American Surety Co. of New York v. McMullen

30 A.2d 564, 129 Conn. 575, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 113
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 3, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 30 A.2d 564 (American Surety Co. of New York v. McMullen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Surety Co. of New York v. McMullen, 30 A.2d 564, 129 Conn. 575, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 113 (Colo. 1943).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The plaintiff was surety upon a bond given by Ray W. McMullen as conservator of the estate of Harry H. Cabot and as such surety it paid $71,733 to a trust company, executor of the estate of Cabot, who had died, to reimburse it for misappropriations by McMullen. The plaintiff brought this action to secure reimbursement for the money so paid, making defendants Ray W. McMullen and Jennie E. McMullen, individually and as executors of the estate of Arthur McMullen, and the Century Indemnity Company, surety on their bond as such executors. The trial court gave judgment against Ray E. McMullen personally and for the other defendants, and the plaintiff has appealed.

There is little dispute as to the underlying facts, and, making a few minor changes in the finding, we summarize them. At the time of his death in 1926, Arthur McMullen was president and treasurer of a corporation bearing his name and the owner of all but two of its shares of stock. He left a will in which his wife, Jennie E. McMullen, was made sole legatee and devisee, and she and Ray McMullen were named ex- *578 editors. They gave a bond with the Century Indemnity Company as surety which recited their appointment as executors and which was conditioned that they “shall faithfully discharge the duties of their said trust according to law.” Except for some stock sold in 1927, substantially all the assets of the estate consisted of the stock in the McMullen Company, and the only income the estate ever received was from this stock. The company conducted a profitable business for a few years after the death of Arthur McMullen but has done no business since 1933. In 1935 it was reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act and new shares of stock were issued, 179,820 to the McMullen estate. In 1937 it went into receivership, all its assets were sold to pay a judgment against it and since then it has had no assets. There were large outstanding claims against the McMullen estate, and it was kept open in the hope of paying these from the income derived from the stock in the company. The Century Company never requested the executors to close the McMullen estate. From the death of Arthur McMullen, Ray McMullen was an officer and director of the McMullen Company and directed and determined its policies and financial affairs. Mrs. McMullen was elected a director, but was not an officer and never attended a directors’ meeting. She signed papers when requested by Ray McMullen to do so, but only as to one matter, a loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, did he ever consult her, and she never interfered with the running of the business. They treated the estate and the company as one and the same.- Previous to 1934, but not since, she received money from Ray McMullen which she was led to believe came from the operation of the company by the estate.

*579 Ray McMullen was conservator of the estate of Henry H. Cabot and as such had, in a safe deposit vault, bonds of a value of more than $70,000. From time to time in 1935 and 1936 he took these bonds, placing in the box receipts for them signed by him personally. In 1936, anticipating that Cabot would soon die, he prepared a series of notes representing the value of the bonds he had taken, signed “Estate of Arthur McMullen, Ray W. McMullen, Executor.” No one except the stenographer who drew them knew of these notes until he sent them, after Cabot’s death, with his account as conservator, to the executor of Cabot’s estate. He also sent to the executor a certificate for 75,000 shares of stock of the McMullen Company which he had caused to be issued and which represented a part of the 179,820 shares which had been previously issued to the estate. The plaintiff ultimately paid to the executor of the Cabot estate $71,733 on account of McMullen’s misappropriations. The executor thereupon indorsed and delivered the notes and assigned the stock to the plaintiff. Jennie McMullen knew nothing of the misappropriation of the bonds or the making of the notes in the name of the estate until after Cabot’s death; she did not authorize the sending of the certificate for 75,000 shares to the executor of the Cabot estate, and did not know of it until after the misappropriation was discovered.

The trial court further found that the first five bonds taken by Ray McMullen were delivered to the conservator of another estate to pay a personal loan made by it to him, and a small balance above the loan resulting from their sale was paid to him personally; that he borrowed large sums from two New York banks, giving his personal notes secured by some of the bonds misappropriated by him, the bonds were sold *580 and substantial balances credited to his personal accounts; that he deposited in a bank account, in the name of the estate of Arthur McMullen, $6,797.04, representing money received through the sale of misappropriated bonds, at least $2,416.66 of which sum was expended for or paid to him personally or for the benefit of persons in no way connected with the estate and as to the disposition of the balance of which no satisfactory evidence was introduced; and that neither Jennie McMullen nor the McMullen estate received any benefit from any of the bonds misappropriated by him. This last finding the plaintiff attacks.

The plaintiff does not base its right to recover upon its ownership of the notes received from the executor of the Cabot estate, but claims rather as subrogee of such rights as the Cabot estate would have had except for the payment made to it by the plaintiff as surety on McMullen’s bond as conservator, in satisfaction of the loss. The claims of the plaintiff against the defendants at the trial and before us leave much to be desired in the way of a clear statement of the various grounds on which it seeks recovery. We have, however, searched the record, and have found no tenable basis for any claim of liability on the part of the defendants other than McMullen.

Mrs. McMullen did not participate in any way in the misappropriation of the bonds. The fact that she was coexecutor of the estate with McMullen would not make her liable for his wrongful conduct in doing something entirely outside the scope of his duties as executor. The plaintiff makes broad claims as to the negligence of Mrs. McMullen in leaving the management of the estate so completely in the hands of McMullen, but it does not appear how that could have adversely affected the rights of the Cabot estate, un *581 less it could be claimed that, by a greater supervision of his activities, she might have discovered the misappropriations, or, by bringing about a settlement of the estate before they occurred, might have prevented them. There is no finding, nor are we asked to find, that Mrs. McMullen personally received any part of the proceeds of the misappropriations. The court refused to find that any of the proceeds were used for the estate or the McMullen Company, but we are asked to add to the finding the fact that this was so. The only support of the claim for the addition to the finding is the testimony of McMullen supported by certain items in a personal account book kept by him; but, in its memorandum of decision, the trial court states that it could not give credence to this evidence, and we cannot, upon the record before us, find that it committed error in this respect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 A.2d 564, 129 Conn. 575, 1943 Conn. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-surety-co-of-new-york-v-mcmullen-conn-1943.