Moore's v. Beauchamp
Moore's v. Beauchamp
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case was before this Court at the Spring Term, 1837, and is reported in 5 Dana, 70.
Upon the return of the cause to the Court below, Johnson, the executor, filed an amended answer, with a view to avoid a settlement of his accounts as executor, upon the principles laid down by this Court, in the ab‘ sence of any further and satisfactory answer. With very little further preparation of the case, the Court referred it to an Auditor, with directions, in the calculation of interest, to be governed by rests; the two first rests to be of three years each, and after that of two yeaiseach, till the termination of thelast rest preceding the commencement of complainant’s suit, and from that period till the commencement of the suit; and after that, to calculate running interest, but only upon the amount due at the termination of the rest next preceding the filing complainant’s bill; and as the executor had made some loans to the parents of the legatees, and as there were other debts due him as executor, which had been permitted to run on for a long time without renewal, the Court directed such debts, or a designated portion of them, to be exempted, in the computation of interest, from the operation of rests. The Auditor was authorized to take and report such testimony as the parties might adduce. Upon the coming in of the Auditor’s report, the executor filed exceptions to it, with very numerous specifications, nearly all of which were overruled.
As to the Grider branch of the legatees, who, after the return of the cause, filed cross pleadings, the case appears to have been settled by the executor before final decree, and also with R. C. Beauchamp, one of the complainants
The Court, on final hearing, decreed the executor an allowance of one thousand dollars, in addition to the allowance of $2325 79, made him by the County Court. The Court found the share of each legatee, in the whole estate, upon the coming in of the Auditor’s report, to be $3167, but apprehending that there might be some error in the report, not noticed, reduced the share of each to $3000. The decree also appropriates a debt due the executor from the father of the complainants, and which had been enjoined by them, to the extinguishment, in part, of their several portions; and there being six legatees of the Beauchamp stock, the share of each of the complainants is credited by one sixth part of said debt, amounting to $306 36, which reduces the shares of each to $2693 64. The share of one of the complainants was further reduced by a payment which had been made to her guardian by the executor, to $1621 64. The Court decreed the injunction as to the debts due the executor from the father of the complainants, perpetual, and that the executor and rhe defendants, his sureties, pay to the complainants, Isaac H. Beauchamp, Richard N. Beauchamp, Joshua Beauchamp and Sarah Ann Beauchamp, each, $2693 64, and to complainant, Margaret E. Beauchamp,. $1621 64, with interest from the 25th June, 1839, till paid.
To reverse this decree the executor again brought the case before this Court.
After numerous errors assigned, we shall proceed to notice such as are deemed deserving particular consideration: And 1st. It is insisted that ppon the filing by the executor of his amended answer, he should only have been held responsible for current interest upon the funds which came into his hands as executor.
It was intimated by this Court, in the former opinion, that if, by an amended answer, the executor should give a satisfactory account of the manner in which he had managed tbe estate which came to his hands, and should also report an interest account from which the actual accumulations, by way of interest, could be ascertained, and it should also appear that the estate had been managed with
The further answer of the executor, although of great length, is indefinite, and, we think, wholly unsatisfactory. No interest account is exhibited, nor is it practicable to ascertain what amount had been actually made by the executor by the use of the funds of the. estate.’ His inability to be more specific, he alledges, results from the loss of his account book, and 'as the estate principally consisted in notes for various amounts, and due-at different periods, any thing like accuracy in the history of such various and complicated transactions, and during a period of nearly twenty years, from mere recollection, could not be expected.
In the opinion of this Court, therefore, the rule for the computation of interest was reasonable, and as liberal as the executor, from the facts and complexion of the whole ,case, was 'entitled to. There is nothing in the answer, nor do the facts of the case exempt him from the effects of such a rule.
But it is urged that the report is not made in pursuance of the principles even of the interlocutory decree. That the disbursements by the executor, made before the termination of the first rest, as well as those made between the rests afterwards, were taken out of thé interest which had accrued at the time the disbursements were made— and such, from an inspection of the report, seems to be the fact. The more liberal and equitable mode would have been to have taken the disbursements from the principal, or what would, in effect, have been the same thing, to have calculated interest upon the disbursements from the time they were respectively made, till the next rest, and then to have deducted the aggregate of disbursements and interest thereon from the principal fund and interest, and this done, the residue would have become capital upon which interest would, in like manner, be computed till the next rest. The exact difference in the result of com
■ But in the account to which we réfer, andaré disposed to adopt, it is insisted there are some items for which the executor should not be made responsible.
