Appeal of Stewart, and McClay

6 A. 321, 110 Pa. 410, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 441
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 4, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 6 A. 321 (Appeal of Stewart, and McClay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Appeal of Stewart, and McClay, 6 A. 321, 110 Pa. 410, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 441 (Pa. 1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Green

delivered the opinion .of the court October 15th, 1885.

First assignment. — There is ,no doubt that an executor who retains the goods of his testator is liable for their value, and it *422 was quite open to the exceptants in this case to give evidence of the actual value of the store goods kept by the accountant and have him charged therewith. But that course was not adopted. In the regular inventory of the estate, sworn to and signed by the appraisers, and filed in October, 1874, shortly after the. testator’s death, the store goods were, appraised at $1,80.0. This is prima facie evidence of their value, and is the sum charged in the account. Another paper was given in evidence, which was filed October 17th, 1883. It is not sworn to and not signed, but appears to be a schedule or list of the personal assets of the testator in detail, with valuations marked opposite each item. No verbal explanatory evidence was given showing what these valuations represented. An individuated and itemized list of store goods appears in this paper not footed up, but the figures of which, being added together, amount to $2,839.60. It is very certain that this sum does not represent the value at which the store goods were appraised, because, by the sworn and signed inventory, they were appraised at $1,800. If this was too low an appraisement, it was entirely competent to prove it; but that not having been done, there is no basis upon which we can find that the Auditor and court below were in error in finding the sum of $1,800 to be the proper value of these goods.

The Auditor finds as a fact the store was an old one, kept for many years by the testator, in which were mány goods which had gone out of date and had greatly depreciated in value, and this appears to be a sufficient reason for holding that $1,800 was an adequate valuation, even if the ordinary retail prices had been as the figures in the specific inventory indicated.- The first assignment is not sustained.

Second assignment. — The accountant charged himself, on-the 17th of November, 1877, with the sum of $7,885, being the valuation of 95 shares of Juniata Valley Bank stock at $83 per share. The facts were that the testator held 178 shares of this stock at the time of his death, which were appraised at $17,880, being the par value of the stock.

The institution in which these shares were held was not a corporation but a partnership.- The articles of partnership contained a provision authorizing a majority of the stockholders, upon the death of any member, to purchase the stock or interest of .the deceased member at a valuation to be fixed in the manner pointed out in the articles. This valuation was made and the price fixed at $83 per share. The bank purchased 83 shares at that price, and the accountant charged himself with that value for those shares. This left 95 shares still., in the hands of -the accountant, and these the cashier urged him' to take, at the.same -valuation. He finally consented *423 to do so, and had them transferred to himself at the price of $83 per share. The Auditor finds that this was the full value of the stock at that time, and there is no doubt that the transaction was made in perfect good faith by the accountant without a suspicion of its illegality. He probably failed to take the advice of counsel on the subject, and that was his misfortune. The rule of liability in such cases does not depend in the slightest degree upon the good or bad faith of the trustee. The transaction is voidable at the instance of the cestui que trust, on the ground that it is prohibited by public policy. A trustee cannot thus deal with the trust estate. It would be a waste of time to recur to the authorities. There is no more familiar doctrine in the law than this. The Auditor thought that Lewis v. Ewing, 6 Harr., 313, was not applicable, because that case relate!! to a transfer of stocks, and this was a partnership interest, which the surviving partners had a contract right to buy. This would have been very well, and would have controlled the question, if the remaining partners had exercised their right of purchase,and taken all of the stock. But they took a part only, and the rest of the shares remained with the accountant. They were not his and could not become his by being transferred to his name. They belonged to the estate the same after as before the transfer. The exceptants ask to have the accountant charged with the full appraised value of the shares instead of the price at which he took them. They have a right to make this demand, and their exceptions and assignment of error on this subject are sustained. The accountant must be surcharged, but we have some difficulty in determining in what way and with what amounts, owing to the language of the exceptions taken before the Auditor, and of the assignment of error. There were two exceptions before the Auditor. One was the 3d specific exception, iii the following words: “ III. He should be charged with the full value of Juniata Valley Bank stock as it was appraised.” The other was the 8th specific exception, as follows: “VIII. He should be charged with the appraised and full value of the Juniata Valley Bank stock.” As we understand these exceptions, they contain no demand to charge the accountant with any other than the full appraised value of the stock, which was $100 per share, and of course it would follow that the demand would relate back to the time of the appropriation of the stock by the accountant, to wit, Nov. 17th, 1877, and he should be charged with interest on the amount from that time. Neither of these exceptions asked that he should be charged with dividends after the stock was taken, nor does the second assignment of error. The exceptions and the assignment treat the stock as having been appropriated by the accountant, and *424 ask to charge him with its value. Of course, this regards the accountant as owner and simply demands payment of the proper price. If the exceptants claimed the stock as still belonging to the estate, they should have asked to charge the accountant with all dividends received, and should have required him either to divide the shares among the legatees or sell them at public sale. Failing to do either of these things, they could have petitioned the court for an order to compel him to sell the shares, or could have asked the Auditor, by a proper exception, to surcharge him with the value of the stock as it was at the time of the audit or at some other fixed time. But they did neither of these things. The second exception in the Orphans’ Court to the report of the Auditor does claim that the “Auditor erred in overruling the third exception and in not charging the accountant with the full and actual and present value of 95 shares of Juniata Valley Bank stock and the dividends thereon, and in overruling the eighth exception so far as it relates to Juniata Valley Bank stock, which exceptions are as follows: “III. He should be charged with the full value of Juniata Valley Bank slock as it was appraised.” “VIII. He should be charged with the appraised and full value of the Juniata Valley Bank stock.”

Of course it was not error for the Auditor to refuse to do that which he was not asked to do.

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Bluebook (online)
6 A. 321, 110 Pa. 410, 1885 Pa. LEXIS 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/appeal-of-stewart-and-mcclay-pa-1885.