Guthrie v. Wheeler

51 Conn. 207, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 51 Conn. 207 (Guthrie v. Wheeler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guthrie v. Wheeler, 51 Conn. 207, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 45 (Colo. 1884).

Opinion

Carpenter, J.

William Guthrie died in December, 1865, leaving a will, in which, after providing for the payment of his debts and the expenses of litigation then pending, and disposing of his wearing apparel and household furniture, he gave the bulk of his property to Elisha Wheeler “absolutely and in fee simple, subject to the following trusts.” These trusts are then stated as follows:—

“ First. The said Elisha Wheeler shall pay to my wife, Polly Ann Guthrie, annually, the entire rents and profits of the said entire estate which may remain after the said debts and charges have been paid, so long as she lives, or to occupy and improve said estate during her natural life. '
“ Second. At and after the decease of my said wife, then I direct the said Elisha Wheeler to pay to my brother Albert Guthrie the one half of the rents and profits of my said estate annually during his life, and likewise to pay the other-half of said rents and profits to my brother John B. Guthrie-during his life.”

The John B. Glithrie mentioned in the last clause is the plaintiff in this action. Said Wheeler and Marshall S. Clarke were appointed executors. Wheeler was the active man in settling the estate. He permitted the widow to occupy the real estate during her life, and she had the income of the personal property. She died May 18th, 1871. After her death Wheeler was in the possession of all the estate, and received the income thereof until his death, January 1st, 1877.

[210]*210Prior to his^Heath he submitted to the court of probate an account in which the principal and the income of the estate were intermingled. The court directed him to present separate accounts — the one showing the principal and the other the income. Before that was done he died. After his death his co-executor, Clark, presented an administration account, which was allowed and recorded. The administrators of Wheeler submitted a statement of the income, which was accepted and ordered on file.

The plaintiff seeks to recover in an action of assumpsit his share of the income. The facts were found by a committee and the case reserved for the advice of this court.

The defendants contend that the action cannot be maintained — that an executor or trustee cannot be called to an account in an action at law, and that the subject matter of the suit, so far as Wheeler acted in the capacity of an executor, was within the sole jurisdiction of the court of probate, and, so far as he was trustee, was within the jurisdiction of a court of equity.

The administration account of the executor may be laid out of the case. That related only to the principal of the estate and this action has no reference to that. It relates only to the income of the estate, which Wheeler held not merely as executor, no.r, in the ordinary sense, as trustee, but held it rather in his own private capacity. It is called for the sake of convenience a trust fund, but is not such in strict and technical sense. The principal of the estate, that which produced the income, Wheeler held as executor for the purpose of paying debts and charges ; otherwise he ¡held it as his own property. The testator imposed certain, burdens upon him, which he accepted when he accepted the provisions of the will. After the death of Mrs. Guthrie he received the income for the plaintiff and his brother. ’ One half of it was money in his hands, which in equity and good •conscience he was bound to pay over to the plaintiff. Had dt been a fixed sum payable annually by his executors, it would have been an ordinary legacy for which assumpsit will lie. It differs from a legacy in this, that it is the income' [211]*211which is to be paid, and it is to be paid by Wheeler personally. The income not being in a strict sense a trust fund, we think may be recovered in the equitable action of assumpsit.

We do not intend to say that a court of equity might not, under some circumstances, take cognizance of the principal of the estate. Should the representatives of Mr. Wheeler, or those who came into the possession of the property by purchase or otherwise, manifest a disposition to defraud those entitled to the income, doubtless there would be a remedy in equity. Should some person be appointed to take charge of the property he would be' strictly a trustee, accountable to the plaintiff and his brother for the income and to those claiming under Wheeler for the body of the estate.

. The. defendants next contend that the plaintiff was not entitled to the income of the estate until after the settlement of the administration account; and that as the account was not settled until July, 1877, six months or more after Mr. Wheeler’s death, there was nothing due from Mr. Wheeler, and that consequently his estate is not liable. This claim, assumes that Wheeler during the settlement of the estate held the property solely as executor, and that, had he settled the estate, he would have ■ held it solely as trustee. This, as we have seen, is not a correct view of the case. But allowing that the assumption is correct, it does not follow that the beneficiaries are to be postponed until the settlement of the estate. They cannot be deprived of the enjoyment of the provision made for them by any delay in the settlement of the estate. Thus in Clement v. Brainard, 46 Conn., 174, and Clement's Appeal from Probate, 49 Conn., 519, Mr. Brainard retained possession of the property, which was given to him as trustee, as executor for several years and during the lifetime of the cestuis que trust '; yet the trust existed and was recognized and the income paid over to the cestuis que trust, although the property never came into his hands as. trustee. As executor he in reality executed the trust, although the court held that [212]*212he was not technically a trustee so as to be liable to account in a court of equity in advance of the settlement of his administration account. Subsequently, when he settled his account in the court of probate, the trust was recognized, as it had been previously, and the estate was settled according to the provisions of the will.

In this ease we cannot doubt as to the intention of the testator. The rents and profits are to be paid annually during life. The expression — “ the entire rents and profits of the said entire estate which may remain after the said debts and charges have been paid ” — was intended to designate the estate which was to produce the income, and not to fix the time to commence paying it to the beneficiaries.

The construction contended for by the defendants, if enforced strictly, would have deprived the widow of her support during life after the death of her husband. Mr. Wheeler did not so construe the will, but he allowed the widow to take possession of and improve the real estate, and paid to her the income from the personal property. This practical construction was the correct one.

The claim of the defendants that the plaintiff is estopped from claiming the income during the time the will was in litigation, is not tenable. He had a legal right to contest the validity of the will. After the will was established it was equally proper for him to claim the benefit of its provisions. In this there was no inconsistency — no antagonism. The _two claims were not pressed simultaneously but successively.

The plaintiff claims that the defendants are not entitled to have the taxes, the repairs, and the expenses of managing the estate, deducted from the income.

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Bluebook (online)
51 Conn. 207, 1884 Conn. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guthrie-v-wheeler-conn-1884.