Hurlbut v. Hutton

44 N.J. Eq. 302
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 44 N.J. Eq. 302 (Hurlbut v. Hutton) 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
Hurlbut v. Hutton, 44 N.J. Eq. 302 (N.J. Ct. App. 1888).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The exceptions to be considered are to the Master’s report upon an account of the executors of the will of Benjamin H. Hutton, deceased.

The first exception is to the allowance of a payment of $38,-254, alleged to have been made to H. Sieber & Co., of Paris, the successors of Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Co., on December 31st, 1884.

This payment is disputed on two grounds. The first of these grounds is, that the moneys paid were not a debt of the testator, and therefore should not be charged against his estate.

By reference to letters of the testator, in the years 1875 and 1876, to Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Co., a firm of manufacturers [304]*304in Paris, it appears that two mortgages for one hundred thousand francs each, upon estates of the Marquis de Portes (to whom the testator's daughter Adele was married), were held by that firm, and that Mr. Hutton had bound himself to their payment. The testator’s books of account verify the statements of his letters, and exhibit the indebtedness unsettled at his death.

It appears, also, that the testator had an account with this firm which he termed “account current.” To this account the semiannual interest upon the mortgages was debited. Statements of this account were rendered at stated periods, and settled between Mr. Hutton and his French correspondents.

The mortgages, and the testator’s guarantee of them, antedate his will, which was made on June 1st, 1868.

By his will, Mr. Hutton recognized his obligation to Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Co., and made the following provisions:

“ I have heretofore become responsible for certain sums of money loaned to-the Marquis de Portes (husband of my daughter Adele), by Auguste Seydoux,, Sieber & Company, on his estate of Portes, in or near Mire Poix, France; and as I may make further loans and advances on said estate, or may purchase the same, it is my will that the whole of such loans, advances or purchase-money shall form part of and be deducted from the share or interest of my daughter Adele in and to my residuary estate, as provided for as before mentioned, and that the same and the securities taken upon such loans, be assigned and transferred to her as and for her sole and separate estate aforesaid, and be subject-in all things to the provisions of my will in respect to her said share. In the event of my purchasing or becoming the possessor of the said estate of Portes, in France, I give and devise the said estate of Portes to my daughter, if she survives me; if not, to her issue by the said Marquis de Portes. If my daughter Adele shall not survive me or shall die without issue, then thcsaid estate of Portes shall go to my issue and their heirs; or, if there shall, at the-time or her death, be no issue of mine living, then to my next of kin in equal shares per stirpes.”

On July 28th, 1874, after the will was made, the Marquis deFortes executed, in favor of Mr. Hutton, an instrument known to the French law as an antichresis, the legal effect of which was to put him in the possession of the estate de Portes (which consisted of about three thousand two hundred acres of land, upon which were farms, mills, and other establishments for revenue), [305]*305with the right to receive its rents, issues and profits, but subject to the duty of paying from the income all governmental impositions on the estate and the interest upon encumbrances, the expense of keeping improvements in repair, and of maintaining insurance thereon. The surplus revenue was to be applied, first, to the payment of the interest upon the principal moneys advanced upon the antichresis, and then to the reduction of that principal. The moneys secured, to be repaid by the antichresis, were two hundred and eighty thousand francs, loaned by Mr. Hutton to the Marquis de Portes, and such moneys as should be appropriated by Mr. Hutton to the betterment and setting in good order of the estate of de Portes, from a maximum credit of one hundred and fifty thousand francs thereby opened by him in favor of his son-in-law. The moneys of the credit account were to pass through the hands of Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Colt appears that, out of the two hundred and eighty thousand francs thus loaned, Mr. Hutton was repaid all the interest that, up to that time, he had paid to Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Co., through his account current,” above referred to, upon the mortgages that they held against the estate de Portes. After that time, the interest he thus paid was charged to the account of the antichresis. The moneys advanced upon the antichresis did not pay the principal of the mortgages held by Messrs. Seydoux, Sieber & Co. As Mr. Hutton states in his will, he was responsible for that principal. I think it was the duty of the executors to discharge the estate from its liability by paying the mortgage debts, taking an assignment of the mortgages.

The second ground of objection to the allowance asked, is, that the executors have not obtained an assignment of the mort- ■ gages for which they have paid.

The will of Mr. Hutton contemplates that the Seydoux, Sieber & Co. mortgages shall become part of the residue of his estate, and shall be apportioned to his daughter Adele, in the distribution of that residue, and be assigned and transferred to her. In Marquis de Portes v. Hurlbut, 17 Stew. Eq. 517, the construction to be given to the clause of the will which I have quoted, was considered by the court of errors and appeals of this [306]*306state, and Chief-Justice Beasley, who wrote the opinion of the court, said : “ The respondents [the executors of the will] must pass to the appellant [Adele, the Marquise de Portes] securities for all sums of moneys that they charge against her.”

I think that, under the will, and, indeed, in the absence of the will (because Mr. Hutton’s obligation was simply the guarantee of the secured debt of another), the original security of the debt, the mortgages, should be transferred to the executors or to the Marquis de Portes, before the executors should be given credit for their payment. They are to form part of the residuary estate which the executors are to distribute, and are to be passed to Madame de Portes in that distribution. The executors, then, are not in position to be allowed for the payment of the mortgages until they can charge themselves with those instruments. As the case stands, the exception will be allowed.

The second exception is to the allowance asked for the following items of discharge:

“ 1885.
May 1st. E. S. Dakin, referee in Landon v. Whiting................. $1,000.00
May 4th. E. H. Landon, attorney, Landon v. Whiting................ 2,108.71
May 4th. J. B. Whiting, attorney, Landon v. Whiting............... 2,065.25
Oct. 28th. C. G-. Landon, decree of court................................. 12,000.00

Charles G. Landon was a brother-in-law and partner of Mr. Hutton, 'and is one of the executors of his will. During Mr. Hutton’s absence in Europe, under a general power of attorney, he managed Mr. Hutton’s affairs, and in so doing collected and disbursed several hundred thousands of dollars. Nothing was said between him and Mr. Hutton about compensation for his services. It was embarrassing to his co-executors, Messrs.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.J. Eq. 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurlbut-v-hutton-njch-1888.