Capuzzi's Estate

158 A. 555, 306 Pa. 27, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 627
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 30, 1931
DocketAppeal, 115
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 158 A. 555 (Capuzzi's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capuzzi's Estate, 158 A. 555, 306 Pa. 27, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 627 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Kephaet,

Queeny R. Capuzzi, appellant, and his brother Frank had been partners as Capuzzi Brothers. Frank died January 22,1927, and appellant was named as executor of his estate. He was also the liquidating partner. As executor, he filed an account wherein he charged as an item due the estate the value of decedent’s share in the partnership as fixed by the appraisers. On exceptions, the court below surcharged him approximately $5,000 for this interest and removed him as executor; the sum surcharged included a share of the profits earned by the business since his brother’s death. This amount was fully paid to the administrators appointed to succeed appellant.

In the list of accounts receivable filed in the amended account of the executor there was an item of $10,000, being a claim in litigation against the American Coke *30 Corporation. Some months after the final award had been paid, or on November 22, 1928, appellant, as surviving partner, received from the American Coke Corporation the sum of $9,653.81 in liquidation of that claim. Appellant refused to turn over any of this sum to the estate, claiming that it had entered into the final partnership settlement adjudicated by the orphans’ court. Whereupon, the executors petitioned for a writ of attachment for contempt; the orphans’ court found the estate was entitled to a share of this fund that had been omitted from the final settlement, and awarded the writ.

On appeal we reversed this order in an opinion by our late Brother Sadler, Capuzzi’s Est., 298 Pa. 71, where a more detailed statement of many of the facts may be found. In that opinion it was stated: “No petition to review the earlier proceeding was presented, nor was any effort made to have the surviving partner state an account as liquidator of the firm’s affairs. Ordinarily, the latter course is the proper way in which to determine the amount owing to a deceased member. In the instant case, the executor, who was also the survivor, brought the interest in the partnership into his account in the orphans’ court, thus giving it power to examine, and, if necessary, restate, as it did: Brown’s App., 89 Pa. 139; Maloney’s Est., 233 Pa. 614...... He was directed to discharge the balance within fifteen days of the final order, and did so. In November, when the coke company paid, he was no longer executor, and any funds then received were in the capacity of liquidating partner. There was no command that he pay any additional share of amounts which might be received for the firm subsequent to the adjudication...... If a mistake has been made, and items omitted with which the executor should have been specifically charged, this cannot be remedied in the manner here attempted, against one who is no longer executor, and who is not in default in performance of the order made......Wheth *31 er this debt was considered in fixing the balance due decedent from the partnership estate, or omitted by error, cannot be determined in the present attempt to attach for contempt. If the account can be lawfully reopened, and a decree then made including the item in question, or if the liquidating partner, who received the amount after ceasing to be executor, is compelled to file a new account as representive of the firm, and a balance be then found due, the right of Frank’s estate to any part thereof may be properly passed upon.”

When the record was returned to the court below, the administrators petitioned for a citation to show cause why a review of the restated account should not be made, and the sum in controversy included therein. The answer denied the jurisdiction of the orphans’ court to meddle in the settlement of partnership affairs. This objection would have been formidable (Blumenthal’s Est., 227 Pa. 268; Hazard’s Est., 253 Pa. 447) had appellant not brought deceased’s interest into his account as executor. This we decided in the former appeal, and it is now too late to raise any question concerning it.

The second and third objections are not without merit. Was this item considered in the restated account, and, if not, should not the account be reopened to all related matters to determine how much, if any, money should be paid to the estate on account of the Coke Corporation claim?

It is difficult to understand why this claim was not considered in the final order since the court was adjudicating partnership matters. Attached to the amended account, was an itemized list of accounts receivable; in it this claim against the American Coke Corporation appears as follows: “Claim against the American Coke Corporation of approximately $10,-000.00; the interest of Frank Capuzzi Estate being 40% or $4,000.00.” Appellee and counsel knew of this, as did the court below. In the opinion giving reasons *32 for removing the executor, the court comments on the claim against this Corporation as follows: “It appears from the restated account that......forty per cent of a $10,000.00 judgment against the American Coke Company Corporation......” was not included in the inventory and appraisement. The fact that it was not included (though a partnership matter) was one of the causes for removing appellant as executor. The court below, in discussing the petition for review, states that the judgment in question was not included in the partnership assets, that the omission “was a mistake.” This finding would ordinarily be conclusive and we shall so regard it.

But in concluding to open and review the final adjudication, the error was that the order did not take all items in the account relating to the Coke Company claim. In placing a value on the partnership interest with which to surcharge the executor, the court below used the financial statement of the bookkeeper made January 2, 1927. Appellant should be given an opportunity to explain and modify any items in this statement which would become prejudicial if this order of the court below admitting the coke claim is to stand. The Coke Company claim was made up of a number of claims for merchandise sold by the partnership to laborers of the Coke Corporation, payment of which was secured by the latter company. The customary place for such charges would be in accounts receivable unless transferred to another account when reduced to judgment or charged off in profit and loss, neither of which appears in the statement. As the item accounts receivable in the financial statement was much larger than the disputed claim, there is reason for appellant’s belief that the Coke Company claim was included in the final adjudication. The following statement of facts shows the error in excluding other items relating to this claim.

In the financial statement were listed as assets, — cash in bank, petty cash, inventory, accounts receivable, fur *33 niture, fixtures, delivery equipment, $33,108.90; less accounts payable $5,988.97, or a net capital account of $27,119.93. To this the court added the profits accruing since Prank’s death, $9,519.21, or a total of $36,639.14. Prom this was deducted $2,675.33, a loss arising from Store No. 2, which left a net partnership value of $33,-963.81. Forty per cent, or the estate’s share, was $13,-585.52, less Prank’s personal account $893.95, or $12,691.57. This was the sum fixed as the value of the partnership interest and ordered to be and was paid by the appellant as executor.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 555, 306 Pa. 27, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capuzzis-estate-pa-1931.