Hine v. Hine

118 A.D. 585, 103 N.Y.S. 535, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 723
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMarch 6, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 118 A.D. 585 (Hine v. Hine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hine v. Hine, 118 A.D. 585, 103 N.Y.S. 535, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 723 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Kobson, J.:

Ho controverted question of material fact appears in the record presented in this case, and a recital of the facts disclosed by the evidence will direct us to the well-settled principles of law to be applied in determining the rights of the parties to the action, which the judgment should have declared.

The plaintiff with his two brothers, Horman and Allen Hine, and his sister, Harriet A.' Huntington, were residuary legatees and devisees in equal shares under the will of Josiah Hine, their father, who died April 21," 1890. This will was admitted to probate May fourteenth of that year, and.letters testamentary thereon were on that day duly issued to the two sons, Horman and Allen, who were named therein as executors. Josiah Hine left a considerable estate, a large part of which has been paid and distributed to those entitled thereto, and all the specific and general legacies have been discharged, and the residuary legatees are now the only persons whose rights and interests have not been fully and satisfactorily adjusted.

The testator prior to his death had foreclosed a mortgage, securing the payment of- $4,400 upon a farm which is referred to as the Stearns farm, upon which mortgage there was then due the sum of $2,000 and to .become'due the sum of $2,400. . On the sale pursuant to the judgment of foreclosure the property had been struck off to Horman Hine, who was the plaintiff’s attorney in that action. [587]*587The deed of the premises was not delivered until the executors had qualified, when title was taken by them in their individual names, and not in their representative capacity. This sale was afterwards duly confirmed, the purchase price, for which the premises had been originally struck off on the sale, and expressed as the consideration in the deed, being $2,187.81. Nothing was paid by Norman and Allen personally as consideration for the transfer to them. Nothing beyond the title to this farm seems to have been obtained on the mortgage security; and it does not appear that anything beyond that could have been secured. Of course, it is unimportant whether title was taken by the executors in their names as individuals, or with the addition denoting their representative capacity as executors. They would still hold the property in trust and the property they thus acquired, as was said in llaberman v. Balter (128 N. T. 261), at once took on the character of the mortgage indebtedness, and was as personalty in their hands, which they could dispose of and were liable to account for as such. (Bookman v. Reilly, 95 N. T. 64.) This farm being assets in the executors’ hands, it was their duty iti the due administration of the .estate to use reasonable diligence to so dispose of it that the proceeds could be seasonably distributed to those entitled thereto. Instead of selling this farm the executors rented it for two years, and then in effect traded it with one Adams for property in the city of Syracuse. The deed which they gave to Adams expressed a consideration of $4,000, and in the deed which Adams gave them the consideration was stated as $7,000, but this latter transfer was subject to a mortgage of $3,200. No money passed between the parties on account of their transfers and the sole actual consideration was the reciprocal transfer of property from one party to the other. The property thus conveyed to them may be conveniently referred to hereafter as the Adams property.

Norman Hine, though not the sole acting executor, did in fact do practically all the business of the estate. The only business in connection with the estate that Allen Hine transacted, was, as Norman testifies, to sign the first check drawn on estate funds and execute the deed of the Stearns farm. No criticism whatever can be made on his conduct in this regard, for he had suffered a stroke of paralysis before this deed was given, and was thereafter nutii his death in October, 1899, in poor health. His coexecutor, [588]*588Norman, was at this time an attorney in good practice, who had acted as his father’s attorney before the latter’s death, and was apparently competent and trustworthy in every way. ' It was entirely natural and proper, therefore, that Allen should, as lie did, leave the management of the business of the estate to Norman, and no . breach of trust or negligent omission of duty as an executor can properly be charged to him because, he did so.

The disposition which the executoi-s.made of the Stearns farm, to which reference has already been made, was not one which the law sanctions; and, unless the persons entitled to share in that' portion of testator’s estate either consented to the. trade, or in effect subsequently ratified it, the executors were personally responsible to account for the value of the Stearns farm at the time it was conveyed in exchange to Adams. (Garner v. Germania Life Ins. Co. 110 N. Y. 267; King v. Talbot, 40 id. 76.)

The trial court has in this action fixed the value of this farm in one of the findings of fact at $4,400, and in a subsequent finding at $4,000, and has held the estate of Allen Hine responsible to the plaintiff for oné-quarter of the latter sum, to which interest at the rate of six per cent from the date of transfer has been added. If it were necessary in determining the disposition of this case to pass upon the correctness of the court’s finding as to the value of the premises' and the proper rate of interest with which Allen’s estate should be. charged, we would be inclined to hold that both the value of the farm and the rate of interest fixed by the court were excessive. But the view we entertain as to this branch of the case ' does not involve a consideration of the value of the Stearns farm. The Adams property, which the executors took in exchange for the ' Stearns farm, instead of being sold by them, was rented until the foreclosure in 1901- of the mortgage, subject to which the premises had been conveyed to the executors. To this action the surviving executor, Norman, the representatives of the estate of Allen, who was then deceased, and the other residuary legatees and devisees of Josiali Hine, deceased, including Ambrose Hine, the plaintiff in this action, were made parties defendant. This foreclosure resulted in the production of a surplus of $1,170.24, which was in due course paid into court. This present action, brought by plaintiff to compel the representatives of Allen’s estate to account for and pay [589]*589over to him, as one of the residuary legatees of Josiah Hine, one-fourth of the value of the Stearns farm, as of the date it was transferred to Adams, with interest thereon from that date, was begun on February 3, 1903. Seventeen days prior to the service of the summons in this action plaintiff assigned to General Hancock his interest in the surplus moneys which resulted from the sale of the Adams property. This transfer, which was for value, in writing, under seal, duly executed, acknowledged and delivered, in the language of the assignment transferred to Hancock “all my (plaintiff’s) right, title, interest arid claim, if any, which I may have in and to the surplus moneys arising out of the foreclosure sale, in the above-entitled action, authorizing said Theodore E. Hancock,, as far as I am concerned, to collect the same.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A.D. 585, 103 N.Y.S. 535, 1907 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hine-v-hine-nyappdiv-1907.