In re accounting of Bayley

59 A. 215, 67 N.J. Eq. 566, 1904 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 23
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedNovember 14, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 59 A. 215 (In re accounting of Bayley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re accounting of Bayley, 59 A. 215, 67 N.J. Eq. 566, 1904 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 23 (N.J. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Magie, Ordinary.

Mary E. Bayley died in Essex county, November 24th, 1894, leaving her surviving her husband, Joseph Bajdey, and three [567]*567children, viz., William, Sarah and Joseph, Jr. William Bayley was appointed administrator of his mother’s estate, and on April 14th, 1902, he filed an inventory of the personal property of the deceased and presented an account for allowance.

The surviving husband of deceased filed exceptions, both to the inventory and account.

In January, 1903, the administrator presented air amended account, to which the same party filed exceptions.

The exceptions, after a number of continuances, were brought to hearing before the orphans court, and testimony was taken thereon in open court, and on January 9th, 1904, the court made a decree allowing some of the exceptions and restating the account so as to charge the administrator with the balance of $6,594.66, and directing that the same should he distributed and paid over to the surviving husband of the intestate.

The administrator has appealed from the decree and all its parts, but the argument here has been directed only to one of the questions raised by the exceptions. .

That question relates to the twenty-one shares of stock of the Pennsylvania Coal Company, of the par value of $50 each, which the administrator inventoried as part of the estate of deceased and as of the value of $1,050. There was an exception to the inventory in respect to the valuation given to those shares, and, in passing, it may be said that the evidence makes it clear that they were worth very much more than par. In the account first presented, accountant charged himself with tire par value of those shares, and prayed allowance, as the case shows, for fourteen shares thereof as of the value at par, and as transferred, seven shares to his sister, Sarah, and seven shares to himself. In the amended account, the administrator charged himself with the inventory, but prayed allowance for the twenty-one shares of stock at its par value, as “erroneously stated in inventory as the property of said Mary E. Bayley.” The exceptions challenged this allowance, and presented the question whether the ownership of the shares was in Mary E. Bayley at the time of her death, so as to require her administrator to account for the same. That is the question argued.

Since the administrator had inventoried those shares of stock [568]*568as part of the estate of deceased, the court below correctly held that the burden of establishing the fact that they did not belong to her at her decease was cast upon him, and that he was not entitled to the allowance'prayed by his amended account except upon satisfactory proof of that fact.

The court below, upon the evidence, reached the conclusion that the administrator had not established the fact that the shares of stock in question were not the property of the deceased at the time of her death. The administrator claimed that they had been the subject of a gift by deceased, in her lifetime, to her three children, in equal portions. But the court correctly held that tlie evidence did not make out either a donatio mortis causa or a gift inter vivos, but rather disclosed an intent on the part of the deceased to make disposition thereof at her death, which failed to become effective because not made in writing and with the formalities required. The opinion rendered in that court reviews the evidence with care, and reaches the conclusion indicated on grounds which I deem entirely support it.

The result thus reached settles (l).that the administrator was bound to include in his inventory and account the twenty-one shares of stock at their real value, and (2) that he cannot be discharged from accounting therefor, as administrator of the intestate, except upon other grounds. But it was claimed below, and it is strenuously insisted here, that the orphans court erred in making a decree requiring him to account for the value of the stock to the respondent. This is, perhaps, rather aimed at the part of the decree which directed distribution of the whole estate upon such accounting to respondent.

The ground of this claim, as presented, is the conduct of respondent disclosed by the evidence. The facts presented by the evidence are these: The administrator testified that shortly after his mother’s death respondent asked him about the Penns3d.van.ia Coal Company’s stock, and that he replied to him that his “mother had given it to us three children, to have seven shares each, and I was appointed to see that it was transferred on the books of the company, and I was' going to do so.” Shortly afterward the administrator did transfer, on tiro books of the company, seven shares to each child, including himself. Re[569]*569spondent knew of this transfer then or afterwards. Subsequently an offer to buy these shares was made by a circular that offered terms which would amount to $365 for each share. Respondent knew of the offer, but it does not appear that he expressly advised or counseled a sale. But the sale was made, to his knowledge, and each child received the offered amount for each share of the stock. Respondent expressed his gratification at the price obtained.

Upon these facts it is contended that there arose an estoppel by respondents conduct. This is claimed, not so much upon any act of respondent, but rather upon his silence and acquiescence in the transfer of the stock by the administrator to his sister and brother, without asserting any right in himself as entitled to his wife’s personal property. This reticence of respondent and his apparent acquiescence, it is urged, induced appellant to make the transfers, for which he had no compensation, and so to deprive himself of all power to account for the stock except out of his own funds.

If the evidence disclosed that the respondent, during the period in question, had been informed of what had occurred when the intestate was claimed to have made a gift of the shares to her three children, it may be that his conduct might be considered. But that conduct must affect him, if at all, by reason of some knowledge of a right to the stock in him, or at least there must appear circumstances from which he was charged with a duty of inquiry in respect thereto. Knowledge or duty to inquire, whereby knowledge would have been acquired, is essential to an estoppel of the kind claimed. Big. Estop. 528; Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Norris, 31 N. J. Eq. (4 Stew.) 583; Baldwin v. Richman, 9 N. J. Eq. (1 Stock.) 394; Richman v. Baldwin, 21 N. J. Law (1 Zab.) 403. Where both parties have equal opportunities of knowledge, and both act in ignorance of the real state of the case, such an estoppel will not arise. Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Norris, ubi supra.

I have searched the evidence in vain to discover that respondent knew the facts on which a gift of the stock by the intestate to her children was claimed. Hor can I discover anything-to put him on inquiry. He was doubtless charged with knowledge [570]*570that, as husband of an intestate wile, he was entitled to her persona] estate, after payment of debts and expenses of administration. But lie was also charged with knowledge that his wife, in her lifetime, could give away her personal estate so as to exclude his rights.

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Bluebook (online)
59 A. 215, 67 N.J. Eq. 566, 1904 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-accounting-of-bayley-njsuperctappdiv-1904.