Hartson v. Elden

44 A. 156, 58 N.J. Eq. 478, 13 Dickinson 478, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 28, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 A. 156 (Hartson v. Elden) 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
Hartson v. Elden, 44 A. 156, 58 N.J. Eq. 478, 13 Dickinson 478, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58 (N.J. Ct. App. 1899).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

The different exceptions of the several parties will be considered and disposed of in their order.

The complainant excepts to the account reported by the master, first, because the complainant is charged with $200 interest on Lombard University, notes, and he alleges that there is nothing in the testimony to show why such a charge is made. At the hearing it appeared that $200 had been deposited to the credit of the cause in this court, and both counsel agreed that this deposit was the interest mentioned in this exception. On this ground this exception was withdrawn.

The complainant’s second exception is that the complainant is surcharged with a note for $50, made by one John A. Temple, part of the assets of the testator which Hettie Elden disposed of during the period in which she was administering the estate. In such cases the second administrator takes all of the goods, &c., of the decedent which remain in specie as at his death, and has no right under ordinary circumstances to call his predecessor to account for her preceding disposition of the estate. Brownlee v. Lockwood, 5 C. E. Gr. 239; Carrick v. Carrick, 8 C. E. Gr. 364; Thiefes v. Mason, 10 Dick. Ch. Rep. 460. Having no right to recover the assets which the previous administrator had administered, the second administrator cannot be surcharged because he did not recover them. The situation is not changed by the fact, which the master recites, that the complainant on Hettie’s death (some thirteen years after the disposition of this note by her) became the administrator of her estate, and that he could then have collected the amount of the note from her estate. Hettie in her lifetime, and the representatives of her estate after her death, were responsible to the legatees or distributees of [481]*481Nathan Elden’s estate for her default as his administratrix. The complainant had no lawful right, as administrator of Hettie’s estate, to take her assets and pay them to himself as succeeding administrator of Nathan Elden’s estate, to satisfy her default, committed while administratrix of Nathan’s estate. Her action as first administrator in disposing of the assets of the decedent’s estate, must be settled between her or her representatives and those who had a right to call her to account. When she disposed of those assets she is held to have administered them, and only "what remains of the decedent’s estate in specie, comes to-her succeeding administrator. This second exception of complainant is sustained, and the accountant should not be surcharged with the Temple note.

The complainant’s third exception is that the complainant accountant is by the master charged with two sums of script issued to him in 1883, for

Dividends on Northern Pacific stock of the estate........ $233 10
Interest on that script to 1888...........'....................... 69 90
$303 00

that this sum, $303, was a profit, payable under the will to-Hettie as life tenant, and if it is as a matter of general account-ing charged to the complainant, because received by him as administrator, it should also be credited to him as payable to Hettie Elden or to her estate, because it was a profit received in her lifetime.

The testimony of Mr. Hartson, tending to show the status of this item, whether it was principal or income, is quite confused, but upon considering it with the evidence of the officers of the railroad, it is made clear that the $233.10 was script, issued for the earnings of the road. Under the will this belonged to Mrs. Elden as life tenant. The interest on the script followed the same ownership. The master has, in schedule No. 3, surcharged the complainant with these items, amounting to $303, and they form part of the total of the debits— $20,531.17’. He nowhere credits the complainant with this [482]*482$303 as due or paid to Mrs. Elden or to her representatives, as under the method of accounting was done with the other profits paid to her. The master evidently intended that this $303 should go to Mrs. Elden’s representatives, for he so states it in the body of his report and in schedule No. 5. The complaint is not that he does not admit that this sum is due to her representatives, but that he has debited the complainant with it, in the account which ascertains the balance, $109.56, due from the accountant, and has not on the credit side of that account allowed it as payable to the representatives of the life tenant, Mrs. Elden.

The master, in stating the account, has correctly separated the real estate items from those which are personal, but has followed the method of the complainant, and included the income during Hettie Elden’s life, and the principal and income earned after her death, in the same statement. These matters are entirely distinct and separate, and should not be jointly stated in this account. The discussion of the complainant’s eighth exception gives the reasons why this course should be followed. When the re-statement of the account is made, the item $303 will not appear as a charge, and consequently need not be allowed as a credit.

The complainant’s fourth and sixth exceptions are based upon the same'grounds, that the master did not allow the complainant for his expenditures in hiring a safe-deposit box in which to store the papers, &c., of the estate. The master properly held this to be expense incident to the performance of the duty of the administrator to care for the property of the decedent, for which his commissions were a compensation. The complainant’s fourth and sixth exceptions should be overruled.

The complainant’s fifth exception is to the master’s disallowance of an expenditure of $35, paid to the surrogate of Cumberland county on May 7th, 1892, as the cost of stating an account. The master in his statement of the account offered by the complaiuant states this item at $30. The voucher produced shows the expenditure to have been $35. The master disallows.it as e< an expenditure which should not have been incurred during [483]*483-the pendency of this suit.” The proofs show that this account was rendered by the complainant to the surrogate of the county, .before whom, under ordinary circumstances, his account should have been stated. That officer has large powers to compel the stating of such an account. He had several times noticed the

■ complainant to account before him, threatening him with citations if he did not.' At that time, May, 1892, it had not yet been determined that this court would order an accounting here. Under these circumstances the complainant appears to have been justified in obeying the surrogate’s repeated demands that he ¡account before him, and the incidental costs thus incurred and paid by the complainant should be allowed him. The complain.ant’s fifth exception is sustained.

The complainant’s seventh exception is that the master credited the complainant with but $637.63 as the difference between -the amount of the inventory and the amount of the proceeds of .sales of the property so inventoried. The exceptant claims that ■“ the said credit by way of difference should be a much larger amount.” This exception was properly withdrawn at the argument. To contend that an item of allowance is not as large as it should be, is quite too indefinite a complaint to be made the .subject of judicial inquiry.

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Bluebook (online)
44 A. 156, 58 N.J. Eq. 478, 13 Dickinson 478, 1899 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartson-v-elden-njch-1899.