Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. McRae

183 P.2d 385, 81 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1016
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 26, 1947
DocketCiv. 7338
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 183 P.2d 385 (Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. McRae) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n v. McRae, 183 P.2d 385, 81 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1016 (Cal. Ct. App. 1947).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The Bank of America National Trust and Savings Association, as executor of the estate of Alexander Bell McRae, deceased, and also in its corporate capacity, brought suit against the defendant upon four promissory notes due to the estate, and upon an indebtedness due to the bank. Said deceased guaranteed payment, before his death, of said notes to the extent of $10,670, which were originally payable to the bank and renewed in the name of the executor of the estate after the claims were allowed. The defendant, who is a son of the deceased and a legatee under his will, assigned to the bank all his interest in his father’s estate to secure payments of said indebtedness. The complaint also asked to foreclose said lien and to sell the defendant’s interest in the estate to satisfy the lien.

The defendant answered the complaint denying the material allegations thereof, except that the execution of the notes was acknowledged, but a lack of consideration therefor was pleaded. In an amended cross-complaint the defendant charged the executor with mismanagement and failure to account, in the estate, for rents, issues and profits derived. The defendant also alleged conveyance to the executor of two lots in Roseville as security for payment of another $6,000 note, and failure to account therefor to the estate. The cross-complaint demands an accounting as trustee of said two lots. An answer to the cross-complaint denies the material allegations thereof and alleges settlements in the estate of annual accounts of the executor covering all the disputed items relied upon by the defendant in this case, which became final and conclusive thereof since no appeal was taken from such orders.

Alexander Bell McRae died testate in Placer County June 3, 1932, possessed of real and personal property of the appraised value of $132,500. The deceased left surviving him a widow, Maggie McRae, the defendant Clarence A. McRae, an adult son, and several other heirs and legatees. The will was admitted to probate June 27, 1932, and the plaintiff, Bank of America, was appointed and qualified as executor of *4 the will. Ten detailed annual accounts were filed and settled by the probate court. The last one was filed and settled after the commencement of this action. No objections were filed to any of the accounts, except the tenth one, to which the defendant, Clarence A. McRae, only, filed objections, which were overruled, and the account was formally settled April 29, 1946.

In 1931, the defendant, Clarence A. McRae, borrowed money from said bank, for which he executed and delivered three promissory notes as follows: January 7, 1931, for $6,000, due October 7, 1931; June 30, 1931, for $4,100, due December 30, 1931; and July 16, 1931, for $950, due October 13, 1931. These notes were payable in monthly or quarterly installments, at stipulated interest of 7 per cent per annum. Each note provided for payment of reasonable attorney’s fees, in the event of the necessity of bringing suit to enforce payment. The notes were not paid, but were subsequently renewed. October 6, 1931, defendant’s father, Alexander Bell McRae, executed and delivered to the bank a written guaranty of payment of his son’s said notes in the specified aggregate sum of $10,670, together with interest. After the appointment of said bank as executor of the will, claims were duly approved by the probate judge and filed in said estate for the amounts of said notes on the theory that the estate became liable therefor as a guarantor. December 5, 1932, the defendant, Clarence A. McRae, who became an heir to one-tenth of his father’s estate, executed and delivered to the executor a written assignment of his interest in the estate to secure payment of said three notes in the aggregate sum of $10,670 and accrued interest. On July 12, 1940, the notes were renewed by the defendant and made payable to the bank “as Executor of the Last Will of A. B. McRae, deceased,” on account of the liability of the estate as guarantor thereof. Neither the principal nor interest of said notes was paid.

May 17,1944, this suit was commenced. The complaint was couched in five counts. The first three counts are based on the amounts due upon said three notes, together with accrued interest and reasonable attorney’s fees. The fourth count is based on another note executed by C. A. McRae, dated March 4, 1941, payable to the executor of the estate, for the sum of $4,204.57, together with interest and counsel fees. The fifth count alleges the lien on defendant’s interest in the estate by virtue of said assignment, which is attached" to the complaint as exhibit “A” and made a part thereof. The fifth *5 count seeks to foreclose the lien and to sell said interest in the estate to satisfy the first three notes. The defendant’s answer to the complaint denies the material allegations thereof, and affirmatively asserts that the notes were given without consideration and that the executor was guilty of mismanagement of the estate to the detriment of the defendant and the other heirs. In a cross-complaint filed by the defendant it is charged that he and his wife, Mae L. McRae, conveyed to the bank, as executor of the estate on June 19, 1933, Lots 3 and 5 of Block 4, in Roseville, in trust, for the benefit of the estate, one of which lots was subsequently sold by the executor for the sum of $5,000, and that the grantee has failed to account for said proceeds of sale or for the rents, issues and profits of said lots. The cross-complaint prays that plaintiff be allowed no more than the sum of $11,050, in payment of the notes due to the estate, and that the executor be required to render an accounting of the properties and of the rents, issues and profits therefrom.

Plaintiff’s motion to strike out portions of the answer and cross-complaint was denied. A demurrer to said pleadings was also overruled. The cross-complaint was answered, denying the essential allegations thereof, and affirmatively alleging the entire transaction, the probating of the estate, including the formal annual accounts containing all of said transactions, and approval thereof, from which orders no appeal was taken, and that the defendant and cross-compláinant is thereby estopped from now challenging any of said transactions in this suit.

The court adopted findings favorable to the plaintiff upon every essential issue. The court specifically determined that the executor had fully accounted for all the property of the estate, and that the settlement of the annual accounts estopped the defendant and cross-complainant from disputing the items therein contained. Regarding the conveyance to the executor of the two Roseville lots, the court found that they were merely conveyed to the defendant and his wife by Alexander Bell McRae, in his lifetime, in trust to enable them to give temporary security for a loan which they desired to procure; that said lots did not belong to the defendant and his wife, and that they were reconveyed by a deed intended to be absolute in effect to the executor of the estate on June 19, 1933, as the property of the estate; that the value of said lots was then $6,000, and that the executor subsequently sold one *6 of said lots for $5,000, which sale was approved by the probate court, and the proceeds thereof duly accounted for in the estate, and that the other lot was duly inventoried and accounted for and still remains as the property of said estate.

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Bluebook (online)
183 P.2d 385, 81 Cal. App. 2d 1, 1947 Cal. App. LEXIS 1016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-america-national-trust-savings-assn-v-mcrae-calctapp-1947.