In Re Hazeltine

182 A. 357, 119 N.J. Eq. 308, 18 Backes 308, 1936 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 12
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 7, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 182 A. 357 (In Re Hazeltine) 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 Hazeltine, 182 A. 357, 119 N.J. Eq. 308, 18 Backes 308, 1936 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 12 (N.J. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

This is an appeal from a decree of the Hudson county orphans court made on December 7th, 1934, wherein it was ordered that the decree dated August 9th, 1933, allowing the executor's final account be set aside, the letters testamentary granted to appellant as executor be revoked and the appellant removed from his office as executor; that letters of administration with the will annexed upon the estate of Philipine Hazeltine, deceased, be granted to William R. Gannon; that appellant surrender the assets of the estate to him; that appellant restate and resettle his account as executor on the 4th day of January, next; that the removal of appellant as trustee is not required but since he is removed from his office as executor "for misconduct in the performance of his *Page 309 duties as such," that he be required as trustee to give security in the sum of $300,000 to the ordinary of the State of New Jersey for the faithful performance of his duty as trustee, and that he bring within the city of Hoboken and the jurisdiction of the court all the assets of the estate, and deposit same in the Hudson County Trust Company, and not withdraw the same except upon special order of the court. The decree imposed the costs of the proceedings and a counsel fee of $1,500, upon appellant personally. (Italics mine.)

The appellant, a nephew of decedent, was named the executor and trustee in the will of Philipine H. Hazeltine, who died March 11th, 1932, a resident of the city of Hoboken. The will was admitted to probate on April 5th, 1932, at which time appellant was a resident of Tenafly, Bergen county, New Jersey, from which place he moved in the early part of 1933 to the town of Barnstable, Massachusetts, where he now resides.

On October 1st, 1932, the city of Hoboken assessed the personal property of the estate in the name of the appellant as executor at the valuation of $250,000. The assessment was made for the year 1933 under authority of section 301, chapter 236, page 853,P.L. 1918, as amended P.L. 1920 ch. 310 p. 561 (2 Cum. Supp.Comp. Stat. p. 3488), which provides for tax on property under the control of any person as trustee, guardian, executor or administrator where such person is not a resident of the taxing district, but where the decedent resided in such taxing district at the time of his death.

By stipulation the file of the Hudson county orphans court is made a part of the record before me, and from this it appears that beginning with August 23d 1933, the city of Hoboken filed several petitions which have been abandoned with the exception of the petition of April 4th, 1934, upon which the order appealed from is founded. That petition alleged that appellant did not include in his final account as executor the amount of the tax assessed against him as such for the year 1933; that the decree of August 9th, 1933, allowing the said account was procured by the accountant by fraudulently withholding from the court the information that *Page 310 the taxes due the city of Hoboken had not been paid or their payment provided for, and by fraudulently leading the court to believe that said accountant had fully administered said estate, whereas he had not done so and did not intend to do so, and prays that the decree of August 9th, 1933, allowing the final account be set aside; that the appellant be restrained from making any distribution of the balance in his hands until the further order of the court; and that he be ordered to bring and keep the balance in his hands shown by said account within the jurisdiction of the court. An order to show cause was made on said petition returnable September 22d 1933.

The answer of appellant to the petition (to which affidavits were annexed) raised the constitutionality of the tax; set forth that the estate had been distributed; that the tax had not been paid upon advice of counsel; that failure to pray allowance for said tax was not predicated upon mistake or fraud, but was purposely omitted on advice of counsel; that the claim of petitioner was not a debt of the estate or of appellant and that the proceeding instituted by petitioner was not a proper proceeding for the collection of the tax and the court was without jurisdiction to aid in the collection thereof.

The court found that "in withholding from this court information relating to this tax, and not making any mention thereof on the final accounting, the executor was guilty of fraudulent conduct. Under these circumstances, the final account was fraudulent and the decree of this court made on August 9th, 1933, allowing this account of the executor should be set aside."

The orphans court is a tribunal created by statute and the power to enter the order appealed from depends upon the statute creating it. Tenbrook v. M'Colm, 10 N.J. Law 333; In reAlexander, 79 N.J. Eq. 226.

Section 127 of the Orphans Court act (3 Comp. Stat. p. 3857), provides that the decree of the orphans court on the final settlement and allowance of executors' accounts "shall exonerate and forever discharge every such executor * * * *Page 311 from all demands * * * beyond the amount of such settlement," except (1) where the executor obtains additional assets of the decedent after such settlement; and (2) excepting also where the party applying for a resettlement shall prove some fraud or mistake therein to the satisfaction of the orphans court.

The object of an account by an executor is not to compel him to carry out his duties to pay creditors of decedent. The object of such accounting is to ascertain how much assets the executor has in his hands. "If the executor or administrator disputes the claim, or refuses to pay it, the orphans court cannot allow it, or compel the executor or administrator to include it in his account. To justify the orphans court in allowing a claim against an estate, it must appear that the executor or administrator assented to, or recognized it as a debt due from the estate. * * *" Vreeland v. Vreeland's Adm'r, 16 N.J. Eq. 512.

When the judge of the orphans court in his opinion (In reHazeltine, 13 N.J. Mis. R. 152, 159; 177 Atl. Rep. 108), said that if the appellant had frankly set forth the assessment of the city of Hoboken, the court would not have allowed the settlement of the final account on August 9th, 1933, the well established principles that the orphans court is not the proper tribunal for the trial of disputed claims (Middleton v. Middleton, 35 N.J. Eq. 115,116) and cannot decree payment to creditors (Miller v. Pettit, 16 N.J. Law 421, 426), but also that the debts before an orphans court in settling a final account are only those for which the executor claims an allowance in his account (Partridge v. Partridge, 46 N.J. Eq. 434, 436; affirmed,47 N.J. Eq. 601), was overlooked. In the latter case, Vice-Chancellor Van Fleet, in reply to the argument that the statute giving the orphans court power to decree distribution under wills so extended the jurisdiction of that court that it could deal with the rights of creditors, said (at p. 436):

"* * * the debts and expenses meant by the statute are obviously those, and only those, which the executor has paid, and for which he claims allowance in his account. The regulation

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Bluebook (online)
182 A. 357, 119 N.J. Eq. 308, 18 Backes 308, 1936 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hazeltine-njsuperctappdiv-1936.