Commonwealth v. Barnitz

9 Watts 252
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 15, 1840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 9 Watts 252 (Commonwealth v. Barnitz) 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
Commonwealth v. Barnitz, 9 Watts 252 (Pa. 1840).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Kennedy, J.

This action is founded upon an administration bond, the condition of which is alleged to have been broken by the defendant in his having refused to pay over to William Hymes, for whose use this action was brought, a certain portion of the personal estate, late of Francis Hymes, deceased, bequeathed by him in his last will and testament to his executors' for the benefit of his daughter Salome. The bequest is couched in the following terms, to wit: “Item. I give to my daughter Salome the equal one-sixth part of the remainder of my estate, in part of which I give unto her the house and part of the lot of No. 2Ó1, &c., to be part of her legacy. The remainder that will be coming to her, it is my will that it be put out on interest, and that she have the interest thereof yearly during her natural life, and that after her decease all shall come to her children; and it is my will that if my daughter Salome should become sick or infirm, so that the interest hereinbefore allotted to her would not be sufficient to maintain her, then my executors shall give her such part of the principal as they may think proper; and further, it is my will that, after the decease of my beloved wife, all the property, or which shall then be remaining, of which I have hereinbefore bequeathed to her, shall be sold, &c., and equally divided between my six children, &c.’’ The testator, after disposing of all his estate by his will, appointed George Nace and George Hymes executors of it. These gentlemen upon the death of the testator, on the 19th of January 1811, renounced before the register of the county, who thereupon granted letters of administration cum testamento annexo, to Henry Shultz and Jacob Barnitz, the defendant, who at the same time gave the bond in suit with the requisite sureties. The administrators thus appointed, after having settled three administration [255]*255accounts at different times before the register, each of which was also approved and confirmed by the orphans’ court of the county, on the 13th of February 1827 presented their petition to the same court, praying to be dismissed from the further administration of the estate of the testator. The court accordingly made an order in conformity to their prayer; and thereupon appointed David Shultz administrator de bonis non; but in consequence of his declining to give the requisite security, the court, on the 3d of August 1830, appointed Luther Skinner, who, after giving the security required, took upon himself the further administration of the estate; and still continues, it is said, to be the administrator de bonis non of it. After these proceedings were all had, Salome, the legatee, made application, by petition, to the orphans’ court, on the 20th of April 1837, to have a trustee appointed, who might receive and take charge of the legacy which she claimed under the above bequest; and the court thereupon appointed William Hymes, who afterwards instituted this action for the recovery of it.

A portion of the personal estate of the testator, the interest of which is directed by the testator in his will to be paid by the executors thereof to Salome, the daughter, is admitted to be still in the hands or under the control of the defendant; and the amount of it seems not to be disputed. But then it is objected that Hymes, though appointed a trustee for the purpose, as it would seem, of receiving the fund bequeathed, is not entitled to it. The ground of this objection is, that the trust fund being personal estate, and the trust itself having been committed by the testator to his executors, not nominatim but ratione officii, it thereby became inseparably connected with the administration of the testator’s personal estate; and, consequently, it was not competent for the orphans’ court to separate it, and to take it out of the hands of those to whom the administration of the estate was committed for the time being, by the appointment of a trustee. It is certainly apparent, from the terms of the will, that the testator intended the trust should be executed by his executors as such, and the subject of it being a portion of his personal estate would, therefore, seem to have been of a testamentary character, and inseparably connected with the administration of it, which properly belonged to the executors. But the executors, upon their renunciation, thereby ceased to be executors of the will, and to have any right thereafter as such to interfere with the administration of the estate. 1 Williams on Executors 155, 156; 3 Add. 273. Likewise, seeing that they were only invested with the trust by reason of their being executors, they consequently became divested of It by their renunciation. Accordingly in Keates v. Burton, 14 Ves. 434, where the testator bequeathed 2000 pounds to a natural son, but directed that his executors might in their discretion, if they saw proper, put the 2000 pounds out on interest, and pay the interest only,.as received, to the son; the testator appointed four executors, one of whom died and the remaining [256]*256three renounced; and the Master of the Rolls said, that the power could only be exercised by the executors as such, and having renounced that character, it was not competent for them afterwards to exercise it. It is true that, in this case, the Master of the Rolls held, that the legatee himself, by the renunciation of the executors, became entitled to receive it, though he had in the meantime become a bankrupt; but then it was because the legacy was given expressly in the first instance to the legatee himself; and in no event were the executors directed or required to put it out on interest, but a discretionary power merely given to do so if they should think proper to exercise it. They, however, by their renunciation, as it was conceived, showed that they did not think proper to exercise it.

Administrators,however,cum testamento annexo,are substituted for and come in the place of the executors, at least so far as concerns the administration and disposition of the personal estate of the testator; and after the payment of debts, the will becomes their guide or directory, as to the disposition which they shall make of the residuum of the personal estate, and points out the duties which it is incumbent upon them to perform. Hence, among other things, they are bound to pay the legacies given by the will, when they have assets sufficient for that purpose; and, in doing so, to observe .the terms and conditions upon which the legacies are directed to be paid, the same as if they were the executors. In short, the office of an administrator cum testamento annexo, is but little different, if at all, from that of an executor, as regards the personal estate. 2 Bl. Comm. 506, 507; 1 Williams on Executors 281; Shep. Touch. 474; 2 Williams on Executors 601; Hensloe’s case, 9 Co. 41, a. And I apprehend that, under our acts of assembly, the same, with but little variation, may be said as to the real estate.

The defendant and Henry Shultz, then, by receiving the appointment of administrators cum testamento annexo, became invested with the right to take charge of and manage the fund claimed in this action, according to the direction of the will, until they were dismissed from the administratorship of the estate. After that, however, upon the appointment of the administrator de bonis non, and ■his giving the requisite security, they ought to have paid the fund over to the administrator de bonis non,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 Watts 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-barnitz-pa-1840.