Baldwin v. Taplin

34 A.2d 117, 113 Vt. 291, 1943 Vt. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 5, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 34 A.2d 117 (Baldwin v. Taplin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Taplin, 34 A.2d 117, 113 Vt. 291, 1943 Vt. LEXIS 171 (Vt. 1943).

Opinion

Sherburne, J.

It appears from the findings of fact that M. M. Taplin died intestate on June 29, 1931, leaving a widow, Susie R. *293 Taplin, and a son, Charles R. Taplin, an only child. Soon after-wards Charles R. Taplin was appointed administrator of the estate. He served in that capacity until he resigned the trust early in 1937. On January 27, 1937, the plaintiff was appointed and qualified as administrator de bonis non, and is now serving in that capacity. The chancellor finds that at the date of his death the intestate was solvent in fact, and that on August 30, 1940, the estate was insolvent in fact and has since so remained. Among the assets in the estate, and so inventoried by Charles R. Taplin as administrator, was an undivided half interest in'the Eldon M. LaClair and Estella M. LaClair note and mortgage, dated May 20, 1929. The other half interest therein was owned by Susie R. Taplin. The estate’s one-half interest in this note and mortgage is the subject of this litigation. On August 15, 1931, Susie R. Taplin paid M. M. Tapi in’s funeral bill in the sum of $453.50. It did not appear that Charles R. Taplin requested this payment, but the payment was approved and ratified by him as administrator. On October 10, 1931, Susie R. Taplin loaned Charles R. Taplin, administrator, $100.00. This money was loaned for the purpose of paying taxes on real estate of the Taplin estate, and was so used. On October 11, 1932, she loaned him as administrator $200.00, and on October 19, 1932, she loaned him $75.00. These last two sums were expended by him in the payment of debts owed by him as administrator or by the estate. The chancellor states that he is unable to find precisely what debts were paid or what the nature of the same was. None of these four items, aggregating $828.50, appears in the administration accounts. These advances and loans were due to the fact that the estate was short of ready cash. On May 10, 1934, Susie R. Taplin called Charles R. Taplin’s attention to her payment of the funeral bill and the three loans, and demanded payment. In response to this demand he, as administrator, assigned to her the one-half interest of the estate in the LaClair note and mortgage then amounting to $747.30. This assignment was made by him and received by her as payment, either in full or in part, of her foregoing claims. This was the only repayment ever made to her. Charles R. Taplin never applied to the probate court for leave to borrow money or to assign to Susie R. Taplin the one-half interest in the note and mortgage. The chancellor finds that the assignment was made and received in good faith. No book *294 keeping entry of this transaction was then made, and the only account ever made of it appears in an interim account filed in the probate court on June 25, 1935. No hearing was had on this account until August 30, 1940. On that date, after having given the usual statutory notice by publication, the probate court held a hearing upon the accounts of Charles R. Taplin. The defendants Florence G. Taplin and Gilbert W. Groom had no actual notice of this hearing and did not attend. Upon the hearing the probate court found that the one-half interest of the estate in the LaClair note and mortgage was of the value of $845.00, and was assigned without consideration and should be an asset of the estate, and found a total shortage in Charles R. Taplin’s accounts of $12,219.14, which was ordered to be turned over to the plaintiff. Susie R. Taplin died on December 23, 1935, leaving a substantial estate, which had been duly administered and closed before the bringing of this proceeding. Since May 10, 1934, she received $67.17 principal and $102.83 interest on the entire LaClair note and mortgage. On October 15, 1935, she assigned the note and mortgage to the defendant'"Florence G. Taplin without consideration, and since that date the said Florence has received $285.99 principal and $216.37 interest thereon. Florence was then the wife of Charles R. Taplin. She divorced him in 1939. On December 3, 1938, Florence assigned the note and mortgage to defendant Groom, her father, without consideration, and he has since received thereon $237.05 principal and $149.70 interest. On June 15, 1942, the sum due on the entire note and mortgage was principal $904.40 and interest $20.09. The plaintiff had no actual knowledge of the LaClair note and mortgage until March 1, 1940. He is chargeable with knowledge since the date of his appointment as administrator d. b. n. on January 27, 1937. In April, 1940, he demanded of the defendant Florence G. Taplin a return of the note and mortgage and an accounting of the sums which she and defendant Groom had severally received therefrom. This demand was refused. No part has ever been returned to the estate. At all times material all of the parties; except the plaintiff, knew that M. M. Taplin owned an undivided half of the note and mortgage, and that the same passed into his estate and was later assigned by Charles R. Taplin, Administrator, to Susie R. Taplin. Charles R. Taplin is bankrupt. The plaintiff has less than $100.00 in his hands to pay debts and *295 expenses of administration of several thousand dollars. If the one-half interest in the note and mortgage is recovered the avails will pay the current debts of the estate in part only. The chancellor finds that the defendants were not prejudiced by the failure of the plaintiff to bring this suit sooner.

The bill of complaint seeks to have the assignment of the estate’s half interest in the note and mortgage set aside. The decree allows against the value of the estate’s half interest in the note and mortgage of $747.30 on May 10, 1934, credits of $453.50 for funeral expenses paid by Susie R. Taplin and the sum of $100.00 advanced by her for the payment of taxes, and finds that on May 10, 1934, Susie R. Taplin was overpaid in the sum of $194.80, and that to this extent the transfer was a breach of trust. To this sum $97.62 interest to September 18, 1942, the date of the decree, is added, making a total of $292.42 to account for, and the one-half interest in the note and mortgage is impressed with a trust to secure its payment. The case is here upon exceptions by the plaintiff and upon exceptions by the defendants Taplin and Groom.

The defendants contend that, because of the payment of the funeral expenses and of the loans to the administrator, all totaling $828.50, the estate was enriched to that extent, and because the value of the one-half interest in the note and mortgage was only $747.30, the estate got more than it gave, and that on equitable principles the estate is not now entitled to recover any part of the note and mortgage. If this were a case where the court of chancery had jurisdiction to determine the propriety of the funeral expenses and of the uses to which the loaned money was put, there might be a basis for such a claim, but under our statutes the probate court is given plenary and exclusive jurisdiction in the matter of the settlement of estates, and the jurisdiction of the court of chancery in such matters is not original but special and limited, and only in aid of the probate court when the powers of that court are inadequate. Smith v. White Estate, 108 Vt 473, 479, 188 A 901; Mathews v. Drew, 106 Vt 245, 247, 172 A 638, and cases cited.

An administrator is a representative of limited authority.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McKnight v. Rice, Hoppner, Brown & Brunner
678 P.2d 1330 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1984)
Kusserow v. Blue Cross-Blue Shield Plan
437 A.2d 1114 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1981)
In Re Wright
310 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1973)
Bennett v. Hibernia Bank
305 P.2d 20 (California Supreme Court, 1956)
In Re: Will of Prudenzano
68 A.2d 704 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1949)
Probate Court v. American Fidelity Co.
35 A.2d 495 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
34 A.2d 117, 113 Vt. 291, 1943 Vt. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-taplin-vt-1943.