66 Mich. 319 | Mich. | 1887
John Blindbury died on March 3, 1867, leaving personal estate worth about $2,700, and real estate worth from $40,000 to $50,0C0.
He left a will, and widow, but no children. By his will he-gave to his wife the use of all his real estate and personal property during her life; and, if the same should not prove sufficient for her suitable maintenance, then she was fully authorized to sell and dispose of so much of the estate’s-property, at her discretion, as would be sufficient for that, purpose. The will also provides that, after the death of Mrs. Blindbury, certain specific legacies should be paid to divers persons out of whatever should remain of the estate. Mrs. Blindbury was also authorized, at any time after the decease of her husband, to dispose of any and all of his personal property by will, as she might desire; and the will further provided that, if any of his personal property should be left undisposed of at the time of her death, it should be equally divided among the other legatees named in the will.
He appointed his wife executrix of his will, which was duly probated on May 7, 1867, in Wayne county. Mrs. Blindbury accepted the trust, qualified, and acted as executrix until the eleventh day of June, 1872, when, upon her filing and settling her final account in the probate court, she was discharged as executrix, because of her marriage to a Mr. Phelps, and she was thereafter appointed administratrix of said estate de bonis non with the will annexed, and thereafter assumed and discharged the trust in that character.
“ Said account having been duly verified and examined, and found to be correct and just, thereupon it is ordered that said account be, and the same is hereby, allowed, as therein stated.”
The account thus settled showed a balance in favor of the executrix of $3,168.98.
After Mrs. Blindbury, or rather Mrs. Phelps, was appointed administratrix of the estate of her husband, she continued to act as such until the sixteenth day of March, 1880, when an order was duly made by the probate court discharging her from her trust, and canceling her bond given as administratrix, she having previously, on the ninth day of January, filed her final account. During the entire period of her administratorship, she appears to have had the control and management of the entire estate, and, after she was discharged, continued to enjoy the income of the property until she died, on the eighth day of February, 1881. She left a last will, and I. Smith Kellum was duly appointed executor of the same.
On the twenty-eighth day of March, 1881, Yolney H. Blind-bury wap appointed administrator de bonis non of the estate of John Blindbury, deceased.
Kellum died November 2, 1883, and on the third day of January, 1881, Charles B. Howell was appointed administrator of Maria Blindbury’s estate in his stead.
There was no personal property remaining belonging to the estate of John Blindbury at the time of Mrs. Blindbury’s death, she having previously disposed of it. The real estate, however, was of the value of $10,000 or over. The special bequests of John Blindbury had not yet been paid.
April 13, 1881, Charity Smith and the other complainants in this cause, legatees under the will of John Blindbury, filed a bill in the circuit court for the county of Wayne, in
A few days before the appointment of a receiver in this cause, Mr. Kellum, as executor of Maria Blindbury’s will, petitioned the probate court for an order requiring Mr. Volney H. Blindbury, as administrator of John Blindbury’s estate, to pay the balance of $3,168.98 shown by Maria Blindbury’s account as above explained. The probate court, on November 17, 1881, made an order directing Blindbury to pay Kellum’s claim, with interest, from any assets of John Blindbury’s estate that had or might come into his hands as administrator, etc. Blindbury appealed from this order to the circuit court, wherein the case still remains pending and undetermined.
The action of the probate - court and Blindbury’s appeal having been called to the attention of the circuit court in chancery, an order was made and entered in this cause reciting the probate proceedings, and the appeal therefrom, and directing the receiver to retain $6,000 from the proceeds of the sale of the real estate involved in this suit, should any sale be made, to await the final determination of Kellum’s claim. The cause proceeded to a hearing and decree. The real estate was sold, and from the moneys thus realized the receiver paid all the money bequests provided by John Blind-bury’s will, all of the expenses of the receivership, and the cost and expenses of the partition suit. He also distributed among the proper persons $5,500 of the undivided assets,
Some time after these events, Charity Smith died, and Elmer W. Smith, executor of her will, was made one of the complainants.
November 26,1884, Mr. Howell, as Mrs. Blindbury’s administrator, filed his petition in this cause, asking that the receiver be directed to pay to him the balance of the amount that was found due to her from John Blindbury’s estate in the probate court, with interest from the date of the decree. This petition was answered by the parties interested, and, after a hearing upon the merits, was dismissed by the circuit judge. From this order dismissing the petition, the administrator for the estate of Mrs. Blindbury appeals. It is this action of the circuit judge we are to consider.
J think the circuit judge decided correctly. The widow of John Blindbury, under the will, was a tenant for life of the real estate she did not sell; and, as I understand the record, she did not sell any, but made use of the personal estate, and the income from all the estate. This was a liberal provision for her, and by the terms of the will it did not devolve upon her to pay the special legacies. As tenant for life, however, it became her duty to pay taxes, and make repairs to prevent waste. Patrick v. Sherwood, 4 Blatchf. 112; McDonald v. Heylin, 4 Phil. 73; Cairns v. Chabert, 3 Edw. Ch. 312; Fleet v. Dorland, 11 How. Pr. 489; Kearney v. Kearney, 17 N. J. Eq. 504; Wilson v. Edmonds, 24 N. H. 517; In re Steel, 19 N. J. Eq. 120; Wood, Landl. &Ten. § 58.
Mrs. Blindbury was more than a tenant for life. She had the control and disposition of the fee to the extent of reimbursing herself for all necessary payments made by her on account of the estate, its care and management, and for her comfortable support and maintenance. She had such sup
Her administrator can maintain no claim she could not, if living, against John Blindbury’s estate; and while living, and nearly eight years after the decree was made in her favor for the sum now claimed by her administrator, and only a year before her death, she stated in her petition to the probate court that nothing further remained to be done by her as administratrix of her husband’s estate, and that the estate ought to be formally closed, and asked that it might be done, and she discharged from the trust, and her bond be canceled. The probate court, after investigating the facts, found the petition to be true, and made an order granting the prayer of her petition. This being true, it is difficult to understand that she still held a claim against the estate of over $3,000, originating nearly eight years before, unsatisfied.
The record nowhere shows that Mrs. Blindbury ever, after her discharge as administratrix, made any claim against the estate for the balance found in her favor on settlement of her final account as executrix in June, 1872, nor that she ever notified any of the persons interested that such a balance was awarded to her in the probate court, and was still
I think the statute, and decisions made under the same, cited in the brief of complainants’ counsel, support this view. I do not agree with the learned counsel for the petitioner that this view will defeat the payment of the special legacies. They stand upon entirely different ground. No decree of •distribution was made ten years ago, directing their amount to be paid, by any court, according to the terms of the will. That question, however, is not now here for discussion.
The order of the circuit judge dismissing the petition was properly entered, and should be affirmed.