In re Settlement of Cator

82 Tenn. 408
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1884
StatusPublished

This text of 82 Tenn. 408 (In re Settlement of Cator) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Settlement of Cator, 82 Tenn. 408 (Tenn. 1884).

Opinion

Freeman, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a case arising on a settlement of his accounts by the executor of Bazil Berry, deceased, in the county court of Williamson, the case having been ‘taken by appeal to the circuit court. There judgment was had against the executor on two items, from which he has appealed to this court. Cator appeals-because he is held liable for the uncollected balance-found remaining on a debt due his testator originally by note, of $5,092, made by Á. G. & H. G. W. .Mayberry, said balance being at date of the judgment of the circuit court $3,046.63, and also because not allowed a credit for $207.86, with interest, amounting to $249.91.

As to the last item, the Referees report correctly,, the executor should not have been charged with it. It was a fee for collecting and paying over upwards-[410]*410of $5,000 of this Mayberry note, about which the contest now is being had1.

Whether the attorneys employed were the proper parties to be so employed or not, because also the attorneys of the administrator of A. G. Mayberry, who was priucipal in the note, still for beneficial services actually rendered, of which the estate received the proceeds, the heirs and distributees ought not to be permitted to take the benefits without bearing a proper and reasonable expense in obtaining it. The fee is shown to have been reasonable, the money collected, and paid over to the executor of Berry.

The question of liability for the uncollected balance on the note given by A. G. & H. G. W. May-berry, depende substantially on the following state of facts: A. C. Mayberry, the principal, died October, 1868, with a large estate and large indebtedness; administration was granted to his co-maker of the note, H. G. W. Mayberry, in November after, .who not long after suggested the insolvency of the estate to the county court, and in less than a year a bill was filed in the chancery court to transfer the administration to that court, which was done, and notice given to all creditors to file their claims. Berry, the testator, filed this note on March 1, 1870, with the clerk and master, in said cause himself, but fiied no petition making himself party, nor did he take any further step to have himself made_such. However, that administration proceeded regularly, or rather very irregularly, and the debt due Berry was reported by the clerk and master, and allowed as a claim against the [411]*411■estate, do exceptions being filed to its allowance. In the meantime Berry died in 1871, and Cator became •bis executor. He employed the firm of Campbell, MeEwen & Bullock to attend to the collection of this claim. They, were at the same time the regular attorneys of the administrator of A. G. Mayberry, and representing him in the administration suit at the time the claim of Berry had been allowed by a decree confirming the report of the clerk and master made in April, 1871, Cator not proving the will until December 4, 1871. The duty of the executor and his" attorneys then was to see to the collection of the claim, as it stood, allowed by the court. The attorneys, no doubt, assumed there was no litigation or contest between the administrator of A. G. May-berry and the executor of Berry, and in .fact there was none. The claim, as • we have said, had been adjudged against the estate on a report of the clerk and master, which had been unexcepted to, and was ■conclusive against the administrator. In this aspect of the case there was no antagonism of interest ' between the administrator and the executor of Berry as to this claim. The only contest that could arise Avould have been with the heirs or distributees when assets, personal or not, were sought to be applied to the payment of the debt so allowed. No such contest was ever made however. They, as well as the other creditors of the estate, were in no condition to contest the claim itself, as they were all parties to the administration suit, and equally with the administrator concluded by this decree. There can then be [412]*412no liability against Cator, on the special facts stated, by reason of having employed this firm to represent him in the collection of this claim.

If the claim had not been allowed, and it had been shown that any failure to have it allowed, or to realize it after it' had been allowed, had resulted by reason of antagonism between the two parties represented, then a different question might have been presented. But on the facts as we have stated them, there is no difficulty in saying there was no impropriety in the position of the attorneys in undertaking the collection of this debt for the executor, nor any wrong in his retention of the firm for this purpose. It is shown the attorneys were a firm of ability and high persoual as well as professional character.

But it is urged that there had been pledged and placed in the hands of Berry $12,000 of Nashville & Decatur bonds, bearing ten per cent interest, and that these bonds were permitted to be sold as part of 'the estate of A. C. Mayberry, without resistance by the executor or his attorneys, and the lien not asserted, aud pledge thereby lost. ¥e proceed to notice this:

The statement of McEwen with reference to May-berry getting the bonds from Berry is as follows: After saying he wrote the note, that H. G. W. May-berry signed it as surety, and that Berry was satisfied with this at the time, he adds, but A. C. May-berry, at the time of the execution of the note, to better satisfy Mr. Berry, handed him a lot of railroad [413]*413bonds, about $12,0U0, I believe, as collateral security, with H. Gr. W. Mayberry. ■ Some time afterwards the road proposed paying interest upon the bonds. A. C. Mayberry spoke to me about getting the bonds back from Mr. Berry. I do not remember what I told him, but he went out to see the old man, and returned with the bonds and coupons, and A. C. May-berry collected the coupons and retained the possession of the bonds, and deposited them in the safe of S. S. House, Esq., and retained them while he lived, and after his death his administrator produced the bonds, and returned them in his inventory as part of the assets of A. C. Mayberry’s estate, and I think I marked them, or made a note on the inventory, that the bonds had^ been given as collateral for the Berry debt, but ■ it was claimed Berry had surrendered them to A. C. Mayberry jn his lifetime, and it is likely I called Mr. Berry’s attention to the matter, and he did not set up any claim to the bonds, and when notice was given, he filed his note himself, and still set up do claim- to the bonds. When I asked the chaucery court for an order to sell the bonds, I recollect distinctly calling the attention of the court to the facts about the bonds, §md the court stated that the return of the bonds by Berry to Mayberry, and retention was a cancellation of that part of the contract, and ordered the clerk and master to sell the bonds for the purpose of paying May-berry’s debts, which was done. The bonds were never in my possession or under my control. They were delivered at the time of the loan by A. C. Mayberry [414]*414to Bazil Berry himself, and surrendered by himself to Mayberry.” He says 'also, on cross-examination, that he called the attention of the court, at the time' the decree was made to sell the bonds, to the memorandum on the inventory.

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82 Tenn. 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-settlement-of-cator-tenn-1884.