In re Estate of Semple

42 A. 28, 189 Pa. 385, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 654
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 3, 1899
DocketAppeals, Nos. 126 and 127
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 42 A. 28 (In re Estate of Semple) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania 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 Semple, 42 A. 28, 189 Pa. 385, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 654 (Pa. 1899).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Geeen,

The appellant was the widow of the decedent and the sole executrix of his will. She was also the devisee and legatee of all his real and personal estate during her life or widowhood. On the adjudication of her account as executrix she was surcharged by the court below with the sum of $48,030, being the difference between the price at which she sold the stock of store goods belonging to the estate of the testator, and the amount of the inventory of the goods. The correctness of this surcharge is the question of chief consequence in the present appeal. There are some other matters of dispute but this is the chief one. The appellant’s husband was a dry goods merchant living in the city of Allegheny at the time of his death. He had conducted a large business some years before his death, employing as many as 200 clerks at times, but before his death the business had become much curtailed, and only about forty to fifty clerks were employed some time before, and at the time of, his death. An inventory of his stock was made after his death, the amount of which was $78,030. In about three months after the death of the testator the executrix sold the whole of the stock for a lump sum of $30,000, and the court below surcharged her with the difference between this sum and the amount of the inventory, to wit: $48,030, holding that she had not overcome the prima facie character of the inventory. After a very careful and attentive reading and study of the opinion of the orphans’ court and of the testimony taken on both sides and of the arguments of counsel on both sides, we find ourselves entirely unable to agree either with the conclusions or the reasons in support of them contained in the opinion of the learned court below. The circumstances in which it is proper to surcharge an accountant have been well defined in a number of the [389]*389decisions of this Court, and there ought not to be any difficulty in applying the principles controlling the subject to the facts of any given case. The particular ground of surcharge in this case was that the executrix sold the stock of goods in question for less than its fair value, and the court below held her responsible, that is liable to pay the full inventory price of the goods, 178,080. There was not a particle of testimony in the case to prove that any responsible person or persons would have paid that much for them, and the appellant claims that she sold them for as much as could be got for them. A very few citations from our own decisions will suffice to exhibit the state of the law on this subject. In McNair’s Appeal, 4 Rawle, 148, it was said: “ So long as executors manage the estate in accordance with the ideas which the decedent himself entertained of it, and do nothing but what there is reason to believe he would have approved, it seems they are not responsible for losses to legatees. Between an executor and legatees, a case is to be decided upon a more liberal view of the discretion and power of the executor than as against creditors.”

The appellant alleged that in selling the stock of goods as she did she was acting in pursuance of the positive directions of her husband. She testified that at a family conference the night after .the funeral, all the children being present and the question being what was to be done with the business, the following took place: “Well, they all thought it would be a good thing to have the store opened and run permanently, and I was called in and we had a counsel. They told me what they thought it would be the best to do, and I objected at once, because my husband before he died told me to get rid of the store. He said, ‘Now you had better get rid of the store and take the first opportunity you can get.’ That was one of the instructions he gave me a few days before he died.” There was no contradiction of this testimony. They all agreed that the store should be opened and run for a time, and this was done for about three months, all concurring, including James Semple, the assignor of the exceptant.

In Keller’s Appeal, 8 Pa. 288, Justice Coulter, delivering the opinion, said: “ A court of chancery always deals with great tenderness towards a trustee acting in good faith. . . . The most stringent of our own cases require that the administrator [390]*390should be guilty of gross negligence in order to charge him.” Lord Hardwick says, in Knight v. Earl of Plimouth, 3 Atk. 480, “ If there is nothing wilful in the conduct of the trustee, no mala tides, the court will always favor him.” In Stewart’s Appeal, 110 Pa. 425, we said: “ For aught that we can see he exercised the ordinary judgment of an ordinarily prudent person in making these sales, and in this there is nothing of supine negligence which is required in order to charge a trustee in such cases. In Neff’s Appeal, 7 P. F. S. on page 96, we said, ‘ All that a court of equity requires from trustees is common skill, common prudence and common caution. Executors, administrators or guardians are not liable beyond what they actually receive unless in case of gross negligence, for when they act as others do with their own goods, in good faith, and they are not guilty of gross negligence, they are not liable.’ ”

It is not necessary to enlarge the citations; there is no kind of dispute that the law is as stated in the foregoing decisions.

The opinion of the learned court below does not contain the slightest reference to the decisions of this Court on the liability of accountants to surcharge, nor is any effort made to show that the accountant was guilty of supine negligence in making the sale of goods. The conclusion of the court is thus expressed, “In view of all the circumstances, the prima facie character of the inventory has not been overcome; and the executrix must therefore be surcharged with the loss which resulted from her negligence.” We do not understand that this is the proper test to determine the liability of an executrix to be surcharged for loss on a sale of goods, and if we did so understand the law, we are unable to agree with the learned judge in his conclusion that the accountant was guilty of supine negligence, or of any negligence in making the sale in question. We will proceed to set forth our reasons for differing with the learned court below in the conclusion reached upon this subject.

In considering a question of this kind it is necessary to take into account the situation and condition of the estate, the character and quality of the goods sold, the opinions of witnesses best qualified to judge, the wishes and desires of the persons interested in the property and in the estate, and the good or bad faith of the accountant in making the sale.

It was distinctly proved, and not at all contradicted, that the [391]*391estate of William Semple was at the time of his death indebted to the amount of $247,644.11. Of this total sum there was due upon promissory notes, maturing from day to day, and all within four months, $147,089.98. There were unpaid bills, taxes, etc., to the amount of $27,091.79, all overdue, and in bonds and mortgages $65,000. While it is true that the latter items might remain for a time without disturbance on their account, it is also true that the other items of debit were imminent, were constantly maturing, were naturally pressing upon the resources of the estate, and might, at the option of the creditors, be urged for payment at the end of one year from the testator’s death.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A. 28, 189 Pa. 385, 1899 Pa. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-semple-pa-1899.