6 Paige Ch. 298 | New York Court of Chancery | 1837
The first objection to the account, as stated by the surrogate, is that he. has not charged the respondents with $1990 for the Howard Insurance stock, instead of $1890. As there is nothing in the return of the surrogate from which it can be legally inferred that this was an erroneous allowance, the appellants strictly are not entitled to have the decree modified upon the mere production of extraneous proofs in opposition to the return. It is the duty of the surrogate upon the taking of an account, or upon any other proceeding which may be the subject of an appeal, to reduce to writing and preserve the evidence and admissions of the parties, so far as to enable him or his successor to make a correct return of the facts, in case it shall be necessary in consequence of an appeal to a higher tribunal. In this case, as it is admitted by the counsel for the respondents that a mistake has occurred in the statement of their accounts to the amount of $100, that sum may be allowed upon a settlement of such account.
I think the surrogate was right in rejecting the claim for the grain used in the family by the widow immediately after the death of the testator and before the taking of the' inventory. It is not usual, even in favor of creditors, to claim an account of every bushel of grain or pound of provisions used by the widow and family of the testator from the very moment of his death. And in this case three out of four of those who were interested in the residuary fund were members of the family and got their share of the grain at the time it was used up in such family.
The children to whom pecuniary legacies were given were all otherwise provided for by the testator, so that the interest on their legacies was not wanted for their support. And as no time was prescribed in the will for the payment of such legacies, except that they should be paid as soon as convenient, the executors were right in supposing that they came within the general rule ; and that the legatees were
There are several cases, not referred to by the counsel for either party on the argument, which it is necessary to consider, and which seem to conflict with some of the cases cited by the appellants’ counsel; particularly with the decision of Sir John Leach in Stott v. Hollingworth. In Fearers v. Young, (9 Vez. 549,) the bequest of the life interest to the wife of the testator was in the nature of a life estate in a general residue ; for it was a bequest of the interest of one half of his property to the widow during her life. A portion of the estate being peculiarly situated, in a continuing partnership, producing more than simple interest during 13 months from the death of the testator, and the profits of the partnership which accrued before as well as after the death of the testator being payable in one and two
The result of the English cases appears to be, and I have not been able to find any in this country establishing a different principle, that in the bequest of a life estate in a residuary fund, and where no time is prescribed in the will for the commencement of the interest or the enjoyment of the use or income of such residue, the legatee for life is entitled to the interest or income of the clear residue,» as after-wards ascertained, to be computed from the time of the death of the testator. All the cases which appear to conflict with this rule, except the two decided by Sir John
But even if the general rule were otherwise, I think the fact that the wife’s life estate in the residue, in this case, is given in lieu of her dower, would be sufficient to take it out of the general rule, so as to give her interest from the death of the testator, as in the case of a legacy to a child having no other means of support from the bounty of the testator. Indeed a legacy to the widow in lieu of dower, is viewed in a more favorable light than a legacy to a child; the widow taking the bequest as an equivalent for her relinquishment of a right, and the child taking it as a mere bounty of the testator. For this reason the legacy of the wife given in lieu of dower does not abate rateably with others, if the fund is insufficient to satisfy all. (Heath v. Dendy, 1 Russ. Rep. 543. Davenhill v. Fletcher, Blunts Amb. 245.)
But although the surrogate’s decision was correct as to the widow’s right to the interest or income of the residuary
I can see no good reason why the appellants should not have been allowed their share of the income which had arisen upon the residuary fund from the death of their mother 5 as it either was or ought to have been invested in stock or other securities producing an income of at least five per cent. The executors should therefore have been charged with five per cent thereon from that time ; as it was their fault if it was not properly invested. Although it may operate as a great hardship upon the executors to require them to account for the money improperly paid over to the mother in ignorance of her rights, the court is not at liberty to deprive her children of it, if they choose to insist upon their legal claims, although a very scanty allowance was made for her support out of this large estate. But if she left any property at the time of her death, the executors will have the right to recover back from her representatives the amount she has received beyond her share, it having been paid to her by mistake.
The executors having unquestionably acted in good faith; and this case presenting an important question of law for the consideration of the court, as to which the appellants have succeeded only in part, 1 think it is a proper case in which to direct their taxable costs upon the appeal to be
The sentence or decree of the surrogate must be reversed or modified in conformity to- these principles ; and the decree must be without prejudice to the rights of the executors as between themselves, or as to then* rights as between them and their mother’s estate.