105 Conn. 230 | Conn. | 1926
Joseph W. Cutler by his will provided several small legacies and then gave the residue of his estate, one third to his wife and two thirds to one Gilpatric to hold in trust for his daughter, and named Gilpatric as executor. Gilpatric accepted and gave a bond, which was in the usual form except that it recited his appointment as “Executor and Trustee,” and which was conditioned upon the faithful discharge of the “duties of said trust.” Upon this bond, the defendant The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, hereinafter called the Fidelity Company, was the surety. In the course of the administration of the estate, Gilpatric found it desirable to sell the real estate included in it. He thereupon filed a bond, which recited that he had been empowered to sell the real estate, and which was conditioned that he “well and truly account for the avails of said real .estate and administer upon the same and shall well and faithfully discharge the duties of said trust according to law.” Upon this bond, the defendant The Royal Indemnity Company, hereinafter called the Indemnity Company, was surety. The executor sold the real estate and received the money paid for it. Thereafter he converted to his own use a considerable portion of the estate. This action is brought to recover the amount so converted; his successor in office as trustee, the beneficiary in the trust, and the testator’s wife as legatee of the
The complaint alleges the giving of both bonds and joins as defendants both the surety companies. The Indemnity Company demurred to it on the ground that it joined distinct causes of action against different defendants. The complaint recited that the plaintiff had no knowledge as to which of the defendants was liable, or whether both were, and if so, the amounts of the respective liabilities of each. The facts alleged are such as to bring the case within our practice permitting the joinder of causes of action, where the plaintiff is uncertain as to the liability of different defendants either or both of whom may be responsible for a violation of his rights. Practice Book, p. 278, § 155; Eames v. Mayo, 93 Conn. 479, 106 Atl. 825.
No application or order for the sale of real estate appearing in the files or records, the plaintiff was entitled to prove that a document comprising the application and subsequent proceedings had once existed, had been lost, and what its contents were. Commonwealth v. Roark, 62 Mass. (8 Cush.) 210, 212; Mandeville v. Reynolds, 68 N. Y. 528, 533. The finding of the trial court that the bond of the Indemnity Company was in fact accepted and approved by the Court of Probate is amply justified by the circumstances appearing in evidence and we have no occasion to consider the suggestion in the brief of counsel that such an approval could be effective only as it was evinced by a written order, for no such question was distinctly raised on the trial, and no specific assignment of error presents it to us. The fact that the bond is dated September 19th, 1919, and refers to an order of sale “made this day,” whereas the order is found to have been made on September 25th, 1919, is without sig
The substantial objection of the Indemnity Company is that prior to Gilpatric’s defalcation he had ceased to hold the property converted by him in his capacity of executor and was holding it as trustee. The Indemnity Company lays stress upon the filing in November, 1920, of an administration account by Gilpatric and its ultimate approval as filed, though this occurred after the defalcation. The bond it gave covered the obligation of Gilpatric properly to distribute the funds received from the sale of the real estate, and the surety upon the bond would be liable for his failure to do so, even though the account filed by him had been approved before the defalcation. State ex rel. Moriarty v. Donahue, 82 Conn. 308, 311, 73 Atl. 763. It is of no moment, then, whether or not the filing of the account and its subsequent approval is to be regarded as establishing, as of the date it was filed, the performance by Gilpatric of all his duties save that of a proper payment of the fund to those
The trial court has found that Gilpatric never held two thirds of the residuary estate as trustee, and that he never held any of it as trustee, unless that is to be implied as matter of law from the other facts found. As the account he submitted in November, 1920, was not approved and no order of distribution was made until long after his defalcation, there was not, prior to it, any debt owing from Gilpatric as executor to himself as trustee, and hence no basis for the application of the doctrine by which, where a person in one capacity owes money to himself in another the law regards the debt as having been in fact paid. Burnside v. Robertson, 28 S. C. 583, 6 S. E. 843. The virtual completion by Gilpatric of his duties as executor might give rise to a presumption that thereafter he held the fund in the capacity of trustee, but, at least as bearing upon the release of the Indemnity Company from further liability, that presumption would be one of fact and hence rebuttable. Pratt v. Northam, 5 Mason (U. S. C. C.) 95, 109. No implication of law arising in the case, the finding of the court that Gilpatric never held the residuary estate, or any part of it, as trustee, is a conclusion drawn from the subordinate facts and must stand, unless it violates some principle of law or it is shown to be unreasonable or illogical in view of the other facts found. Goodsell v. McElroy Brothers Co., 86 Conn. 402, 407, 85 Atl. 509.
