| N.J. | Nov 15, 1915
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The vice-chancellor overruled the demurrers, the propriety of which action is the question presented for review. As there are different grounds advanced by each defendant in support of their respective demurrers, they will be separately considered and determined. The first ground upon which Edson relies is that process is prayed against him individually and also as administrator, claiming that as the bill contains no charges that would justify a decree against him individually, he is entitled to a dismissal for that reason.
That the bill charges him with so administering the estate in his control as to entitle .complainants to relief, if the charges are true, we think clearly appears, and the prayer for relief is confined to his liability in that capacity. The only question pre
The next ground of demurrer is that sufficient facts are not disclosed in the bill to support the allegation of his fraudulent conduct as administrator. There is no merit in this point. The conduct of the administrator in refusing to settle his account in the orphans court, in selling part of the land to his solicitor, and the refusal to compel him to account for and pay over the secret profits made by him, which belong to the complainants as legatees, is a sufficient specification of fraudulent conduct.
Another ground urged is that the orphans court has partially proceeded with the accounting, and that no good reason sufficient to justify the court of chancery in assuming jurisdiction appears. Concerning the power of the court of chancery to assume jurisdiction of a case of this character, it was said as long ago as 1853 by Chancellor Williamson, in Van Mater v. Sickler, 9 N. J. Eq. 483, that, in the settlement of estates of decedents, equity has concurrent jurisdiction with the orphans court, “but where jurisdiction has been assumed by the orphans court, it is not the right of a party to change the forum of settlement at his pleasure. The chancellor must exercise his discretion and judge as to the propriety of the court of chancery interposing. There are many cases where the character of the estate is such that the remedy
The defendant Gay demurs because no wrong is charged, and that there is no prayer for relief against him. The bill shows that Gay is a purchaser of one of the shares of the estate, and therefore entitled to a part of the entire proceeds including the profits made by Newcomb, and he is, therefore, not only a proper but a necessary party. He is in the position of one, who, having an interest in the subject-matter, refuses to join in the bill of complaint in a case which could not be proceeded with unless he was a party. It is not unlike making a person who holds a second mortgage a party defendant where the decree ordinarily will be in his favor as to the amount due and the extent of his lien.
Newcomb demurs first upon the ground of complainants’ laches, and he urges that the land which he purchased was sold to him on the 30th day of October, 1909, by virtue of an order of the orphans court, and that complainants are only entitled to have the sale set aside when they act promptly. But the bill alleges that, at the time when the original bill was filed, they had no knowledge that Newcomb was the purchaser, and, in addition to this, the supplemental bill does not seek to set aside the sale but to recover a secret profit made by Mr. Newcomb as trustee, which he should pay over to the administrator to be by him accounted for. Under these conditions the delay cannot be said to amount to laches.
The bill charges that the administrator sold the land to New-comb, his solicitor, through an intermediary who bought in trust for Newcomb; that Newcomb resold the land at a large profit, which the administrator has taken no steps to recover for so long a time as to justify the conclusion he does not intend to. The administrator refuses to act and the bill is. filed by those to whom he holds a fiduciary relation to compel him and his solicitor, the two wrong-doers, to account. If the bill correctly states the facts it is the duty of the solicitor to pay over the profit he has thus made to the administrator, as the representative of the complainants, in order that he may account to them.
The case made by the-bill is that the solicitor of Edson as administrator has in his hands, belonging to the estate, a profit made through the joint act of a trustee and his solicitor acting for the beneficiaries under the will, which the administrator refuses to collect or the solicitor to pay over to him, and the prayer is, in substance, that each account in order that the estate may be administered. The relief sought is not distinct, but relates to a common subject-matter, and is in furtherance of a single purpose, which is the bringing in of the assets of the estate and the distribution thereof, a portion of which is fraudulently withheld by the solicitor of the administrator who refuses to make him disgorge, thus assisting in the fraud. The theory of demur-rant is that the complainants should, under these conditions, institute two suits to bring in the assets. Mr. Justice Depue, speaking for this court, said in Lehigh Valley Railroad Co. v. McFarlan, 31 N. J. Eq. 135: “The rule with regard to multifariousness, whether arising from the misjoinder of causes of action or of defendants therein, is not an inflexible rule of practice or procedure, but is a rule founded in general con
The order appealed from will be affirmed, with costs.