Adams v. Rees
Adams v. Rees
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The assent of the executor to a legacy, essential to the legatee’s right at law, may be given before probate and is usually a fact for the jury; but a will of personalty must be proved in the Ordinary’s Court, before a Court of common law can know that there is such.a will, is, or ever was, any legatee or executors under it. Here neither Orlando S. Rees, nominated executor, nor his sister Maria P. Mayrant, nominated executrix, ever took probate, but the will was proved by some
A conversion of the testator’s goods to an executor’s own use might have been rightful before the Acts of our Legislature which require that an order from the ordinary shall sanction a sale by an executor. 1 Wms. on Exors. 513; 1 Saund. 307. Even under our Acts goods bequeathed may be retained by an executor until his assent has been given to the legatee, or until a decree in Equity has been rendered against him; and before such decree, he may in the absence of special circumstances, require an accounting into which he may bring all the debts of the testator, whether to himself or other persons, and all his rightful advances and expenditures. Conversion by him may show a breach of trust or devastavit, and his withholding a legacy from a legatee, after his acknowledgment, express or implied, that such course is no longer needed for his protection, may be the ground for a decree in equity compelling his assent or his delivery of the legacy.' But a'Court of law is' incompetent to investigate the grounds upon which an executor withholds a legacy or his asspnt to it; for such Court cannot take the accounting under which his conduct might be justified, and if it should deem an acknowledgment that all debts have been paid, to be, of itself, equivalent to an assent, and upon that sustain a legatee’s action, it might take from an executor the very means in view of which the acknowledgment was made.
Motion granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.