In re the Estate of Watson

168 Misc. 135, 5 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1707
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedJune 21, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 168 Misc. 135 (In re the Estate of Watson) 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 Watson, 168 Misc. 135, 5 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1707 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1938).

Opinion

Ringrose, S.

Julia M. Watson died in the city of Utica on January 29, 1927. Her will, dated on April 28, 1917, was admitted to probate by a decree of this court, entered on May 6, 1927, and letters testamentary thereupon issued to Cornelia E. Williams, one of the named executors. The executrix is the only child of the testatrix. Sterling A. Millard, the other named executor, renounced his appointment as such on the proceeding for the probate of the will.

The executrix, who is also the life tenant of the greater part of the estate of which the deceased died seized and possessed, continued to act as executrix hereof up until August 25, 1937, at which time she was adjudged an incompetent. This is a proceeding for the settlement of her account by Robert U. Hayes, who was appointed her committee on February 10, 1938.

Objections to said account have been filed by Frederick W. Millard, one of the remaindermen, wherein it is sought to surcharge the account with the depreciation in value of certain securities which were taken over by Cornelia E. Williams as executrix and life tenant, and which constituted a part of the decedent’s estate at the time of death. The securities consist of fifty shares of the [136]*136capital stock of Norfolk and Southern Railway Company, originally inventoried at $39.62% per share; sixty-three shares of the capital stock of Utica Steam and Mohawk Valley Cotton Mills, originally inventoried at $90 per share, and twenty shares first preferred stock of the United States Rubber Company, originally inventoried at $107.25.

The only evidence upon which to predicate negligence or the lack of care and prudence that might reasonably be required of the executrix and life tenant in the instant case was proof of the value of these stocks as of May 6, 1928, November 6, 1928, August 25, 1937, October 2, 1937 and February 28, 1938, being one year, eighteen months, the date of the appointment of the now acting committee, and the. commencement of this proceeding, respectively.

The fifty shares of the capital stock of the Norfolk and Southern Railway Company, inventoried at 39%, were valued at 45 bid, 48% asked on May 6, 1928; 36 bid, 41 asked on November 6, 1928; 2% bid, 2% asked on August 25, 1937; 1% bid on October 2, 1937; % bid, 1% asked on February 10, 1938. The sixty-three shares of the capital stock of the Utica Steam and Mohawk Valley Cotton Mills, inventoried at $90 per share, were valued at 100 on May 4, 1928; 90 bid, 98 asked on November 6, 1928 ; 62 on August 25, 1937; 55 bid, 60 asked on October 2, 1937; and 20 bid, 30 asked on February 10, 1938. The twenty shares of first preferred stock of the United States Rubber Company, inventoried at $107.25, were valued at 79% bid, 80% asked on May 6, 1938; 69 bid, 69% asked on November 6, 1928; 93% on August 25, 1937; 72 on October 2, 1937, and 58% bid, 59 asked on February 10, 1938.

Subsequent to the commencement of this proceeding, the court appointed a special guardian for the incompetent executrix. On the occasion of the first hearing, there were numerous items in the account which were objected to, due to the inability of the committee of the executrix to locate records and vouchers that would ordinarily be in the possession of the executrix in the management of the estate. After an exhaustive investigation made by the special guardian, many of the objectionable items of the original account were eliminated and this account has been superseded by an amended and supplemental account, subsequently filed. Also the committee of the executrix subsequent to the first hearing discovered numerous canceled checks and vouchers which have also materially eliminated the difficulty encountered in explaining many discrepancies in the account. Amended objections were thereafter filed to the amended account and the issues have been thus narrowed [137]*137to a determination of the liability of the estate of the executrix for the shrinkage in value of the aforesaid stocks.

It is the contention of the objectant that the executor and life tenant in the instant case is chargeable with the same degree of care and prudence as is required of a trustee of a statutory trust and, therefore, was required to convert the assets of this estate into securities legal for trust fund investments. The will does not indicate any such intention on the part of the testatrix. While a statutory trustee is governed in the investment and reinvestment of the corpus of the estate by law, the life tenant in the instant case derives her authority from the instrument creating the life estate and her limitations are imposed from the same source. The terms of the will under consideration indicate an intelligent understanding by the testatrix of the distinctive features of an annuity, a trust, and a life estate, as all three are found in this testamentary document and all three methods are employed by the testatrix for the purposes suitable to the results sought to be accomplished.

Of particular significance in connection with the attempt to surcharge in this proceeding is the direction in the provision of the will of the testatrix creating a trust for the benefit of her sister, Jeanette Millard Gilbert, that the trustee therein named invest the corpus of the trust and keep same invested in legal interest-bearing securities. Had the testatrix intended to impose upon the life tenant the same restrictions, it is believed that she would have so stated.

In the case at bar, as in all cases of this nature, the intent of the testator as gathered from the testamentary instrument as a whole is the milepost from which to measure the liability of the life tenant as custodian of the estate and as trustee of the remainder for the benefit of the remaindermen.

Some confusion exists as to the application of law to the situation here presented, due to the fact that the life tenant is also the executrix and failed to account as such up to the time of the commencement of the present proceeding by her committee. There is some authority to the effect that where two or more of these fiduciary functions co-exist at the same time and no point of time is fixed in the testamentary intention at which one function should end and the other begin, the duty of the executor continues. (Matter of Flint, 148 Misc. 474, 483; Matter of Schliemann, 259 N. Y. 497.)

However, no authority has been found to justify a surcharge against a life tenant, who is also the executrix, on that basis alone. The testatrix was entirely within her rights relative to the testamentary disposition of property to absolve the life tenant from [138]*138responsibility incurred by reason of depreciation or loss in the retention of securities received by her as a part of the corpus of the life estate, when such loss was not due to willful negligence, neglect or conversion.

The language oí that provision of the will wherein the life estate was created, is important in the consideration of the question here involved. It is in the following language:

“ Third. All the rest, residue and remainder of my property real and personal I give, devise and bequeath to my daughter Cornelia E. Williams to have and to hold for and during the term of her life. From and upon her death I give, Revise and bequeath the use. of my house at Clayville with the furniture and ground pertaining thereto together with the income of Five Thousand Dollars ($5000.00) to my said sister Jeanette Millard Gilbert, to take, hold and enjoy during her life.

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Related

Meyer v. Citizens & Southern National Bank
677 F. Supp. 1196 (M.D. Georgia, 1988)
In re the Estate of Cuddeback
168 Misc. 698 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
168 Misc. 135, 5 N.Y.S.2d 416, 1938 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-watson-nysurct-1938.