In re the Estate of Kent

146 Misc. 155, 261 N.Y.S. 698, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1732
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 146 Misc. 155 (In re the Estate of Kent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Kent, 146 Misc. 155, 261 N.Y.S. 698, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1732 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Foley, S.

In this contested accounting proceeding, the principal issues raised by the objections to the account involve an attempted surcharge against the corporate executor for its failure to sell the securities taken over from the decedent at the time of her death and still retained within the estate. Mrs. Kent, the testatrix, died February 19, 1930. Letters testamentary were issued to the accounting executor on April 26, 1930. The principal asset of the estate consisted of 4,736 shares of the common stock of the General Electric Company, which were appraised, as of the date of her death,, at $73 7 /8 per share, or a total of $349,872. Within the estate there was also a block of 332 shares of the Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation, valued as of the date of death at $13,487.50, or approximately $41 per share. The remaining assets consisted of real estate, shares of stock and personal effects appraised at approximately $30,000. No serious dispute has arisen as to the administration of the last group of assets.

Mrs. Kent’s will and codicil provided pecuniary legacies of [157]*157$121,550 and created two trusts aggregating $10,000, or a total of $131,550. The residuary estate was bequeathed in one-third parts to her stepdaughter, Mrs. Alice Kent Stoddard, and her two nieces, Virginia Lowrey Pierson and Juliet Tryon Baggallay. Each of the three residuary legatees received pecuniary legacies within the group mentioned above in the sum of $5,000.

At the time of the qualification of the executor, on April 26, 1930, the stock of the General Electric Company had increased in value per share to about $90. It has been estimated that the sum of $80,000 is needed to pay the debts, funeral expenses, administration expenses and taxes in the estate. When this sum is added to the total of the pecuniary legacies and trusts, there was required approximately $210,000 before the amount of the residue could be ascertained and fixed. The tentative residue, based upon values as of the time of the qualification of the executor, would have been about $250,000.

In the course of the administration of the estate, certain of the minor assets have been liquidated. The entire block of the General Electric Company’s stock and the shares of the Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation have been retained. The liability of the executor for its failure to liquidate these securities is asserted by the three residuary legatees and by certain of the general legatees.

The determination of the question has not been without difficulty, particularly, because of the voluminous testimony and numerous exhibits which have been submitted by the parties in the course of the hearings held by the surrogate. The present account is a voluntary one. It is an intermediate account. It was filed as the result of a compulsory proceeding brought against the executor. The latter proceeding was initiated in the month of June, 1931. The account here was filed on August 30, 1931.

The questions presented are those which have frequently arisen in estates in recent months as a direct result of the existing financial depression and the shrinkage in security values. These questions, briefly stated, are: At what date should the executor have sold the securities, and particularly the General Electric stock? Under the circumstances, what was a reasonable period for liquidation? Should the stock have been disposed of at the end of one year after the issuance of letters testamentary, or before the last date of the transaction set forth in the account, approximately fourteen months after the issuance of letters? Did the executor act in good faith and without negligence throughout the period of administration? Is it to be surcharged for failure to sell during the period of the account?

There is in evidence the range of the market price of the stock [158]*158of the General Electric Company and of the Goldman Sachs Trading Corporation for a period of some months before the date of death of the decedent, during the period of the account, and for several months' after the last date covered by the account. The former stock was dealt in on the New York Stock Exchange. The latter was traded in upon the New York Curb Exchange.

As to the General Electric it appears that the selling price as of the date of death, February 19, 1930, was approximately seventy-four dollars per share.

At the date of the issuance of letters, upon April 26, 1930, the range for the week ending on that date was eighty-eight to ninety-three, an average of about ninety dollars per share.

Six months after the issuance of letters, on October 26, 1930, the range for the week was approximately forty-eight to fifty-four, or an average of about fifty-one dollars per share. One year after the issuance of letters on April 26, 1931, the range was from forty-one to forty-five, an average of about forty-three dollars per share. For the last week of the period set forth in the pending account/ ending June 22,1931, the range was from'thirty-eight to forty-three, and the average was forty dollars and fifty cents per share.

With reference to the Goldman Sachs stock, which consisted of a relatively small block of 332 shares, the decline in market price was faster. At the date of the issuance of letters, its average was about forty-five. Two months later the price had fallen to an average of twenty. At the end of six months from the date of the issuance of letters it had reached an average of eleven. At the end of one year from the issuance of letters it had reached a selling price of about eight dollars per share. At the time of the last date set forth in the account it had fallen as low as five dollars. A further shrinkage in the market value of both stocks has taken place since June 22, 1931.

At the outset I specifically hold that the objections to the account raise the question as to the liability of the executor for its failure to sell only during the period of the account, to wit, from April 26, 1930, to June 22, 1931, a period of approximately fourteen months. The decree can only settle matters contained in the account. (Surr. Ct. Act, § 274.) Any liability for failure to sell after the last named date must be raised in a new accounting proceeding covering the subsequent transactions of the executor. An alternative method of the disposition of these subsequent transactions and one perhaps less expensive, might be employed by filing a supplemental account in the pending proceeding, procuring supplemental citation to be issued and served, and by determining the new issues covering the subsequent period of the supplemental [159]*159account upon proper objections filed thereto. All issues might thus be adjudicated by the single final decree.

The rules applicable to the responsibility of a fiduciary have been recently restated by the Court of Appeals in Matter of Clark (257 N. Y. 132). While that case involved the duty of trustees, its terms covered also the general rules pertinent to executors. There is attached to the relation of trustee a duty to be faithful, to be diligent, to be prudent ” in an administration intrusted to him.

(1) The trustee is bound to employ such diligence and such prudence in the care and management, as in general, prudent men of discretion and intelligence in such matters, employ in their own like affairs.” (Citing King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76.)

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Bluebook (online)
146 Misc. 155, 261 N.Y.S. 698, 1932 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-kent-nysurct-1932.