Dyer v. Riley

51 N.J. Eq. 124
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 51 N.J. Eq. 124 (Dyer v. Riley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dyer v. Riley, 51 N.J. Eq. 124 (N.J. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

Riley, by his answer and amended answer, sets up, in effect, three defences — -first, he alleges that he never acted as trustee as contradistinguished from executor, and that part of the defence is set out thus in his answer:

“And this defendant further answering admits that the burthen of administering said estate was largely assumed by said Ephraim Waters the son of said testator one of said executors, and avers the fact to be that upon the auditing and filing of said accounts in Salem county Orphans’ Court and the allowance of the same in all things by said court this defendant’s co-executor said Ephraim Waters (son of said testator) took the entire charge, custody and possession of the whole surplus of the said estate remaining after the payment of the debts of said testator, and the expense of settlement of his said estate, and thenceforth since the year 1867 up to the present time has had the exclusive custody, control and management of said estate and of the moneys and property thereof.”

The second defence is that the complainant’s demand upon which he recovered against Waters was a joint demand, and that if he (Riley) was liable at all he was liable jointly with Waters, and that the presentation by the complainant to the assignee of Waters of a claim for the amount due him from Waters, upon the decree of this court, was a discharge of Waters, under the twenty-first section of the Assignment act. Rev. p. 40.

And, third, that he (Riley) was guilty of no negligence in permitting his co-trustee to take actual care and custody of the assets of the estate, and that under the circumstances of the case complainant’s intestate was estopped by her conduct from calling on the defendant Riley to make good the default of her son in not paying the interest to her from year to year.

The answer, in support of this point, sets out that the defendant Waters was, at the date of the accounting and for a long time afterward', a man of reputed wealth and of business capacity, and after stating the insolvency of Waters, after having paid the [129]*129principal moneys of the trust to the parties entitled thereto, proceeds as follows:

“And this defendant avers that the above named action of said Elizabeth Waters in her lifetime, and of said Ephraim Waters and Caroline Dyer, was a full ratification and acceptance of said Ephraim Waters as sole trustee for said trust fund and for all interest that might come due thereon, and an acquiescence in his action as such sole trustee, and a discharge from any and all responsibility as trustee of the same, if any such responsibility ever existed, which this defendant denies.
“And this defendant avers that by the omission of said Elizabeth Waters in her lifetime and of said Ephraim Waters and Caroline Dyer to take any steps during the long period of twenty years having full knowledge of the facts as hereinbefore set forth and the omission of said complainant, administrator of said Elizabeth Waters since her death to enforce said supposed trust against this defendant as trustee, and against said Ephraim Waters trustee as aforesaid until he the said Ephraim Waters had become insolvent, the said Elizabeth Waters in her lifetime and the complainant since her death and said Ephraim Waters and Caroline Dyer have been guilty of gross laches and neglect, to such an extent that if said several parties or either or any of them ever had any right or equities as against this defendant as such supposed trustee as aforesaid (which this defendant denies) they and each of them have wholly abandoned and lost the same, and this defendant prays that he may have the same advantage of defence upon this ground as if he had formally pleaded the same.”

The first ground above stated was supported by proof that at the settlement of 1867 of the accounts of the defendants as executors, the whole of the assets of the estate were at once placed in the hands of Ephraim Waters, by the request of the widow, the complainant’s intestate, and that Waters continued to act as trustee from that time on, and that he was recognized as sole trustee by Mrs. Dyer, and that she, from the year 1870' on, demanded and received from her son only about $50 a year,, and that she never made any demand whatever upon the defendant Riley for any arrears of interest; and a forcible argument was made in support of this point, based upon the distinction between the function of an executor and that of a trustee, as-defined by the chief-justice, speaking for the court of errors and appeals, in the ease of Pitney v. Everson, 15 Stew. Eq. 361.

But I have not found it necessary to consider either this or the second of the defences, since I think that the defendant must [130]*130succeeed on the last point taken, viz., the absence of negligence on the part of himself and the conduct and laches of the intestate, in her lifetime, and her next of kin since her death.

As before remarked, it appears that although from the year 1870 on until her death, a period of eleven years, the intestate received only about $50 a year from her son (excepting the last two or three years of her life, when she was imbecile and he paid the cost of her support), yet she never made any demand upon Riley to execute the trust and to pay her any interest, but looked solely to her son and indicated by her conduct that she was satisfied to look to him alone. Then after her death her next of kin failed to take out letters of administration for almost six years after her death, and neglected to file their bill until more than six years after her death, and in that bill made but very faint, if any, charge against the defendant Riley. An examination of the opinion in Dyer v. Waters, 1 Dick. Ch. Rep. 484 (at p. 487), shows that the court there had difficulty in meeting this allegation of laches and lapse of time occurring after the death of the intestate, and did so only on the ground that there were negotiations and attempts to settle going on continuously between the next of kin and Waters. The court there (at p. 489) says: “ The principle upon which courts of equity refuse to enforce stale claims, in cases where the statute of limitations does not apply either directly or by analogy, is that, considering all the circumstances, it would be inequitable to do so by reason of the danger of doing injustice to the defendant, because, for instance, the defendant, by reason of the delay, has changed his position irretrievably, or lost some advantage he was entitled to keep, or that evidence has been lost or facts obscured by the lapse of time. Story Eq. Jur. § 529.”

None of the reasons there stated for holding Waters liable, notwithstanding the lapse of time, apply to the defendant Riley. The circumstances of the case render it reasonably certain that if he had been called upon, either in the lifetime of the intestate or within a reasonable time after her death, to account for these arrears of interest, and had been informed that he was to be held liable for Waters’ default in that behalf, he would have been [131]*131able to have saved himself from Waters, who was then amply able to pay, as in fact he did save himself as to the principal of the two legacies put in trust, viz., that for $8,500 for the widow for life and the one for $6,700 for Mrs. Dyer for life.

Further, the evidence shows that neither Mrs. Waters nor her daughter, Mrs.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.J. Eq. 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dyer-v-riley-njch-1893.