George v. Serrett, Administrator

182 S.W.2d 198, 207 Ark. 568, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 705
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 19, 1944
Docket4-7148
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 182 S.W.2d 198 (George v. Serrett, Administrator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
George v. Serrett, Administrator, 182 S.W.2d 198, 207 Ark. 568, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 705 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

Knox, J.

Dr. B. F. George, a life-long citizen of Ashley county, but who on account of his health had been forced to spend the greater part of the last years of his life in Tom Green county, Texas, died in San Angelo, Texas, October 15,1933.

Dr. George had never married and the next of kin surviving him were two brothers, Joe George and G. Percy George; one sister, Mrs. Susye George Corson, and one nephew and two neices, children of. his deceased brother, Norwood George, the nephew being named G. P. George, and the neices Joan George (now Welsh), and Dora George Hiatt.

On November 1, 1933, letters of administration on the estate of Dr. George were issued by the probate court of Ashley county to Leslie J. Serrett, who was then cashier of Farmers Bank & Trust Co. Sureties on Serrett’s bond were Frank Pugh, vice president of the bank, and G. Percy George, brother of deceased, who was president of and principal stockholder in the bank.

On December 27, 1934, Serrett filed his first account current, in which he charges himself with three items as follows: Doss note, $780; 328 shares Farmers Bank & Trust Co. stock, par value of $8,200; cash from insurance, $4,107.43 — total, $13,087.43, and the administrator takes credit for money expended in.the aggregate sum of $4,-098.38, leaving in Ins possession cash $9.03, the Doss note (which he reports is in process of foreclosure), and the bank stock (which he reports is intact).

In conformity with statutory requirements proper court orders were made and complied with respecting filing, continuance and publication of notice of the filing of such account.

No further account current, final account, petition for discharge, report or pleading of any character appears to have been filed by the administrator, and there is of record no further order of court, of any character whatever, respecting this estate.

Claims against the estate, approximating some nine or ten thousand dollars, appear to have been filed with the clerk. Some of these, however, do not appear to have been presented to the administrator for allowance and classification.

Ancillary administration was effected in Texas, where at the time of his death Dr. George had on deposit in the San Angelo National Bank $723.98. Two hundred fifty dollars of the Texas bank deposits was used to pay Texas claims and cost of the ancillary administration, and the balance was paid directly to Farmers Bank & Trust Company of Hamburg, Arkansas, to be applied on its note claim, which had been filed in the Arkansas administration, and thereafter the ancillary administration in Texas was closed.

All parties to this litigation appear to concede that while Serrett held the title of administrator, in truth and fact, because of his kinship to the heirs, and his connection with the bank (which was the largest creditor of the estate), the actual management of the estate was left to G. Percy George, a brother of the deceased, who was a prominent attorney, and president and principal stockholder of the bank. The mother of the Norwood George children testified that as agent for her children and with their full knowledge and consent she made arrangements with him to look after their interests. Her testimony concerning this is as follows: “Being their nncle, an attorney, and president of the bank, he assured me he would protect their interest, and I relied upon him, . . . with perfect confidence, ’ ’ I had no reason to doubt either the faithfulness of his services or the correctness of his statements or the statements of the administrator of the estate of B. F. George, because he had even stated to me that, having so much money of his own, he didn’t want his share of any interest in the bank. I was surprised when I received notice that he claimed his share in the bank stock.

-Serrett testified as a witness for appellants that on June 5, 1936, he wrote Mrs. Corson, Joe George, G. P. George and the widow and heirs of Norwood George that “after liquidating the business of the deceased there remained in my hands an unpaid balance of $3,034.20, ” and offering to pay the same equally, that is one-fourth each to Joe George, Susye George Corson, and G. P. George, and the remaining one-fourth to the heirs of Norwood George, on their signing and returning receipts sent with such letters.

The receipt inclosed was in these words: “Received of Leslie J. Serrett, as administrator of the estate of B. F. George, deceased, the sum of $758.55 in full settlement of all our interest in said estate.

“And in consideration of the payment of the above' sum of money we and each of us hereby release and acquit the said Leslie J. Serrett as said administrator of any further liability to us on account of our interest in said estate.”

In a verified pleading filed herein, Serrett details the circumstances surrounding the execution of these receipts as follows: “G. P. George on June S, 1936, advised this respondent that he had made settlement with the heirs of B. F. George, and the balance to be paid by him to them was in the sum of $3,034.20, . . . and he was to have said bank stock transferred to him of said estate, and this would close said estate.

‘ ‘ Said respondent prepared receipts accordingly for each ... in the sum of $758.55, and advised said heirs that this closed the estate upon them signing said receipts.

“Said heirs duly signed said receipts . . . and said estate was duly closed, and on July 13, 19&6, the bank stock of B. F. George was duly transferred on the books of the Farmers Bank & Trust Company to the name of G. P. George, as owner, and remained as such until the death of G. P. George in the year of 1941. Said receipts were sent to the court of Tom Green county, Texas, where settlement of said estate was finally shown in the early part of the year 1937. ’ ’

Norwood George’s children and Joe George brought this action on June 2, 1941, and later Susye George Cor-son, who had been made a defendant in order that all rights might be adjudicated, adopted the complaint as her own, asking to be made a party plaintiff. The action was brought against the administrator, Serrett, his surviving bondsman, Frank Pugh, and the estate of his then deceased bondsman, G. Percy George, by Sam J. "Wilson as executor, and Wilson in his own right as devisee.

Later, by amendment, Farmers Bank & Trust Company, of which G. Percy George had been president and practically sole owner, was made a defendant on the allegation that it had wrongfully received and appropriated large funds of the estate of Dr. B. F. George.

Appellants allege fraudulent mishandling and wrongful appropriation of funds, fraudulent handling and conversion of securities by G. Percy George and the administrator, wrongful and fraudulent receipt and appropriation of funds by representation by the administrator in procuring receipts of plaintiffs, relation of trust and confidence between plaintiffs on the one hand and G.

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Bluebook (online)
182 S.W.2d 198, 207 Ark. 568, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/george-v-serrett-administrator-ark-1944.