsford, and as such administered upon her estate through the probate court of the district of Rutland. The plaintiff was the residuary legatee under the will. The defendant settled his administration account on July 28, 1925, and on that date the probate court ascertained and adjudged that the residue of the estate consisted of $4,151.93, in money, and decreed the same, less the inheritance tax of $207.59, to the plaintiff. The defendant did not comply with the decree, but, having paid the tax, he converted the balance of the residue to his own use. Thereupon this tort action was brought. The trial below was by the court, and it being stipulated that if entitled to recover at all in this action the plaintiff should recover the amount decreed to her together with the sum of $500, exemplary damages, judgment was rendered on findings filed for the recovery of said sums, and a certified execution was granted. The defendant excepted.
The main point of the defendant's claim is that the action is essentially trover, and since the findings show that it did not appear where the funds covered by the decree were kept or deposited, nor in what form or denomination of currency they were, the subject-matter of the alleged conversion was not sufficiently ear-marked to afford a basis for an action of trover.
The answer is that the action is not trover at all. To be sure, it is alleged that the defendant embezzled and misappropriated the funds, and converted the same to his own use; but this is so alleged because, under the Practice Act, it was necessary for the pleader to tell the story as it was, and terms appropriate to actions of trover were properly used to state the facts. But the complaint was under the Act, and the only question is whether on the facts stated the plaintiff can recover in a tort action.
When this executor neglected and refused to pay over this legacy, the plaintiff might have brought an action of contract in the nature of debt on the decree for its recovery, G.L. 3424;Weeks v. Sowles,
As we have often said, an executor is a trustee; and *354
while the general rule is that a cestui must sue in equity to enforce the trust — since the legal title is in the trustee(Lynde v. Davenport,
So, too, when a trustee has, in violation of his trust, so disposed of the trust estate that it cannot be followed, the beneficiary may sue at law to recover his damages. Snyder v.Parmalee,
When this final decree was made, administration ended, the trust terminated, the character of the defendant's liability changed from an official to a personal one, and the plaintiff's inchoate title to the funds decreed to her became complete. 3 Woerner, Admr. 1952. The legal title which previously had been in the executor passed to her by operation of law, and the funds became her absolute property. Hall v. Windsor Savings Bank,
The defendant saved several exceptions to the findings of the court. Some of these challenge the finding that he had in his possession at the date of the inventory the assets of the estate shown thereby.
All reasonable intendments are in favor of the rulings and judgment of a trial court. Cleveland v. Rand,
It is obvious that the inventory, alone, is not conclusive on the question above referred to. For, in conformity with the requirements of the statute under which it was filed (G.L. 3260), it covers "goods, chattels, rights and credits" that had come to the defendant's knowledge, as well as what had come to his possession. But the inventory did not stand alone. The defendant testified that he had in his possession, at the time he made the inventory, the assets shown thereby. It is true that he also testified to the effect that two items of the inventory, aggregating some $5,000, represented money received from property belonging to the executrix, which money came into his hands during her lifetime, and that this had been used up by him prior to the date of the inventory; so that as he claims these two items as set down in the inventory, represented debts against him instead of cash on hand. This evidence was offered and received, not to reduce the amount of the recovery, but to show that the plaintiff could not recover at all in this form of action.
The evidence tended to show that the defendant was administering on several different estates, and that it was his custom to deposit funds belonging to these estates in an account in the Marble Savings Bank, of Rutland, standing in the name of "G. Frank Hendee, Admr." There was evidence that some of his private funds went into this account and that he drew money from it as his necessities, private or representative, required. This account was practically exhausted prior to April 4, 1925, the date of the inventory. With the evidence standing in this way, we cannot say as matter of law that the conclusion of the trial court to the effect that at the time he filed his inventory the defendant had procured from some source and then held funds that he had elected to treat as the "proceeds" of the Victory Bonds and the Town Order scheduled therein, was unwarranted. *356
On the question whether the defendant had this money on hand at the time the decree was rendered, the evidence stands in much the same way. It was conflicting. As rendered, his final account indicated that he did have it. He therein charged himself with the "proceeds" of the securities above referred to. No suggestion was made or intimation given that these proceeds were not in hand, or that they were only represented by debts against the defendant. It is quite apparent that the probate court accepted the account at its face value, for the decree recites that — "It appears by the records and files of said court that * * * * there remains in the hands of said G. Frank Hendee, executor as aforesaid, * * * * the sum of $6,151.93, in money." Though a copy of the decree containing this recital was placed in the defendant's hands, no protest or suggestion came from him or his counsel — so far as appears. Construing the transcript according to the rule above referred to, the defendant testified both ways on the question we are now considering. In one place in the transcript, he testified that he had the sum of $3,944.32, the amount decreed to the plaintiff; and later on, he testified that he did not have it. Both statements refer to the date of the final decree, as we read the transcript. Here, again, the evidence stood in such a way that it presented a question of fact and we cannot disturb the finding. It follows that, inasmuch as the defendant admits that he has converted the funds, the finding to the effect that the conversion was after decree and before suit must stand.
The exceptions to the refusal to find according to the defendant's requests, so far as they refer to the matters hereinbefore referred to, do not require separate consideration. The other requests were either complied with or are immaterial.
*357Judgment affirmed.