Upon the basis of the account filed by Gilpatric in November, 1920, the amount of the estate which would have constituted the trust fund was $44,908.48. He had, as executor, opened a charge account in the National Bank of which he was cashier, in the name of “J. W. Cutler Estate.” This account, the court has found, he used for other purposes than those connected
This brief recital of salient facts shows that up to January 5th, 1921, the bank account was still being used by Gilpatric as executor, because checks drawn
The trial court committed no error in holding the Indemnity Company liable upon its bond, and it therefore became necessary for it to apportion the amount between the two defendants. In effect the method it followed was this: It found the amount of the deficit by deducting from the total of all sums received by the executor, all payments which were properly made by him, and all sums representing items which could be traced as not having been misappropriated or as property which was turned over by him
The real-estate commission was an expense so connected with the sale as properly to be charged against its proceeds rather than against the general assets of the estate; 3 Woerner on Administration (3d Ed.) p. 1676; 24 Corpus Juris, p. 705; and it was properly deducted in determining the primary liability of the Indemnity Company. Under our law charges against an estate for expenses of administration, debts and legacies are payable, in the absence of any directions to the contrary by will, from the personal property and until it has been exhausted are not charges upon the real estate. Canfield v. Bostwick, 21 Conn. 550; Duffield v. Pike, 71 Conn. 521, 529, 42 Atl. 641; Cleaveland, Hewitt & Clark, Probate Law & Practice, p. 674. If real estate is sold, its proceeds are to be divided and distributed in the same way as the land would have been; General Statutes, § 5015; and therefore such proceeds may not be used to pay the expenses of
The residuary gifts might have been satisfied from either the personal estate or the proceeds of the lands, and, had either defendant shown that the property secured by its bond had gone to make up the amounts paid to or for the wife, it would have been entitled to credit that amount against its primary liability; but the burden to show that rested upon them; Potter v. Ogden, 136 N. Y. 384, 392, 33 N. E. 228; Choate v. Arrington, 116 Mass. 552; and both failed to sustain it. As, however, the deficit exceeds the whole amount received from the sale of the lands, the amount of this excess could only represent personal estate misappropriated; this amount should be charged against the Fidelity Company, and in the determination of its further liability, should be deducted from its primary
The amount of the total deficit was $34,765.06; the total amount received from the sale of lands less the commission was $26,267.50, and the difference between these two amounts, that is, $8,497.56, can be definitely placed as representing personal property converted, and so, as a fixed liability of the Fidelity Company; the difference between the sum received from the sale of lands, $26,267.50, and the sum rightfully paid to or for the testator’s wife, $22,367.41, that is, $3,900.09, represents a portion of those proceeds which can definitely be placed as not having been paid out as a part of the residuary gift, and so must be regarded as a fixed liability of the Indemnity Company; deducting these two items of fixed liability from the total defalcation, there remains $22,367.41, which cannot definitely be known to represent either personal property or the proceeds of real estate and the liability for which must therefore be divided between the two defendants. The whole liability of the Fidelity Comr
There is no error upon the appeal of the defendant The Royal Indemnity Company. There is error upon the appeal of the defendant The United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, the judgment is set aside, and the cause is remanded with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff to recover of the defendant The United States Fidelity and Guaranty
In this opinion the other judges concurred.