In re the appeal from a decree of the Union county orphans court allowing the account of the Westfield Trust Co.

117 N.J. Eq. 429
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJanuary 10, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 117 N.J. Eq. 429 (In re the appeal from a decree of the Union county orphans court allowing the account of the Westfield Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the appeal from a decree of the Union county orphans court allowing the account of the Westfield Trust Co., 117 N.J. Eq. 429 (N.J. 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the conrt was delivered by

Case, J.

The executors of the last will and testament of William M. Cross, deceased, come before ns with appeals from two decrees of the conrt of chancery, one surcharging the execn[430]*430tors for potential losses and the other refusing to grant a rehearing.

William M. Cross died January 10th, 1929, leaving a last will and testament in which he made provision for his wife, Mary Y. Cross, and for his children. He named his brother, Edwin S. Cross, and Westfield Trust Company as executors and trustees. In the will he said, in part:

“I direct my said trustees to sell whatever securities may be necessary to pay any necessary expenses, but only such securities shall be sold as my said brother, Edwin S. Cross, if he then be alive, shall designate.
“I do give my said trustees power of borrowing a sum not exceeding Twenty Five Hundred Dollars, if necessary, in order that my securities be not sold at unfavorable times or on unfavorable terms."

The will was duly probated, and both executors qualified. On September 26th, 1932, the executors filed their petition on final accounting in the Union county orphans court and with it their first and final account as executors. The account was allowed notwithstanding exceptions thereto filed by the widow. Appeal from the decree was taken to the prerogative court by the guardian of the testator’s infant children. The proof is meager except for the statistical showing of the stockholdings disclosed by the inventory, the monthly market values from the time of death forward and the evidence of retention — still—of the stockholdings by the executors. An officer of the Westfield Trust Company testified that although that company did not consider the stockholdings hazardous it had counseled the sale of them upon the ground that they did not constitute the kind of investments legal for trust funds, but that Mr. Cross considered that the determination to sell lay with him under the will and that because of the knowledge had by him he was confident that the values would increase to the enrichment of the estate and that therefore he would not consent to sell except when necessary to raise funds for estate needs. The approximate values of the shares at varying periods were as follows: At the appraisal of the estate, $39,000; at the peak preceding the 1929 crash, $71,000; in the succeeding slump, $33,000; in April, 1930, [431]*431$62,000; in June, 1932, $3,000; at the filing of the accounting, $9,000. The vice-ordinary was of the opinion that this record threw liability upon the executors, and a decree of surcharge was .signed accordingly.

At or about the time of the making of the decree the executors applied for a rehearing, which was denied. We are of the opinion that the vice-ordinary was, under the circumstances of the case, quite within his field of discretion in refusing the rehearing. We pass to the major appeal.

The underlying rule is familiar and simple. The law holds an executor to, and only to, the exercise of reasonable diligence and ordinary prudence and caution. People’s National Bank, &c., v. Bichler, 115 N. J. Eq. 617 (at p. 620). The statute has specifically brought the retention by an executor of investments made by the testator within the same field of responsibility in providing (Comp. Stat. p. 2271 pl. 34; P. L. 1899 p. 236; P. L. 1881 p. 130) that “whenever * * * such executor * * * may, in the exercise of good faith

and reasonable discretion, have continued such investment, or may hereafter continue the same, he shall not be accountable for any loss by reason of such continuance.” The principle was stated by Vice-Ordinary Van Fleet in Heisler v. Sharp’s Ex’rs, 44 N. J. Eq. 167, in the following language approved by this court in In re Corn Exchange National Bank, &c., 109 N. J. Eq. 169:

“All that the respondents [the executors] were required to do was simply to do what any man of ordinary prudence and caution would, under like circumstances, have done. So long as the executor acts in good faith, and with ordinary discretion, and within the scope of his powers, his acts cannot be successfully assailed. No man is infallible; the wisest make mistakes; but the law holds no man responsible for the consequences of his mistakes which are the result of the imperfection of human judgment, and do not proceed from fraud, gross carelessness or indifference to duty.”

Here, as often, it is in the concrete application of the appropriate rule that the difficulty lies.

The vice-ordinary considered that the inaction of the [432]*432executors had amounted to gambling and speculating with the trust funds.’ This conclusion appears to have been based upon the reasoning that, inasmuch as the stocks, having reached a peak, had slumped with the crash and had again risen in the spring and summer of 1930 to a price at which they could have been sold without loss and even at a profit, the executors should then have sold instead of retaining the holdings on a falling market in the mistaken belief that better prices would return. The initial break was thought to have been such notice of instability as to put the executors to the obligation of selling on the rebound. However sound that reasoning would be if applied to the gyration of a single group of stocks in normal times, we think that it loses force in the face of the rule stated above and of the financial cataclysm through which the entire country, to say nothing of the outside world, has been passing. Fortúnate and unusual the man, who, in each or any of the succeeding stages of this general distress, has known what, with safety, to do in the effort to preserve the corpus of his own estate or of the estate of others.

It must be taken that the testamentary directions regarding securities had reference to the shares of corporate stock. It has been said that stockholdings are not securities (Graydon’s Executors v. Graydon, 23 N. J. Eq. 229; 25 N. J. Eq. 561), but terminology changes and that statement is not now baldly correct. Blanchard v. Blanchard, 116 N. J. Eq. 435. Corporate shares were the only assets in the testator’s estate that could come within the classification of securities.

We construe the will as indicating a desire on the part of the decedent to have his executors retain the stock securities of which he died possessed, selling only such as his brother, Edwin, whether or not the brother qualified as an executor, should designate. The further expressed wish was that the securities should be sold only when the times and the terms were favorable; and as “favorable” is in this connection a relative expression, we are led by the intrinsic force of the situation to believe that Edwin’s opinion was, in the mind of the decedent, an essential factor in the determination.

[433]*433When Echvin qualified, he became, of course, an executor, but in addition to the ordinary functions of that office, he occupied the rather unusual fiduciary position conferred by the testator wherein his judgment on the sale of the securities had a superior place. The dead brother clearly had intended the sale of the securities to rest heavily upon Edwin’s judgment. Consequently Edwin was given the power which, when accepted, became a duty. There is no proof that he did not give diligent and honest study to the trust.

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