That it embraces two debts, created by the executor, one due by Henderson and the other by Clark & Coffee, which the executor has not collected and ought to be credited. .
In order to entitle him to the favorable consideration 0f the Chancellor, in reference to these debts, he should ... . . have shown, salislactonly, that the debts, when created, were such as a prudent and vigilant man, in the manage. ment of his otra affairs, would have made, and that # t 9 timely and. proper exertions to collect them had proved unavailing. This, we think, he has failed to do. The
In regard to the other debt, the executor states in his answer, that Coffee had proved insolvent, but it was expected Clark would pay.
We are very clearly of the opinion that the Court correctly refused any relief or credit on account of these claims.
The executor further relies, that he is charged with several original claims due his testator which he has not collected: but as he has failed to establish the fact of having used even ordinary diligence for their collection, and also failed to show that they were unpaid, the Court was right in overruling the exceptions in regard to them. He is charged with only one original claim, not included in the inventory — this is the claim of J. W. Miller, whose testimony in reference to it is positive and uncontradicted; except this, the executor is charged, in the account before us, with no original claim which was not embraced in and charged against him in the County Court settlement.
The executor complains that he was entitled to certain credits, which the Auditor, and afterwards the Court, refused to allow him. We are not satisfied that he showed himself entitled to any credits in addition to those which were allowed him by the Court below, and which are embraced in the account or statement before us.
We will now notice the particulars in which we think this statement is incorrect, and does injustice to the complainants.
The executor qualified in November, 1819; in March, 1820, he paid Elizabeth Moore, administratrix of Geo. Moore, $5287 26, in discharge of a debt due by his testator. This sum was paid by the executor, in notes belonging to the estate of his testator, on which, when paid, there was interest to the amount of $369. For the whole amount, thus paid, the executor is credited, and in reduction of the principal of the fund in his hands. We think the more equitable mode would have been, to have applir
Again, in 1837 and 1838, the executor paid over to the legatees more than $10,000; all, or the greater portion of which was paid in notes due the executor, as such, and some of them, which had been wholly exempted from the operation of rests. The whole amount paid in this manner is applied as a credit upon the fund, upon which the executor had only been charged with running interest since November, 1831. We think it would have been equitable to have adopted the mode already suggested in regard to the payments made to Elizabeth Moore — and to illustrate the injustice done the legatees, and the corresponding gain to the executor, by the mode adopted, a single case need only be stated. The executor had a debt upon Martin Grider & Co. for $1433 25, due 6th November, 1824. When due, this debt was deducted from the fund in the hands of the executor, upon which he was at that time paying interest, and he is charged only with running interest upon it, from the time it was thus due, till 25th June, 1839, when the Auditor’s report came in. It was, in other words, exempted from the operation of rests. Upon the statement before us, he is, therefore, charged for this debt, or, which is the same thing, for that much of the capital in his hands on the 6th November, 1824, including interest to 25th June, 1839, with $2693. On the 14th November, 1829, it appears the executor collected, on this claim, $201 37, which, with interest there, on till the Auditor reported, amounts to $317. The residue of this debt he transferred in payment to the Griders, on the 13th July, 1837, for which he obtained a credit, at that time, for $2521. These sums, with interest upon the latter from the time the executor obtained credit for
The amount found in the'hands óf the executor oh the 25th June, 1839, by this account, was $19,915 75. To this sum add, for the errors indicated, something,less than the amount $536, and we find in his hands $20,451 75, leaving, after deducting $1100, being the allowance to the executor, and $100 which he was directed to pay the Auditor, $19,351 75, for distribution. ;Tbis sum, however, is exclusive of the advancements made by 'the executor, under the provisions of the will, to some of the legatees.'
The will directs an equal distribution among the children of the testator’s two daughters, Mrs. Grider and Mrs. Beauchamp, when they should have had their last children. The will also authorizes the executor, in the event any of the children should marry before a division takes place, to pay over to such child so much money as the executor may suppose will not exceed the proportion of said child at the time of said division.
