Butler v. Butler
Butler v. Butler
Opinion of the Court
This opinion was filed April 20, Í903, and remittitur held up on petition for rehearing until
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
This action was for the settlement of the estate of Willis W. Butler, who died in 1882, leaving a will, under which plaintiff became executor. The estate consisted mainly of a tract of land which was sold by order of the Court in this proceeding for $2,200. The devisees under the will were the plaintiff, Baylis A. Butler, and the defendants, William J. Butler and James T. Butler, who, being dead, is represented herein by his heirs at law as defendants. After the death of the testator, the plaintiff and James T. Butler, being severally indebted by notes to D. M. Adams, executed to him as further security a mortgage upon the tract of land devised as aforesaid, containing a general warranty clause, it being stated in the mortgage that “this conveyance covers all my right, title and interest in said tract of land of every nature and kind.” These notes and mortgages were afterwards assigned to the defendant, B. M. McGee. The master found that the amount due on the note and mortgage by plaintiff at the date of his report, March 19, 1902, was $1,536, and on the note and mortgage by James T. Butler, $759.28. The will among other things provided that the plaintiff should have out of the testator’s estate reasonable compensation for his services in taking care of Mary M. Butler and Susan F. Benson, such compensation to be determined by two disinterested men. By an order of Judge Townsend, in'November, 1901, it was referred to the master to appoint two1 disinterested men to ascertain the amount of such compensation, which was done, and these men found $3,000 as the amount of compensation. The master in stating the account said: “This said sum of $3,000 is, however, to be reduced by the amount for which the said Baylis A. Butler is liable to account to said estate, as above found, to wit: $1,597.92, which leaves the sum of $1,402.08, and I fix this sum as the amount due the said Baylis A. Butler from the estate of the said Willis W. Butler, after a full accounting between them. But of this amount, as above found, the sum of $113.59, being the amount found due the said Baylis A. Butler at the date of *214 his last accounting to the probate court, has been assigned to the defendant, B. M. McGee, and should be paid to him, leaving the amount due and payable to the said Baylis A. Butler out of the said estate $1,288.49.” No exceptions were filed to the report of the referee, but when the matter came up before Judge Gage, he made the following decree:
“This matter comes on to be heard on the master’s report. The defendant, McGee, excepts to a decree proposed by the plaintiff’s attorneys, in execution of the master’s report. There are no formal exceptions to the report of the master. The plaintiff objects to the consideration of McGee’s contentions. If the report of the master was free from ambiguity, I should not hear McGee against it; for he never answered; and he never excepted, though he, most of all persons, is interested in the cause. The real question, though, is what disposition of the funds has the master recommended ? The amounts due the several creditors and claimants are found; but, as I see, no scheme of payment is proposed by the master. I shall, therefore, consider the two schemes proposed, on one side by plaintiff and on the other side by McGee. There are two issues: (1) Shall the $200 fee due to plaintiff’s attorney come first out of the general fund? and (2) Shall the sum of $1,288.49 be paid to plaintiff or to McGee? It seems clear to me that'the fee should come out of .the general fund. The service was rendered for the estate of W. W. Butler, and all parties who had an interest therein as a consequence. The services being for the estate, remuneration should be made by the estate. The two cases cited by the defendant do not militate against this view. It seems clear to me, too, that McGee and not the plaintiff is entitled to receive the above stated amount. It is true, that plaintiff did not execute to McGee’s assignor, Adams, a mortgage or pledge of the claim which plaintiff held against the estate of W. W. Butler; the plaintiff only executed to Adams a mortgage on his interests in the land out of which ■this fund had proceeded. But that mortgage contains a clause of general warranty. It would be inequitable to *215 allow plaintiff to say now that he had mortgaged his interests to Adams while he held against the whole title a claim which might consume his interest. He is now estopped to make such a contention.
“It is, therefore, ordered, that the report of the master be confirmed; that out of the fund he pay the following claims, to wit: First, the taxes due; then costs, disbursements and expenses of the action; then to Hyde and Verdin $10 for their compensation herein; and then to B. M. McGee the sum of $113.59 and $1,288.49; that the balance be held subject to the further order of this Court.”
The exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
On July 20, 1903, petition for rehearing was dismissed by following per curiam order:
It is ordered, that the petition be dismissed, and the order for the stay of remittitur be vacated.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Butler v. Butler.
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Master — Exceptions—ReperEnce—Equity.—The Circuit Court may hear a party interested in the distribution of a fund in Court without answer or exceptions to the master’s report, when the equities of such party is not one of the subjects referred. 2. Warranty — Mortgage—Estoppee.—A party having an interest in land by devise and a claim against it as estate of testator, who gives a mortgage with general warranty, is estopped from claiming the proceeds of such claim as against the assignee of the mortgage in proportion to the extent of his 'title. 3. Equity.. — When the Court has in hand a fund, the claimant of which having brought in a parly having an interest in another portion of the fund, to whom such claimanl is indebted, the Court may order the fund paid to such party on the debt due him by claimant. 4. Rehearing refused.