Hite v. Hite's ex'rs

40 Ky. 177
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 9, 1841
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 Ky. 177 (Hite v. Hite's ex'rs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hite v. Hite's ex'rs, 40 Ky. 177 (Ky. Ct. App. 1841).

Opinion

Judge Ewing

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Abraham Hite, Sen. and his three sons, then residents of Virginia, in 1784, entered into articles of co-partnership, for the acquisition of western lands, in which there was a stipulation, in substance, that if any disagreement should arise in the division, that it should be settled by men, chosen by a majority of those in interest. Abraham Hite, Sen. and Isaac Hite, one of the sons, died, the latter leaving a son Jacob, and a daughter, who intermarried with Charles Fishback, and died, leaving several children. Upon the death of Abraham and Isaac, the whole labor of superintending and managing .a large landed estate, which they had acquired in Kentucky, paying taxes, prosecuting and defending law suits, for a series of years, selling and disposing of parts of the lands, and collecting the proceeds and applying the same in discharge of a large debt, to which the company had become subject, devolved on Abraham Hite, Jr. and in 1814 and [178]*1781830, an award was made by men, chosen by a majority of those in interest, by which an allowance was made to him for his services. But in calculating and carrying out •the aggregate amount of his credits against the firm, in the settlement of 1814, a mistake is alleged to have been committed, to his prejudice, in a large amount.

Decree of the Chancellor, Chancellor will not interfere to correct an alleged mistake in a settlement after a lapse of more than 16 years, on the alleged ground that it was recently discovered, whore compl’t. had the means in his power to know and might have known it, during all that lapse oí time.

After the settlement of 1830, he exhibited his bill to correct this mistake, and Jacob Hite and Fishback’s heirs answered, resisting the correction and controverting both settlements. The Chancellor confirmed both settlements and corrected the alleged mistake in the first, and decreed accordingly. From this decree Jacob Hite and Fishback’s heirs have appealed to this Court.

We concur with the Chancellor, in sustaining the settlement of 1814, as well as that of 1830: or rather, we so far concur as to deem it improper, under all the cir. cumstances of the case, to disturb the result in either settlement. But while we thus far concur, we feel, after a full examination of the whole case, that it would be improper to disturb the result, by interposing the extraordinary powers of a Court of Chancery, to correct the alleged mistake of £612 19s 8d, in the first settlement.

1st. The lapse of time presents an argument of no inconsiderable force against the correction. Though it is alleged as an excuse, that the complainants testator was not apprised of the mistake, until some short time before the bill was filed, it is certain that he had the books, accounts, and estimates all in his own possession, and by the exercise of reasonable vigilance and scrutiny, he could have found out all that he now knows in relation to it. After he, with a knowledge of the mistake, or means in his own hands to know it, has acquiesced in the result so long, he should not now be permitted to disturb it. Vigilcmtibus non dormientibus servit lex.

The defendants too, have acquiesced in the result as it is, and may not have acquiesced had they known that an account, over six hundred pounds, was to bo added to the aggregate of the charge against the firm, produced by the commissioners; and had an attempt been made, within reasonable time, to overhaul.the settlement, or add to the aggregate amount, they may, while the arbi[179]*179trators were all living, and the circumstances fresh in the recollection of all, have presented good and sufficient ground to resist it, if not to overturn the whole settlement; acquiescing in it so long, as they are required to abide by R, they should abide by it as it is, and not be subjected to an addition to the amount of one third more for services: But,

it is a general tee! or^sravi?" pansation ' for SSmwinding oF'’ana “J m?dem adjudilations there are _ exceptions t0 this rule-

2d. The reasons most conclusive with this Court, against the correction sought, are the following:

As a general rule, a trustee or surviving partner is not entitled to compensation for personal services, in managing trust funds or in winding up. the business of the firm. And though there are exceptions to this rule, in modern adjudications, and the charactér of the partnership property in this case, audits involved condition, and* the labor, perplexity, toil, and skill, necessary for its sue- . , cessful management, together with the consideration, that the partners themselves concurred in that practical and equitable interpretation of the article, which allowed compensation for extraordinary services, by allowing it to the ancestor of the defendants, makes it proper, equitable, and just, that this case should form an exception to the general rule, and that compensation should be allowed to Abraham Hite, Jr. for the extraordinary and perplexing services which devolved on him to perform, and which could not have been performed by the infants, while they were such, nor perhaps so advantageously by them even after they attained to riper years; yet the compensation should not he so liberal as to inspire cupidity or stimulate avarice, or tempt to the procrastination of the business of the firm, with a view to profit, in the compensation to he received, but should be pared down and restricted to an amount barely sufficient to remunerate him for the actual services necessarily rendered, or as would save him from actual loss.

Tested by this rule, and looking at the compensation allowed in both settlements, we are perfectly satisfied, that it is ample if not liberal, without the addition of the £612 19s 8d, sought to be added by the correction of the mistake complained of. Indeed we are satisfied that by adding the amount of the alleged mistake, and interest, that the allowance would be extravagant and uncoii[180]*180sciencious, and we cannot consent to interpose the equitable arm of this Court, in aiding a complainant under such circumstances. Our only difficulty has been, in the examination which we have given to the case, in coming to a satisfactory conclusion, that the allowance which was made, without the addition of the alleged amount sought to be set up and added, is not too liberal to be permitted to stand.

Settlement oí 1814. A surviving partner should pay interest on any balance in his hands from the time when debts of the firm aie or might have heenpaid off, until distribution made to those entitled.

[180]*180The amount allowed in the settlement of 1814, greatly exceeds the amount of compensation for daily service, charged by the complainant’s ancestor, in his own account, and is greater than he probably expected to receive at the time when he rendered the service; and an increased annual amount is not only allowed in the last settlement, but instead of allowing an aggregate sum for the whole service, as is usual for services rendered for a certain term, an annual amount is allowed, and that amount made to carry interest from the expiration of each year, when it was charged to have fallen due, which could scarcely have been sanctioned as an original claim, for the first time set up in a Court of Chancery.

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Related

Taylor v. Commonwealth
302 S.W.2d 583 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
40 Ky. 177, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hite-v-hites-exrs-kyctapp-1841.