Salisbury v. Colt
Salisbury v. Colt
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
These are cross-appeals from an interlocutory decree of the Chancellor, made upon the report of 'William Paterson, esquire, as master, in a cause in that court between He Grasse B. Fowler and wife, complainants, and Morgan Colt and others, defendants. The two appeals -were heard, and will be decided together.
The cause in the Court of Chancery had respect to the will and codicil of Roswell L. Colt, deceased, by which Maria Theresa Colt, afterwards the wife of Edward Salisbury, had bequeathed to her a legacy of $20,000, which was directed to be held by the executors upon certain trusts. In December, 1872, Mr. Salisbury and wife filed their petition in that court, praying that a certain decree theretofore made be set aside, and reference had to a master to state an account of the principal and interest due to Mrs. Salisbury upon her legacy, above the payments made to her. Morgan G. Colt, the surviving executor, answered the petition, and on the 18th day of March, 1873, the Chancellor made an order that the said interlocutory decree of September 15th, 3868, be vacated and set aside,'and that it be referred to William Paterson, esquire, one of the special masters, to take and state an account of the amount due for principal and interest upon said legacy to said Maria Theresa Salisbury, “and that he allow her interest
On the 3d of May, 1873, the master filed a report of the account made and stated by him, with the evidence taken before him on the reference. He allowed interest from November 22d, 1856, to November 22cf, 1859, at the rate of six per cent, per annum; from November 22d, 1859, for the remainder of the time, after the rate of seven per cent, per annum, with calculations of interest upon annual rests, throughout the whole time.
The master further reported that the estate of the testator, Roswell L. Colt, principally consisted in shares in the Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures, the par value of which was $100 per share; that all the income received by the executors from the estate of the testator was derived from dividends on those shares; and that as the legacy had to be paid out of that stock, the executors should be charged seven per cent, upon the legacy for each year that seven per cent, or upwards had been received by the executors in dividends upon the stock, taking the yearly dividends made upon the stock at par, as the rate per cent, which the executors had received in those years as interest on the legacy: and in accounting upon that method, the master found that for the years 1860, 1861, 1863, 1864, 1865 and 1866, during which period the lawful rate of interest was ai-x per cent., the executor should be charged after the .rate of seven per cent., because the dividends on the stock paid in each of those years had equaled or exceeded seven per cent., and the account was made and stated, charging the executor upon that basis, the master having in his interpretation of the order of reference, regarded it as permitting that method of accounting.
The executors excepted to this part of the report, substantially upon the ground that they had received, during
The-executors also excepted to the manner of stating the-account in making yearly rests in the computation of interest. This exception was overruled by the Chancellor.
Both parties appeal from the decree-of the Chancellor, and¡ the question presented is whether.-the decree upon the matters; excepted t© in the report is<in> accordance with the directions; of the first-mentioned order- ©f reference. That order was. not appealed from, and whatever accounting is had in the-case must be regulated and, controlled by the terms of that order.
The substantial direction of that order, so far as is important here, is that the, master;, in stating this account, shall charge the executor, in any event, with; not less than lawful interest upon the legacy, nor more than seven per cent., and if, while the- rate of interest, by- law;, was- less than seven percent,, the executors received, interest upon the money in their-hands at that rate, then, for such time as they received interest at that rate, they sha-ll be charged seven per cent.
The- decree of the Chancellor upon the rate of interest to. be allowed by the- master- is-, obviously- correct, unless it appears in the case that the- executors, during some of the years from-1855 to-18.66, received interest on this legacy at. the rate of seven per cent, per- ammiani,, oar more.
But, on behalf of the legatee, it is insisted that because the money to pay this legacy, with the other moneys of the testator, was invested, at the time of the testator’s death, in the stock of this corporation, and the executors have allowed it .so to remain, they must be considered as having received interest upon the legacy after the rate of the dividends paid ■upon the stock at par; in other words, should be charged for ■dividends received, as if the legacy had been invested in the .■stock at par value.
It seems by no means clear, that such is the interpretation ■of the order of reference, or that it calls for or permits any ■such rule for the ascertainment of the interest received on the legacy. If the money of the legacy had been invested in this or other stock, at a known price, it might have been easy to determine, from the dividends paid, what the executor received as interest, but such is not the case. It was admitted, ■on the argument, that the stock in this corporation was worth ,$250 per share, at the least. The dividends on two hundred ■shares of this stock, it is claimed, should be taken to represent the interest received on the legacy. But two hundred .shares of the stock represent $50,000 of this estate. It is not apparent upon what just principle is based the claim to have the dividends oil $50,000 worth of the stock considered .as the interest which the executors received on $20,000 invested in the stock. If these dividends are to represent ■and determine the interest received by the executors on this legacy, it must be dividends on such amount of stock as the legacy would purchase — that would not exceed eighty shares i — and the dividends received by the executors on that amount 'of stock, did not, in any of those years, equal seven per cent, upon the legacy. The Chancellor was clearly right in his .conclusion that no evidence is found in the case showing that
The executor appeals from that part of the Chancellor’s decree which overrules his exception to the mode of computing interest with yearly rests. The decree, -in that respect, is right: the circumstances of the case fully justify the compounding of interest upon the legacy.
The decree of the Chancellor is affirmed, but without costs in either case.
Decree, on appeal, affirmed by following vote:
Eor affirmance- — -Beasley, C. J., Clement, Dalrimple, Depue, Knapp, Lathrop, Lilly, Scudder, Van Syckel, Wales, Woodhull. 11.
For reversal — -Dodd and Green. 2.
Decree, on cross-appeal, unanimously affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.