Gwynn v. Dorsey
Gwynn v. Dorsey
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This case presents three questions for consideration. They were decided by the Orphans Court of Anne Arundel county, and are brought before us, on the appeal of William, Gwynn, in a dispute concerning the settlement of the administration accounts of his debtor, George Howard of Brice, on whose estate Roderick Dorsey administered. The Orphans Court made certain allowances to the administrator, which William Gwynn thought objectionable, and refused to make him account for interest, with which it was contended he was chargeable.
In making the allowance to the administrator of $ 17 28, for so much paid by him to Samuel Brown, Jr. for commission on money collected, we think the court erred in judgment. This collection, the administrator ought to have made himself, and should not have burthened the estate with the expense of it. The collector was not a public officer, by the usage of the country entitled to commissions, (if there be any such usage,) nor was resort had to legal process, or the intervention of an attorney at law, to compel the payment. In the last case the expense of the collection may be defrayed by the estate, and we observe that many expenditures of this kind were allowed in the last account passed by this administrator. While on the argument of this question, it was urged by the appellant’s counsel, that the administrator’s commission was improperly allowed by the court, on passing his second account, and that the allowance ought to have been deferred for the last or final ac
The sum lost by the insolvency of the Shipleys, we are of opinion, the court were right in passing to the credit'of the administrator, in his last account. It amounted but to seventy-two dollars, and from aught that appears, Edward Shipley was fully competent to its discharge, when he entered into the bond with Levy Shipley, as his security for the payment of it. Nor was the administrator remiss in using ordinary diligence, for the recovery of this debt after it became due. At the next term but one thereafter, he instituted a suit for it, and in the due course of the courts, obtained a judgment, and issued a fieri facias. It was, therefore, not lost by his negligence, unless indeed, passing by one term of the court without suing, is to be taken as an evidence of it. Such strictness, we think, was not required of the administrator; and if this was once pronounced tobe the law, we are assured that prudent men, and those most worthy of the office, would seldom be found engaged in the settlement of intestates’ estates. Whenever an administrator manifestly intends fairly to do his duty, the rule should be not to hold him liable upon slight grounds.
The question upon the subject of interest is the most important one at present under the review of the court. It is worded thus: Whether or not the administrator should be charged with a larger sum for interest? Before it was sub
His second account was passed the 21st January, 1829, and his commission, disbursement, and other expenses, allowed to that time, amounted only to $656 28J, which demonstrates that there remained in his hands for nearly two years, the sum of $488 15|. On this sum he ought to be. held to account for interest, from the time he received it, if he applied it to his own use and profit, and from the end of thirteen months after the date of his letters, if he kept it by him without any apparent reason, and omitted to make distribution of it, as he ought to have done among the creditors. This they were entitled to have, made within that time, by the act of 1798, ch. 101, sub-ch. 8, sec. 14, and if they were disappointed in the receipt of their dividends, by his culpable inattention to duty, it is but just that he should be charged with interest lost to them by his neglect. The order for the distribution on the 17th January, 1829, was not passed, as intimated, on the 8th of February preceding, and furnishes no excuse for the delay, and the controversy among the creditors was no impediment to it, as the administrator'might have retained the disputed dividend, or a portion of it, under the direction of the Orphans Court.
The decision of the Orphans Court of Anne Arundel county in this case is reversed; and we direct the proceedings to be returned to that tribunal, that on the principles herein set forth, justice may be done to the parties.
DECREE REVERSED.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Wm. Gwynn v. Dorsey, Adm'r of G. Howard of Brice
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