Two of the daughters of Mrs. Grider were married as early as 1823 and 1824, and advancements made or money loaned to each, to the amount of $1500. On the 13th July, 1837, the executor paid over to other children of Mrs. Grider, or their guardians, $8003 06, and on the 27th June, 1838, he paid to two of the Beauchamps, legatees, $2145.
In ascertaining the distributive, share of the complainants, the question arises, how these advancements and payments are to be treated. As the will directs an equal distribution, we are of opinion they should be treated as loans, and the executor charged with interest, and of course, in a settlement between the executor and the legatees, to whom advancements or payments had been
But it is urged on behalf of the executor, that he should not have been made responsible for interest after the institution of complainants’suit. In that respect, we think he had no cause of complaint; if he had collected the debts due him as executor, and brought it into Gourt, or shown that he was ready to pay it. over, his claim to exemption might be entitled to consideration: but he hag not done this — nor does it appear that any portion of the fund due him as executor had ceased to be productive.
The Court decreed him a credit, as against the complainants, for a claim upon their father. What other claims still remained in his hands does not appear. The executor states in his answer, that he will exhibit a statement of-all the uncollected debts, but none is found in
That the report of the Auditor was defective and to the . prejudice of the executor, we are satisfied: but if it appear, from all the facts in the case, that the final decree was right, as to the amount to which the complainants were entitled, we think this Court ought not to reverse it, , , . , , . , ... . ,, ' that the case might again be sent to an Auditor, especially as it is no where suggested, that the Auditor did not report all the facts of the case.
We are satisfied, after a careful and laborous investigation of the case, that $3000 did not excéed the amount of the share of each legatee, and,-we should be prepared to affirm the decree, but for -the seeming injustice which it does the executor in regard to his claim upon P. R. Beauchamp, and which had been enjoined by the complainants.
There were six of the Beauchamp stock of legatees, all of whom were originally complainants. But some time before the final decree, the suit as to one of them, R. C. Beauchamp, was dismissed, the executor, as stated in the order, having settled with him. The decree perpetuate the injunction and allots the debt to the complainants as so much of their respective shares as legatees, and then proceeds to deduct one sixth part from the share of each. So far as appears from the record, a fifth instead of a sixth should have been deducted, which would have reduced the amount to $2632 37, instead as decreed-of $2693 64. The share of Margaret E. Beauchamp should have been further reduced by $1072 50, paid to her guardian on the 27th June, 1838, with interest to 25lh June, 1839, which would leave a balance due her of'$1495 52. The Court gave interest from the coming in of the Audito.r’s report, and in so doing, we think,- there was ho
It is, therefore, the opinion of the Court, that so much of the decree herein be reversed as relates to the application of the debt of the executor upon P. R. Beauchamp, to the partial discharge of the respective shares of the complainants as legatees, 'and also so much of the decree as relates to the final balance accrued to each of the complainants, and the cause remanded with directions so to .amend said decree as to allot to the five remaining complainants, to-wit: To Isaac H. Beauchamp, Richard N. Beauchamp, Joshua Beauchamp, Sarah Ann Beau-champ, and Margaret E. Beauchamp, the whole amount of the debt of the executor against P. R. Beauchamp, and which had been enjoined in this case, and to perpetuate the injunction, and that their respectively ascertained shares of $3000 each be reduced by one fifth of said P. R. Beauchamp’s debt, viz: by $367 64, and to decree to said Isaac H., Richard N., Joshua and Sarah Ann Beau-champ, each, $2632 37, with interest from the 25th June, 1839, till paid, being the residue of theirrespective shares of $3000 each, as due at that date, after deducting from each one fifth of the debt aforesaid, and to decree to the said Margaret E. Beauchamp, $1495 52, with interest from 25th June, 1839, till paid, that being the balance due her after deducting from her share, as legatee, one-fifth of said debt upon P. R. Beauchamp, and also $1072 50, paid her guardian by the executor, with interest thereon from 27th June, 1838, till 25th June, 1839. And as the executor, Johnson, has died since this cause has been in this Court, and it has been revived in the name of his executors, John N. and Jedediah Johnson, it will stand revived in the Court below.
It being suggested that payments have been made to complainants on account of their claims, since the final decree was rendered, it is understood that any such pay
Decree reversed and cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.