Bechtold v. Read

49 N.J. Eq. 111
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 N.J. Eq. 111 (Bechtold v. Read) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bechtold v. Read, 49 N.J. Eq. 111 (N.J. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Bird, V. C.

In case the administration of an estate in the orphans court' be imperfect, or incomplete, and serious complications are presented, it is proper for the parties seeking relief to ask the aid of this court. It may be said that in case an injunction be necessary for the protection of the interests involved, there is no-exception to the jurisdiction of this court, whatever may be the-progress -towards final settlement in the inferior tribunal. In the case now under consideration it appears that the testator died, in November, 1869. In and by his last will he gave and devised to his wife the house in which he then lived, besides the-right which she would be entitled to in his real estate as bis-widow. He gave and devised all the residue of his real and personal estate to the children of his brothers and sisters, and to Nathan S. Read and Mary A. Read in equal shares. After the-death of the widow, that portion of his estate to which she was-entitled was to be divided as the residue was directed to be.

He authorized his executors to sell and convey any of his real estate at any time within five years. Henry Bechtold, one of the complainants, and Nathan S. Read and Wallace Lippincott,. two of the defendants, were named as executors. They proved the will and took upon themselves the burden imposed thereby.. [113]*113The inventory which they filed shows personal estate amounting to $8,525.50, of which $7,834 were a bond and mortgage given to the testator by Nathan S. Read, one of the said executors. It is important to remember that this bond and mortgage bore date in April, 1869, as the testator died in the following November. At the time of his death the testator was seized of considerable real estate in and about the town of Riverside, situate at the junction of the Rancocas creek with the Delaware river. This real estate he had caused to be surveyed and plotted out and mapped. There were in all several hundred lots. The testator had made efforts to sell these lands but had not been very successful. The market value of a large number of them was quite inconsiderable.

At the time of his death the testator was indebted on several judgments, the amount of -which has not been very clearly established, but which was about $3,736. His other liabilities did not exceed $2,150. Thus, it appears that all the duties which devolved upon the executors, or all the difficulties which they had to encounter and dispose of, were, making sales of the personal property, collecting the said bond' due from one of their number, disposing of the real estate, discharging the said judgments and the other liabilities and the expenses of administering the estate, before the legatees could legally claim anything from them. Nothing is more manifest from these statements than that the obligations which the law imposed upon them were very few, very simple and easily comprehended by the plainest business man, and capable of being discharged in a very short period of time with very slight cost.

It should be distinctly noted and constantly kept in mind that within a year — that is, during the year 1870 — after the death of the testator the executors come to the conclusion that the estate was insolvent. However, notwithstanding this, no application was made by them to the orphans court with the view of a settlement of the estate by proceedings as in cases of insolvency until the year 1888, eighteen years after they became satisfied, according to their own testimony, that such was the condition of the estate which they had undertaken to manage, not only for [114]*114creditors but for legatees. The fact that the will gave them five years in which to dispose of the real estate offers not the slightest obstruction to their proceeding under the statute to declare the estate insolvent.

The will directed them to pay all debts as soon as they conveniently could. As intimated, there were several judgments unpaid which had been obtained against the testator in his lifetime. Levies had been made upon the personal property and upon the homestead of the deceased. But notwithstanding these things, instead of endeavoring to comply with the directions of the will, and of the statute, in such matters, they seemed to be quite, if not entirely, indifferent to their solemn obligations and to the rights of others, until the year 1872, when they offered a portion of the lands named for sale. They then became indifferent until the following year, when certain other lots were offered for sale. The fact that the sheriff sold the personal property which they had inventoried, and the homestead of the testator which he had devised to his widow, was not sufficient to spur them to reasonable diligence. In the years 1872 and 1873 a largo number of lots were sold and conveyed; in the latter year a number were conveyed without any consideration received therefor. The reason given for making title without compensation is that they tried in vain to get bids therefor.

In 1875 one of the legatees cited the executors to account. An effort was made by one of the executors to that end, but before his work was complete the pressure which moved him was withdrawn and his efforts ceased. Nothing further appears to have been accomplished in the way of a successful administration of this estate, or even undertaking, until the year 1885, when another citation was issued and an account was prepared by Wallace Lippincott and presented to the orphans court, which shows a balance in his favor of $524. It is this account, filed at this late day, which is sought to be a bar to the action of this court. In addition to what has already been presented, it need only be stated that in 1888 these executors actually commenced proceedings in the same orphans court for the purpose of having this estate declared insolvent, and proceeded so far as to offer a [115]*115large number of lots of land for sale. In order to show the weakness of the objection to the jurisdiction of this court, it is sufficient to allege the necessity of some tribunal which has the power of controlling the action of these executors by injunction, taking cognizance of the case. Further amplification is unnecessary.

But it has been alleged with more than ordinary zeal that the complainants have been guilty of laches, in delaying to file their bill for nearly twenty years after the death of the testator. A complete and unmistakable answer to this defence is found in the facts above given. Perhaps it ought to appear in this connection that the complainants were for all this period of time nonresidents. At the hearing it seemed reasonable to me that the accident of locality in a foreigu state could not reasonably be invoked as an excuse for laches, if any were demanded in this case; but the very highest authority makes it manifest that I was mistaken. Taylor v. Benham, 5 How. 278, 326. In the application of this doctrine of laches when the rights of oestuis que trust were involved and the trustee is charged with fraud, the latitude extended in favor of the oestuis que trust is very much more liberal than in other cases where the same defence is aclied upon. Taylor v. Benham, supra; Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. 563; Decouche v. Savetier, 3 Johns. Ch. 190, 216; S. C., 8 Am. Dec. 478, and notes. But there is a modification of this view applicable to the State of New York. See Kane v. Bloodgood, 7 Johns. Ch. 90.

It seems to me that the doctrine of laches should never be applied to oestuis que trust

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.J. Eq. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bechtold-v-read-njch-1891.