Case of M'Nair's Appeal

4 Rawle 148, 1833 Pa. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 11, 1833
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 4 Rawle 148 (Case of M'Nair's Appeal) 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
Case of M'Nair's Appeal, 4 Rawle 148, 1833 Pa. LEXIS 15 (Pa. 1833).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

It is proper to observe, that the contest In this case is between the executors and legatees, and not with the creditors of the testator. And although Lord Thürlow, in Saddler v. Hobbs, 2 Bro. Ch. Rep. 117, seemed to think it an odd distinction that a creditor should have a right to charge an executor when legatees should not, and Mr. Toller, in his treatise on the Law of Executors and Administrators, 484, has said, that it appeared to rest on no authority, its existence is recognised in 2 Fonb. 83-84, and acted upon in several cases. In Gibbs v. Herring, Pre. Ch. 49, the distinction is taken, and the decision of the case professes to be founded upon it. The court say, “ the executrix shall not make it good to the plaintiffs who were to have a share of the estate by the custom of the province of York, but against a creditor she should.” In Churchhill v. Lady Hobson. 1 P. Wms., 243, the distinction is expressly taken by Lord Chancellor Harcourt, and given by him as the reason and ground of his decision in that case. Lord Northington in Westley v. Clark, 1 Eden. 357, S. C. in note 1 P. Wms., 83, if he does not sustain the distinction, decided that two executors who joined a third in giving a receipt for money received by him alone, should not be liable to the legatees for it, which is directly contrary to what Lord Thurlow considered was the rule as to executors. And in Bacon v. Bacon, 5 Ves. 331, an executor who lived in town gave twelve hundred pounds to his co-executor to pay a list of debts made out and represented by the co-executor to be owing by the testator in the country, where he resided at the time of his death, was discharged from a loss of more than four hundred pounds of the money, arising from the misapplication and insolvency of the co-executor. It appeared there, that the co-executor lived in the country, where he said the debts were owing, and where in fact debts of considerable amount were known to exist by the executor giving the money ; that the co-executor had been the confidential agent and attorney of the testator in his lifetime for many years, and had been entrusted with the receipt and payment of large sums of money by him. And as a direct and binding authority upon this court, we have the decision of it made as early as 1788, in the case of Brown’s Appeal, 1 Dall. 311, where one executor, who had received money belonging to the estate of the testator, and paid it over to his co-executor, who became insolvent, [155]*155was held not to be answerable to legatees, although, as the court say, he would have been chargeable to creditors, if there had been any.

In the case of Gibbs v. Herring, it appeared that the testator in his lifetime had entrusted J. S. with several sums of money, to dispose of at interest for him, and died while part of it was still in his hands undisposed of. The executrix, however, instead of taking the money out of the hands of J. S., directed him to put it out at interest, which he accordingly did, on security that proved deficient, and yet she was held not- liable for the loss of it to the legatees. The resemblance of this case to the one under consideration is, as it appears to me, very striking. The confidence of the testator in the goodness of his security for the debt due upon the bond, with the accruing interest, shown in the one case by his refusing to receive the principal, saying he “ did not wish it paid during his life, the interest was all that he required,” is fully equivalent to the confidence of the testator evinced in the other case, in the integrity and responsibility of J. S., by entrusting and leaving his money in his hands to be put to interest on such security as he might think good. Beside, executors have always been permitted to exercise their discretion upon such subjects ; for Lord-keeper Harcouiit in Brown v. Litton, 1 P. Wms. 141, lays it down, that where an executor puts out money, though without the indemnity of a decree, upon a real security which there was no reason then to suspect, but afterwards such security proves bad, he is not accountable for the loss.

Lord Redesdale, who was disposed to hold a pretty tight rein upon executors, was unwilling to lay down the rule positively that there was no case where the strictness of the law would charge a man as executor as to creditors, in which a court of equity would not charge him also as to legatees. “ Legatees,” he said, “ were bound by the terms of the will; creditors were not so : and therefore in many cases executors would be discharged as against legatees, though not as against creditors.” 2 Schoales & Lef. 239.

An opinion seems to have prevailed at one time, and perhaps, with some at almost all times, that it was an inflexible rule to charge executors jointly with all moneys for which they had given joint receipts, upon the ground, that it was unnecessary for them to join in such receipts unless they intended that they should be charged jointly, that is, to be responsible for each other; but that in the case of trustees, the one who actually received the money was alone to be charged, although all had joined in giving the receipt, because it was necessary that all should unite in the execution of the trust where it was joint. Lord Eldon thought this a very intelligible rule, but admits that it had been broken down by decisions, in which the rule that every case was to be determined upon its own circumstances, was adopted; whether it was wise to do so, he however, thought might be reasonably doubted. 16 Ves. 479.

Here we have the admission of an advocate of this first rule, as he seemed to think it was, tjiat its inflexibility no longqc exists, but [156]*156has yielded to another rule, that every case must be decided upon its own peculiar circumstances. Indeed it may perhaps be somewhat doubtful which of these rules was first established, for Gibbs v. Herring, in which the latter is adopted and applied, is one of the earliest reported cases that we have on this subject. The former is undoubtedly, as Lord Eldo.v observes, a very intelligible rule, and one too that would probably in most cases be of easy application, but the reasonableness of it may be very questionable. I confess that I am unable to persuade myself that the reason assigned for making executors responsible for moneys which they never received, merely because they joined with a co-executor who had received it, in signing a receipt, is in any way sufficient, or that it is true in point of fact. 1 do not believe that in doing so, they ever think of making themselves answerable for the money where it has been received by their co-executor. On the contrary I believe that it is done, either because they conceive it to be their duty to do so, as in the case of joint trustees, or do it from a desire to satisfy the payer of the money, who may not think he has got a good acquittance or discharge from his obligation unless signed b^ all the executors.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Rawle 148, 1833 Pa. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-of-mnairs-appeal-pa-1833.