Hilton's Administratrix v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co.

19 S.W.2d 1088, 230 Ky. 401, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 98
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 24, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 S.W.2d 1088 (Hilton's Administratrix v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilton's Administratrix v. Potter-Matlock Trust Co., 19 S.W.2d 1088, 230 Ky. 401, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 98 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

— Reversing.

The appellant, Minnie F. Hilton, as administratrix of J. L. Hilton, sued the Potter-Matlock Trust Company, the former trustee of J. L. Hilton’s estate, for money she alleged the trust company had caused the trust estate to lose by its negligent management of it.' She was unsuccessful, hence this appeal.

It appears from this record that J. L. Hilton was somewhat mentally infirm, and the Potter-Matlock Trust Company had been, for perhaps a quarter of a century, his trustee. Just how it became such does not appear in the record. On September 28, 1921, the Potter-Mat-lock Trust Company loaned to J. D. Fonville $5,000 with which Fonville purchased a house on Tenth street in Bowling Green, and to secure the payment of the three bonds representing this $5,000, Fonville gave to the trust company a mortgage on this Tenth street house and on lots 84 and 85 in what is known as Cabell Garden addition to Bowling Green. The three bonds that represented this $5,000 the trust company sold to itself as trustee for Hilton. On August 19, 1922, it made to Fonvillei a loan of $1,250 of its own funds, and to secure the payment thereof took a second mortgage on this Tenth street house and these two Cabell Garden lots. Shortly thereafter Fonville made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors and named the Potter-Matlock Trust Company as his assignee. Shortly after that Fonville was adjudged' bankrupt, but an appraisement of this mortgaged property indicated there was no surplus in it available for creditors, and the trustee in bankruptcy did not take hold of it. As assignee, the Potter-Matlock Trust Company and Fonville sold these two Cabell Garden lots to R. C. P. Thomas on February 15, 1923, for $1,250. This money the Potter-Matlock Trust Company *403 applied to the payment of its second mortgage debt and released both mortgages upon tbe Cabell Garden lots, thus leaving tbe three bonds that represented this $5,000 secured by the Tenth street property alone. On October 25, 1925, Minnie Hilton married J. L. Hilton. J. L. Hilton died March 16,1926, and shortly thereafter his widow qualified as his administratrix. Litigation relative to this estate followed. The administratrix was trying to get possession of this estate, and in some of that litigation this order was entered:

“Exceptions having been filed herein by Minnie Hilton, administratrix of the estate of J. L. Hilton, to the report of settlement made herein by the Potter-Matlock Trust Company and to the report filed by Will R. Speck, commissioner, in connection with said settlement, and the court being sufficiently advised, overrules said exceptions, it is the judgment of the court and is ordered that the PotterMatlock Trust Co. be and it is allowed the sum of $500.00 for extra services rendered the estate, and that the report of settlement and the report of the commissioner be and the same is confirmed; however, this order is not intended nor shall it be construed to preclude any further action in connection with the settlement, should the audit of the trust company’s books, which is now being proposed and authorized, show there be any discrepancies or irregularities warranting further action upon the part of the administratrix of said estate.”

A part of the assets turned over by the Potter-Mat-lock Trust Company to Minnie Hilton as administratrix was this $5,000 bunch of bonds, and on May 3, 1927, she filed a suit to foreclose that mortgage. She obtained a judgment, and the property was sold on June 27, 1927, for $3,500. After paying some back taxes, costs, etc., the net sum realized by her from this sale was $3,190.05. Thereupon she began this action against the trust company, charging it with mismanagement of this trust, with appropriating to itself the money realized from the sale of the Cabell Gardens property, and asking judgment against it for $1,950. The trust company for its defense first categorically controverted her petition and, further answering, alleged that this loss was.due to her own mismanagement of this business after it came into her hands, and further pleaded that it had settled with *404 her, had turned over to her these bonds as representing $5,000 in money; that she had not filed any exceptions to the settlement nor had she appealed therefrom; that she had given the trust company no notice of her suit to enforce this mortgage and was now estopped from setting up and claiming any loss or damage against the trust company. It further pleaded that it had carefully managed this business and that at the time the Cabell Gardens property was sold the Tenth street property was ample security for the $5,000 loan.

By reply Mrs. Hilton controverted everything contained in the trust company’s answer. That this estate was mismanaged is evident to the proverbial wayfaring man. One.of the first questions is, who is to blame for it? The greater part of the proof filed on behalf of both the administratrix and the trust company and the greater part of the argument in the briefs is devoted to an effort to fix the blame for this negligence. Each is trying to thrust it upon the other. The administratrix cannot be blamed for this. She' did not cause this loss. She was not negligent. All she did was to endeavor to collect these bonds, and she did that at the first available court after she got possession of them. The trust company argues in its brief that it was this action on her part that caused the loss. It argues that she should have waited and should have endeavored to sell this property privately; but. the administratrix here is acting in a fiduciary capacity. She must administer this estate. The heirs and creditors of J. L. Hilton were entitled to have this estate administered and distributed. The suggestion that she could have sold this privately is utterly without merit, for the title was not in the administratrix, it was in Fonville, and there is nothing to indicate that she could have induced him to cooperate with her. For that and other reasons that could be cited the conduct of the administratrix is approved. The trust company argues that she accepted these bonds as $5,000' in cash. It made that allegation in its answer. She controverted it by reply. The proof is silent on the subject. The trust company relies on the order copied above as establishing this, but we are unable to spell that out of this order. On the contrary, a careful consideration of this order leads us to the conclusion that it shows the contrary, and it is our judgment that she never accepted these bonds as cash or its equivalent. She was entitled to the possession of them. They should have been collected, and she should *405 have been able to collect thereon the face value thereof. She was not able to do so, and the trust company must be held responsible therefor, as this failure to collect was due to its negligence. We are unable to see anything in any of the acts or conduct of the administratrix to estop her as such from proceeding against this trustee. This estate has suffered from somebody’s negligence. This is a controversy between two fiduciaries. We are interested in seeing that the estate does not suffer by negligence. We have found one of these fiduciaries was not negligent. We shall now consider the evidence as to whether or not the other one was.

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Bluebook (online)
19 S.W.2d 1088, 230 Ky. 401, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hiltons-administratrix-v-potter-matlock-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1929.