In Re Estate of Olson

219 N.W. 401, 206 Iowa 706
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 15, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 219 N.W. 401 (In Re Estate of Olson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Olson, 219 N.W. 401, 206 Iowa 706 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

De Graff, J.

O. I. Olson died testate in April, 1925, at Forest City, Iowa. The appellant, H. H. Eichorn, and O. M. Harmon were named as joint executors of his last will and testament. They qualified as such executors May 15,- 1925. William Harmon, Neil Harmon, and Albert .Harmon are residents of North Dakota, and O. M. Harmon is a resident of Minnesota. These four persons are the objectors in the instant case. They were heirs at law of O. I. Olson, and were named among the devisees in his will. These four objectors are the sons of O. I. Olson, but, for some reason not disclosed in the record, assumed the name of Harmon, and are known by that name.

It appears that O. I. Olson, about a month prior to his death, deposited $3,600 with the Winnebago County State Bank of Forest City, Iowa, and received a certificate of deposit, bearing interest at 5 per cent, and due September 18, 1925. This certificate of deposit constituted a part of the assets of the estate of O. I. Olson. Among.the other assets was a certificate of deposit issued by the Forest City National Bank to O. I. Olsop for $2,000, a small farm pear Forest City, some live stogk. *708 machinery, and household goods, and a promissory note executéd by one Holland.

The executor did not take possession of any personal property op the home premises. The personal property was sold at public auction on the Olson farm, and the proceeds of the salé placed in the First National Bank of Forest-City, in the name of Olson Brothers. They collected it. The $2,000 certificate of deposit did not come-into the possession' of the executor Eichorn, but Was 'indorsed by the executor to O. M. Harmon, the' other executor, at the suggestion of the ‘ ‘Harmon brothers, and paid to the Harmon brothers and Oscar Olson, another- son, and one of the legatees. This was done before Eichorn .received' his appointment as executor.

The record discloses that, before the will was -admitted to probate, practically all of the personal property of which O. I. Olson died seized was received by the heirs at law and ob- . jéctors herein, and without reference to administration of the property under the will. It appears- further that, while the objectors were at Forest City for a few days subsequent .to the death and funeral of their father, they attempted to collect from the Winnebago County State Bank the $3,600 certificate of deposit, without reference to the provisions of the will of O. I. Olson. At the request of the objectors; the appellant, Eichorn, and the other executor, O. M. Harmon, attempted to cash 'the $3,600 certificate of deposit. In fact, the certificate was presented to the bank for payment the day following thé funeral of O. I. Olson. The Winnebago bafik refused payment, and’suggested that the will would first have to be probated; On the following day, the will was offered for probate, and Eichorn and Harmon duly qualified as joint executors of said estate. No doubt is left in the record that each of these objectors, before leaving for their respective homes in North Dakota and Minnesota, directed Eichorn to withdraw the funds on certificate of deposit from the Winnebago County State Bank. These objectors were much displeased by the attitude of said bank in its refusal to cash the certificate, and they felt that the said bank had put them to a lot of’ trouble. ' '

The executor Eichorn was impersonal in the matter. He was getting nothing for his good offices. He had no knowledge at any time that the First National Bank of Forest City was *709 financially embarrassed in any way, and considered said bank a sound and solvent banking institution. He was not financially interested in the First National Bank, and was not related in any way to any of its officers. The record is plain that these objectors received all of the proceeds from the sale of the farm, without paying Eichorn any compensation for his services- He did assist the objectors, before the will was probated, in obtaining the proceeds of the $2,000 certificate of deposit. He had the note that was due the estate renewed, and made payable direct to the objectors and Oscar Olson, another legatee. The only asset that came into his hands as executor was the certificate of deposit for $3,600 which was then in the Winnebago County State Bank.

In the light of this record, we first ask: Were the acts and statements of the objectors in pursuading the executor to withdraw the funds out of the Winnebago County State Bank suffieiet to constitute an estoppel of their subsequent right to complain of any loss resulting from their own direction? We answer in the affirmative. Villard v. Villard, 219 N. Y. 482 (114 N. E. 789) ; Campbell v. Miller, 38 Ga. 304; 24 Corpus Juris 51. Nor may it be said that the executor, under the instant facts, was guilty of any negligence or bad faith in changing the deposit from one bank to the other. An executor-or administrator, for the purpose of safely keeping the funds of an estate during administration, has the right to deposit the same in a bank, using due care in selecting the depositary. In re Estate of Workman, 196 Iowa 1108; Incorporated Town of Conway v. Conway, 190 Iowa 563; 24 Corpus Juris 50.

It follows that an executor who exercises -the care of a prudent man in selecting a depositary for the funds of the estate and depositing same in his fiduciary capacity, is not liable for loss sustained by the bankruptcy of the depositary. Officer v. Officer, 120 Iowa 389; In re Estate of Ring, 132 Iowa 216. Our statute provides that an executor is not chargeable for “any loss occurring without his fault” Section 12048, Code of 1924. Executors and administrators are not insurers.

*710 *709 Second: Was Eichorn’s act, as executor, in redepositing the funds evidenced by the first certificate of deposit, a deposit of the funds, and not an investment? Was parol evidence ad *710 missible to prove the oral agreement made by the executor with the First National Bank, to show the true nature of the transaction?.. A certificate of deposit is a written acknowledgment by a bank or banker of a receipt of a sum of money om-deposit which the bank or banker promises to pay to the depositor, bearer, the order of bearer, or some other person or his order. 7 Corpus Juris 646. A deposit is neither a loan nor a bailment. Ordinarily, it -simply, creates the relationship of debtor and creditor between the bank and the depositor. Leach v. Beazley, 201 Iowa 337; State ex rel. Carroll v. Corning State Sav. Bank, 136 Iowa 79; Elliott v. Capital City State Bank, 128 Iowa 275.

The certificate of deposit in question was deposited by Eichorn, as executor of the estate of O. I.. Olson,, deceased, payable to the order of himself, as such executor, in current funds, on the return of the certificate, properly indorsed, in six or twelve months, with interest at 5 per cent. The executor offered evidence to prove the true nature of this transaction. This was done to.

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Bluebook (online)
219 N.W. 401, 206 Iowa 706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-olson-iowa-1928.