Bonham v. Bonham

175 S.W.2d 328, 180 Tenn. 364, 16 Beeler 364, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 19
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 1943
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 175 S.W.2d 328 (Bonham v. Bonham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bonham v. Bonham, 175 S.W.2d 328, 180 Tenn. 364, 16 Beeler 364, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 19 (Tenn. 1943).

Opinion

Mb. JtrsTicE G-ailor

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The original hill in this cause was filed in the Chancery Court of Knox County hy the executors of the estate of Walter M. Bonham, deceased, against his heirs, legatees *366 and devisees, seeking the construction of certain items of his will. The record comes to this court on the pleadings and a stipulation of facts. Two of the legatees are minors, for whom a guardian ad litem was appointed, and the chancellor has expressly authorized this guardian to agree to the stipulation.

Walter M. Bonham died on May 14,1940, leaving a will in which he appointed his wife, Jennie K. Bonham and the firm of Green, Webb & Bass of Knoxville, Tennessee, his executors. John W. Green resigned as executor after he was appointed; Webb did not qualify, so that the bill herein was filed by the remaining appointees, the widow, Jennie K. Bonham and Leslie Bass as co-executors.

A summary of the pertinent provisions of the will upon which a construction is sought from this court is as follows :

In Item 3, pecuniary bequests in a maximum amount of $10,000 are made, on condition that the net estate amounts to more than $50,000. The will provides the method for arriving at the net estate, and that it shall not be taken to include life insurance, personal belongings, nor the home place which the testator owned jointly with his wife as tenant by the entirety. The net estate did not include any debts or expenses since provision had been made in Item 1 that they he paid first out of his estate. The executors are allowed time, in their discretion, for the payment of the legacies and they are permitted, if they decide that such course is advisable, to pay the legacies with stock in O. M. McClung and Company using the stock in such payment'at its book and not its market value. The principal part of the personal property in the estate was in C. M. McClung and Company, of which testator was the president and a large stockholder.

*367 By Item 4 of the will, the wife and daughter of the testator were made residuary legatees and devisees. They are each given 25% of the property absolutely and the other 50% is placed in trust, with the income payable to the wife and daughter in equal shares during their joint lives, and upon the death of either, the survivor is to receive the entire income for the remainder of her life. The final sentence of this Item of the will is:

“I authorize and empower my wife and daughter to dispose, by last will and testament, of the property embraced in said respective trusts in such way and manner as they see fit.”

At the time of his death, the testator was indebted in substantial amount tó C. M. McClung and Company, to the Hamilton National Bank and the home was encumbered by a mortgage to the Prudential Insurance Company of America. '

The notes evidencing the debt to C. M. McClung and Company provided that payment might be made out of the dividends accruing on the stock which was. put up as collateral. Except for a comparatively small amount of cash paid by the executors, this debt has been paid by application of dividends which have accrued on the stock since the death of the testator.

In order to release certain life insurance' policies and other stock in C. M. McClung and Company, which were held as collateral for the indebtedness at the Hamilton National Bank, Mrs. Bonham paid the indebtedness to the bank out of the proceeds of life insurance on which she was beneficiary and she has been repaid the amount advanced, by the executors, but without interest.

We think these are the facts necessary to determine questions presented by the assignments of error on this appeal.

*368 The action of the chancellor in adjudging that the indebtedness to the Prudential Insurance Company was a claim against the estate and adjudging that the executors should therefore pay it, is made the first assignment of error by both parties. Since the will was not probated until after Mr. Bonham’s death on May 14, 1940', the administration of the estate is controlled by the provisions of Chapter 175 of the Public Acts of 1939. Pursuant to the provisions of that Act, the executors proceeded to advertise for claims against the estate, the first advertisement appearing in May, 1940. Neither the Prudential Insurance Company nor the widow filed any claim on their indebtedness before May, 1941. It seems clear to us that such failure to file the claim barred its payment by the. personal representatives out of the assets of the estate. The language of the statute, section 3, Chapter 175 of the Public Acts of 1939, is specific and leaves no room for doubt. By that section it is provided that after advertisement, the failure of a creditor to file his claim for a debt alleged to be owing by the estate, whether said claim be due or not due, within a year of the advertisement, bars payment of such claim out of the assets by the personal representative, relieves the representative of any obligation to set up a reserve for the payment of the claim and justifies him in making distribution and closing his administration without regard to it.

Learned counsel for the executors first assigns the finding of the chancellor that the debt was to be paid by the executors, as error, then proceeds to argue on this assignment that it was the testator’s intention to leave the home place kto his widow, free and clear from all encumbrances. The section of the Act of 1939' above *369 cited, which is now the law for the administration of decedent’s estates in Tennessee, makes no exception to the claims which must be filed to bring about their payment out of the assets into the hands of personal representatives, and we see no reason for an exception here. Mrs. Bonham by filing the claim with notice to the necessary parties, might have had an adjudication under the further provisions of this statute, but she failed to do so. It appears that the insurance company refused to file its claim against the estate. We hold, therefore, that since such claim was not filed within the year following the advertisement by the executors, that it is barred so far as its payment by them out of the assets of the estate is concerned. Compare Commerce Union Bank v. Gille spie, 178 Tenn., 179, 188, 156 S. W. (2d), 425.

The first assignment of error of both parties and the only assignment made by the guardian ad litem, is therefore sustained.

The second error assigned by the executors is based on the chancellor’s finding that the value of the net estate exceeded $50,000, and that it made no difference whether the stock owned by testator in C. M. McClung and Company was appraised at its book or at its market value. Under this assignment, it is insisted that the chancellor should not have fixed the value of the net estate, but rather, should have laid down a rule or formula by which the executors might have fixed the value at the time of their distribution to the beneficiaries.

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Bluebook (online)
175 S.W.2d 328, 180 Tenn. 364, 16 Beeler 364, 1943 Tenn. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bonham-v-bonham-tenn-1943.