In Re the Estate of Lange

383 A.2d 1130, 75 N.J. 464, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 6, 1978
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 383 A.2d 1130 (In Re the Estate of Lange) 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 Estate of Lange, 383 A.2d 1130, 75 N.J. 464, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 158 (N.J. 1978).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pashman, J.

The issue presented by this appeal is the propriety of surcharging executrices for acts beyond the scope of their powers under the will but validated by the effective consent of all parties in interest to those acts. The County Court, Probate Division, held, and the Appellate Division agreed, that any such consensual conduct was ineffective to exonerate the executrices from liability for the consequences of the breach of their ñduciary duties. Finding merit in the contention that such validation by the parties in interest precludes the imposition of a surcharge under the circumstances of this case, we reverse the judgment of the courts below.

*470 Philip Lange died in December 1967, survived by his wife, Catherine Lange, and their adult children, Catherine Lennox, Elizabeth Dixon and George Lange. His will designated Catherine Lange and Catherine Lennox as co-executriees of his estate and co-trustees of a residuary trust created thereunder. Specific cash bequests of iequal amounts were made to each of three children. The residue of the estate was placed in the trust, with the net income to be paid to Mrs. Lange during her lifetime and principal to he invaded, if necessary, to assure that her accustomed standard of living would be maintained. Upon her death, the trust was to terminate with the outright payment of the remaining trust balance in equal shares to the testator’s three children, if living, or their surviving issue, per stirpes. The residuary assets from which the testamentary trust was to be funded consisted predominantly of numerous shares of various stocks and were valued at several hundred thousand dollars.

In early 1969, the attorney for the estate advised the executrices that approximately $60,000 would be needed to pay the estimated federal estate tax liability. Since liquid assets sufficient to meet this obligation were apparently not available, the attorney recommended that certain of the residuary assets of the estate be liquidated in order to obtain the necessary funds. It was then determined that 1500 of the estate’s 4500 shares of stock in the Colonial Fational Bank .(hereinafter Colonial) should be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the estate tax. 1 Eive hundred shares of the Colonial stock were sold in March 1969 at a price com sidered to be very unfavorable by Mrs. Lange, who thereupon determined to refrain from selling any more of the stock until market conditions improved. 2 The proceeds of the shares *471 sold were used for partial payment of the estate taxes. Ho attempt was made to liquidate other residuary assets, although estate taxes were still owing. Later that month, apparently at the suggestion of Elizabeth Dixon, the executrices negotiated a loan from the Delaware Valley Rational Bank (hereinafter Delaware Valley) on behalf of the estate for the balance of the tax indebtedness. Mrs. Lennox agreed to the loan transaction on the understanding that it was to be only a temporary measure and would be repaid as soon as possible by the sale of small increments of the Colonial stock. This loan was secured by the pledge of a substantial amount of the estate’s shares of Colonial stock as collateral. The attorney for the estate had given his opinion that the executrices would be acting within their powers under the will in procuring this loan. In addition, the lending bank agreed to the loan only after it had examined the will and satisfied itself that the executrices were authorized to so obligate the estate. Reither George Lange nor Elizabeth Dixon, the other parties in interest under the will, made any objection or otherwise questioned the propriety of the loan transaction. The monies obtained from the loan were used to pay the balance of the estate tax due. Interest on the loan was paid out of income from the residuary assets of the estate, including the pledged Colonial stock.

In late summer of 1971 the attorney for the estate recommended to Mrs. Lennox that a portion of the estate’s Colonial stock sufficient to pay off the loan be sold. In March 1973 Mrs. Lennox’s husband became the attorney for the estate and made a similar recommendation to the executrices, with which Mrs. Lennox agreed. However, Mrs. Lange, her co-executrix and the income beneficiary under the trust, refused to consent to liquidation of any of the estate’s Colonial stock. Her resistance resulted from the opposition to the proposal by George Lange and Elizabeth Dixon, the other two legatees and beneficiaries in remainder. They believed that the stock continued to be undervalued and that any such sale would still yield an unfavorable price for the shares. When the at *472 torney formally requested the consent of those two beneficiaries to the retention of the shares as estate assets, both indicated their opposition to any sale of the Colonial stock. Mrs. Lange thereafter remained adament in her refusal to consent to any liquidation of the Colonial stock. 3 In August 1972 the three children, by agreement, received their specific bequests in kind by way of shares of the estate’s Colonial stock and executed the appropriate refunding bonds and releases. All subsequent efforts by Mrs. Lennox and her husband, as attorney for the estate, to persuade Mrs. Lange, Elizabeth Dixon and George Lange to liquidate the remaining Colonial stock held by the estate and to pay off the Delaware Valley loan proved unsuccessful. In May 1973 an informal accounting rendered by the executrices to all interested parties 4 revealed the outstanding Delaware Valley loan, the pledge of the Colonial stock and the monthly interest payments on the loan. Hone of the beneficiaries objected to the continuation of the loan or the estate’s retention of the pledged and non-pledged Colonial stock. 5 As late as May 1974: Mrs. Lange, through her counsel, reiterated her continuing refusal to liquidate any of the Colonial stock for the purpose of satisfying the loan even though the value of the stock had steadily declined since her husband’s death. Hone of the residuary remaindermen, other than Catherine Lennox, ever objected *473 to the continuance of the Delaware Yalley loan or the retention of the Colonial stock during the decline in its market value.

As a result of other unrelated disputes among the parties in interest, in September 1974 Mrs. Lennox filed a complaint with the account annexed in the Probate Division of the Camden County Court. She sought, inter alia, to have her final and formal accounting approved and distribution of the residuary assets to the testamentary trustees ordered. She also sought an order directing the executrices to liquidate sufficient estate assets to retire the Delaware Yalley loan, the outstanding amount of which was some $33,000 at that time. Mrs. Lennox’s formal accounting revealed the outstanding status of the loan and the retention of both the pledged and non-pledged Colonial stock as estate assets. Mrs. Lange filed exceptions to this accounting, in which she had not joined as a co-accountant, in October 1974.

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Bluebook (online)
383 A.2d 1130, 75 N.J. 464, 1978 N.J. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-lange-nj-1978.