Bigelow v. Estate of Edward Lathrop

13 Conn. Super. Ct. 400, 13 Conn. Supp. 400, 1945 Conn. Super. LEXIS 67
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1945
DocketFile 69556
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 Conn. Super. Ct. 400 (Bigelow v. Estate of Edward Lathrop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigelow v. Estate of Edward Lathrop, 13 Conn. Super. Ct. 400, 13 Conn. Supp. 400, 1945 Conn. Super. LEXIS 67 (Colo. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

The plaintiff, as sole surviving executrix on the will of her late deceased husband, Edward Lathrop Ballard, filed her final account in the Probate Court for the District of Ridgefield. Among the items for which allowance was sought therein was one in the sum of $131,408.65, representing fees and disbursements of counsel paid by her for legal services in connection with the administration of the estate, inclusive of certain questions of taxation and litigation incident thereto. The court of probate corrected the account by disallowing the named sum and allowing in lieu thereof the amount of $75,000, and by an order and decree made on September 15, 1944, allowed the account as so corrected and adjusted. Claiming to be aggrieved by this action plaintiff instituted an appeal to this court.

There is and can be no question that the particular legal services rendered to the executrix were necessary in the proper administration and conservation of the assets of the estate, nor that, under such circumstances, the executrix is entitled to allowance in her final account for any reasonable expenditures made by her for that purpose. The only question involved in the appeal, therefore, is whether the sum for which she seeks allowance is the equivalent of the fair value of such services and if it is in excess of same, then what amount conforms thereto.

Before discussing that matter it is necessary to take note of another which affects the power of the court to pass judgment in this proceeding. The appellee again presses upon the court’s attention the claim underlying a motion to erase made at the *402 outset of the trial. This is that the plaintiff in her capacity as executrix is not aggrieved by the action of the court of probate, but, if at all, personally, and that, in consequence, the appeal should have been taken by her in her individual capacity. This misconceives the relation of an executor or administrator toward the estate which he administers and the procedure that has developed over the years consistently therewith. Since, however, the contention is seriously renewed, the following brief comments are called for, in the hope that the estate may be spared further litigation by reason of any misapprehension on that account. It is true that expenses incurred by the administrator on an estate or the executor named in a will in adminis' tering his decedent’s estate are his personal obligations so far as the person who furnishes them is concerned. Chambers vs. Robbins, 28 Conn. 544, 550; Dillaby vs. Wilcox, 60 id. 71, 75, 25 Am. St. Rep. 299, 13 L.R.A. 643. In this State if he fails to pay for them such creditors are permitted to institute suit against him in his representative capacity under the provi' sions of section 5640 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930. If in such an action, the court finds that the claim is a “just one and one which ought to be equitably paid out of such estate, judgment may be rendered in favor of such claimant, to be paid wholly out of the estate. ...” Hewitt vs. Beattie, 106 Conn. 602, 612, 613; Beattie vs. Hewitt, 114 id. 689, 692; American Surety Co. of New York vs. McMullen, 129 id. 575, 582. It is preferable, however, that he personally pay creditors who hold claims against him for expenses as executor or ad' ministrator rather than to compel them to resort to the courts to collect what may then be owed them. Beattie vs. Hewitt, supra, p. 692. The foregoing, of course, has reference to the means at the disposal of the creditor to obtain payment of an indebtedness owing to the personal representative to him. An executor or administrator, however, has but one means of being reimbursed for expenditures made out of his personal funds for services to aid him in the performance of his official duties. That is by exhibiting and seeking allowance for them in his final account. In so doing, his status is not that of a creditor of the estate, but of one seeking indemnity which, in turn will be extended him only in the proper exercise of the discretion of the court of probate. Bohun vs. Kinasz, 124 Conn. 543, 548. The account in which the personal representative seeks allow' anee for his expenditures is not between him, individually, and the estate, but between him in his representative capacity and *403 the estate, and if reimbursement be denied him it is refused to him in such representative capacity and in that status and out of such relationship toward the estate, and not personally, he is pecuniarily aggrieved and thus entitled to appeal. The case of Ekdahl vs. Wessman, 127 Conn 141, 129 A.L.R. 920, upon which appellee principally relies, is not in point and requires no discussion. The contention made that the appeal taken by plaintiff as sole surviving executrix is subject to dismissal or erasure because in that status it does not appear that she is pecuniarily aggrieved is without basis in the law of this State.

The item of $131,408.65 in the account represented the total of sums paid by the executrix to the law firm of Conklin & Bentley of New York City, for services in connection with the administration of the estate and litigation concerning estate taxes. This included the successful resistance of the contention of the New York Department of Taxation and Finance that the deceased, when he died, was a resident of the State of New York within the meaning of the pertinent statute and that his estate was hence subject to taxation in that State; the adjustment of the Federal inheritance tax and that of the succession tax due the State of Connecticut where Mr. Ballard was found to be domiciled at the time of his death; and the successful defense of an action of foreclosure accompanied with a claim for a personal judgment against the estate and the deceased’s wife in the sum of $80,000.

The other part of the legal services was necessitated by the demand of the United States Commissioner of Internal Revenue for a deficiency Federal inheritance tax in the sum of $649,-615.35. The estate tax return filed by the executors on October 26, 1938, showed a gross estate of $1,935,704.50 on the basis of which the computed tax was in total $506,784.01, of which $399,853.11 was paid to the United States Collector of Internal Revenue in Connecticut and $99,596.35, to the Connecticut State Tax Commissioner, the difference of $7,334.25 being a credit for a gift tax. When Mr. Ballard died he owned 33,157 shares of stock in Merchants Fire Assurance Corporation which, valued in the return at $36 per share, totalled $1,193,652. In the month of December, 1937, on the last day of which he died, he made gifts -to divers persons aggregating 3,600 shares of the stock of that corporation. Over the years preceding his demise, he had created a number of trusts for the benefit of his wife, children and other next of *404 kin or employees. The internal revenue agent, on June 9, 1939, claimed that the gift transfers of stock mentioned as, also, the corpus of three of such trusts should be included in the gross estate and were subject to taxation under the provisions of section 302 (c) and (d) of the Revenue Act of 1926 — the gifts mentioned at a total of $140,400 and the principals of the trusts (the so-called “Ross”, “Falcon”, “Crehore”, and “Children’s”) at a total of $1,183,703.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Conn. Super. Ct. 400, 13 Conn. Supp. 400, 1945 Conn. Super. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigelow-v-estate-of-edward-lathrop-connsuperct-1945.