In Re Opitz

17 A.2d 271, 128 N.J. Eq. 487, 27 Backes 487, 1941 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 13
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 15, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 17 A.2d 271 (In Re Opitz) 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 Opitz, 17 A.2d 271, 128 N.J. Eq. 487, 27 Backes 487, 1941 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 13 (N.J. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

This is an appeal from an order of the Passaic County Orphans Court discharging an order to show cause why a final decree approving the executor's account should not be reopened so as to permit the appellant to file exceptions thereto.

The appellant's father, Victor Opitz, died in the city of Paterson, this state, on September 16th, 1925. He left a last will and testament which was admitted to probate in the county of Passaic on September 28th, 1925. The Franklin Trust Company of Paterson was named, and qualified, as executor and trustee under the will. On November 7th, 1925, it filed an inventory of the estate showing assets of the value of $76,337.43. No account was filed until March 15th, 1938. The account states there is no balance. It was allowed by final decree dated April 28th, 1938. To the account is annexed a statement showing that the securities in the hands of the *Page 488 accountant consisted of 1,120 shares of preferred stock of the Paterson Mutual Hosiery Mills, Inc., having a par value of $100, which originally were inventoried at $73,763.20, and 1,103 shares of common stock in the same company, which at the time of the accounting had no stated value.

The decedent left him surviving his wife and one child, the appellant, who at the time of her father's death was of the age of eight years. The widow, on December 25th, 1926, married Herman Koerber.

Shortly after her father's death, the appellant, with her mother, removed to California. On November 19th, 1926, appellant's mother was appointed her guardian by the Superior Court of the State of California, Los Angeles county. Certified copies of that appointment were forwarded to the executor in a letter dated November 24th, 1926 (Exhibits D-1 and D-2). On March 29th, 1938, appellant attained her twenty-first birthday.

On March 15th, 1938, the executor mailed to appellant, and to her guardian, her mother, at the mother's address, State Game Farm, Yountville, California, notice that the account of the estate would be audited and reported for settlement by the Orphans Court of Passaic county on April 21st, 1938. On April 28th, 1938, the account was allowed and a decree signed by the judge of the Orphans Court.

On May 9th, 1938, the executor mailed a notice, or writing, to appellant and her mother, at the above address in California, that it would apply to the Orphans Court of Passaic county in June, 1938, for an order discharging it from further duties. On June 9th, 1938, such order was signed and entered by the Orphans Court.

The appellant lived with her mother and stepfather until sometime in the year 1935, when she became estranged from them, allegedly because of differences with her stepfather, and took up a residence in another part of the State of California. She alleges that she had no knowledge of her father's will, or that The Franklin Trust Company was executor and trustee thereunder, until the latter part of April, 1938, when she learned from her mother that a final account of her father's estate had been filed. Upon receiving that information *Page 489 she requested, and received from her mother, the latter part of April, 1938, a copy of her father's will. She then wrote to the clerk of Passaic county for a copy of the account. She received it in the early part of May, 1938. At that time the final decree allowing the account had been filed.

While the appellant knew that her mother had been appointed her guardian, she declares that she had no knowledge or information about her father's estate. She had received no word about it from the executor, she asserts, and, consequently, could make no arrangement to be represented at the hearing on the accounting. She says the notice which the executor claims to have forwarded her was never received by her.

The will of the decedent, Victor Opitz, after ordering the payment of debts, gave a money bequest of $10,000 to his wife and the residue to his executor to "invest and keep the same invested" and to pay the income arising therefrom to his wife until his daughter, the appellant, became twenty-five years of age; but, in the event that his wife remarried (which she did) before his daughter attained the age of twenty-five years, then the executor was to pay one-quarter of the income to the wife and three-quarters of the income to the daughter until the daughter became twenty-five years of age. When she attained that age, the trust terminated and the trustee was to pay one-quarter of thecorpus to the wife and the remaining three-quarters to the daughter, the appellant.

The decedent's estate consisted practically of the stock in the Paterson Mutual Hosiery Mills, Inc. The hosiery company was a close corporation; it had few stockholders. Its stock was not listed on any exchange and there appeared to be no ready market for its sale or purchase. The executor says it offered the stock to brokers to sell, but they could find no market for it. It says it also mailed letters to stockholders of the company offering the stock for sale, but there were no purchasers for it.

From the year 1925 to 1927 the stock drew dividends. Thereafter, no dividends were paid. In 1931 the hosiery company became insolvent and a receiver was appointed for it by this court. *Page 490

The appellant says that the executor was in a position to note the steadily declining financial strength of the hosiery company and to observe the continuous depreciation of the stock's worth, and despite its knowledge and observation it negligently held the stock and at no time made an attempt to sell it, with the result that it became valueless. She points to the fact that Hugo Huettig was vice-president and a director of the executor trust company; that he was also the president and treasurer and a director and stockholder of the hosiery company; that he knew that the trust company was executor of this estate; and that as such director and treasurer of the hosiery company, he was in a position to acquire full knowledge of its affairs, and was able to readily furnish the executor trust company with information of the hosiery company's doubtful financial position, and with falling value of decedent's stock. She contends that it is impossible to divorce the knowledge which Huettig had as a director and officer of the hosiery company from the knowledge which he had as a director and officer of The Franklin Trust Company. Hollingsworth v. Lederer, 125 N.J. Eq. 193;4 Atl. Rep. 2d 300. She argues that the stock was of a speculative nature, and that the executor trust company knew that to be so. Consequently, she says, it was the duty of the executor to sell the stock or to apply to the court for instructions as to the retention or disposition of it.

R.S. 1937, 3:10-18 relates to decrees on final account; it reads as follows:

"The decree of the ordinary or orphans court on the final account and settlement of a fiduciary shall be conclusive on all parties and shall exonerate and discharge the accountant from all demands of creditors, legatees or others, beyond the amount of the settlement, except for assets which may come to hand thereafter and in cases where a person applying for resettlement proves fraud or mistake in the account to the satisfaction of the court."

The provisions of the statute are quite clear. It lays down the terms under which a decree or final account may be reopened. One of the terms necessary to such purpose is that the moving party is required to establish "fraud or mistake in the account to the satisfaction of the court." The numerous *Page 491

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22 A.2d 364 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 A.2d 271, 128 N.J. Eq. 487, 27 Backes 487, 1941 N.J. Prerog. Ct. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-opitz-njsuperctappdiv-1941.