In re the Judicial Accounting of Hiscox

135 A.D. 848, 120 N.Y.S. 308, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4081
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 A.D. 848 (In re the Judicial Accounting of Hiscox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Judicial Accounting of Hiscox, 135 A.D. 848, 120 N.Y.S. 308, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4081 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Burr, J.:

David Hiscox died January 25, 1906. He left a. will dated October 6,1905, and proved March 19, 1906. • On the same day his sons, Everett S. Hiscox and Jesse F. Hiscox,. qualified as executors. At the time of his death he was engaged in the business of the manufacture and sale of proprietary medicines .and toilet articles. By his will he provided, among other things, as follows : “ I.appoint my two sons, Everett S. Hiscox and Jesse F. Hiscox, as my executors, to carry on the business now conducted by me under the name of the Hiscox Chemical "Works, and to continue and conduct said business under said name during the lives of my said sons, Everett S. Hiscox and Jesse F. Hiscox, and the survivor of them, or in case all my debts and obligations owing by me shall be fully paid and discharged.’'’ He then gave directions as to how the profits arising from his business were to be used by the said executors, and, among other things, provided that they were each to be paid the sum of $3,000 annually for all services which they should render to the business of the Hiscox Chemical Works, unless the profits of said, business amounted to more than ■ $32,000 a year, in which case there was a provision for an increase of - salary. The testator was the owner of certain trade inárks used in connection with the said business, and of certain formulas in accordance with which the articles above referred to were manufactured. The business was a lucrative one. There was some evidence that in the year immediately preceding his death the profits were in the neighborhood of $32,500. After liis death the business was carried on by his sons, the above-named executors, and although the exact amount of the' profits therefrom during the years 1907 and 1908 is not disclosed, it does appear, that these profits were considerably larger than during the. last year of the testator’s life. In May, 1907, Harriet M. Hughes, a daughter of decedent and a legatee under the said will, instituted proceedings to compel these executors to account. Thereafter they filed a petition for a voluntary accounting, and the proceedings were thereupon consolidated: . To the account filed in the [851]*851voluntary proceedings Mrs. Hughes filed objections. No inventory of the personal property belonging to the estate of the deceased seems ever to have been filed, but when the executors filed their account they charged themselves with the amount of an inventory of stock, cash in bank, and accounts receivable, which had been made by the said David Hiscox in connection with the said business and about a month before his death. To this was added a large amount of mining stocks declared by them to be of no value, so that the amount of personal property with which they charged themselves was precisely the same as that shown in the inventory above referred to. Nothing was included in the account for the value of the good will of the business, which wa.s presumably very large (von Au v. Magenheimer, 115 App. Div. 87 Matter of Silkman, 121 id. 202, 218; affd., 190 N. Y. 560), nor for the formulae or trade marks belonging to the deceased, nor for the profits of the business carried on by the executors since the date of his death. The Surrogate’s Court thereupon made an order directing these executors to amend their account “so that it shall show the exact condition of the estate of the said David Hiscox, deceased, at the date of his death, and shall show the entire conduct of the business of the Hiscox Chemical Works subsequent to that date, including all sales and the expenses of the conduct of the said business so as to show the annual profits thereof.” From that order of the surrogate this appeal is taken.

The excuses offered by these accounting executors for failing to charge themselves with these valuable assets and income of the estate are, first, that some of the provisions of the will are invalid. Whether the directions contained in the will for the distribution of the income or for the ultimate disposition of the principal of the estate are valid or invalid, it is their, duty to collect the assets of the estate, and if they carry, on the business to receive and retain the profits of the business until properly instructed by a court of competent jurisdiction in regard to the distribution thereof. Second, that the good will, formulae and trade marks above referred to are of little value and that not easy, to ascertain. It is no answer to say that they do not know what the good will of the business is worth. It is their duty to make an honest effort to find out. Nor is it any answer to say that the trade marks are of little value without the [852]*852formulae in accordance with which the articles protected by these trade marks are manufactured. On the examination before the sur-' rogate one of the executors testified with regard to one of the trade marks: In connection with the recipes it is very valuable to me.” The other executor testified' as follows: I refuse to tell what the formula is, because it is valuable to me. It is valuable to me as the manufacturer under that name. -1 don’t know how valuable it is to me. I don’t know how many thousand dollars it is worth.” These formuke belonged to the testator and not to his clerks or his employees. ' It would establish a new principle in the law of trusts if a trustee who was in possession of valuable information . of this character should refuse to disclose it for the benefit of the estate beeausq he had acquired his knowledge while a clerk of the testator and now desired‘to make use of it for his own benefit and advantage. Third, that the contestant, Mrs. Hughes, is not concerned, with the disposition of the profits of the business, first, because under agreements made by David Hiscox in his lifetime these profits are pledged toward the payment of certain debts ' of the deceased, and second, because the business has not been carried on by these men as executors under the will, but as individuals and for their own benefit under an.agreement made with the widow and all of the children of the deceased except Mrs. Hughes, executed before the will was proved. It does appear that immediately after their father’s death and before the will was proved an agreement was prepared and executed by the. widow and all of the children of the said David Hiscox, who were also the only beneficiaries under his will, except a son who is incompetent, and Harriet M. Hughes, the contestant here, by which they conveyed to the said Everett S. Hiscox and Jesse F. Hiscox all their interest in the business carried' on under the name of Hiscox Chemical Works, together with all patents', trade marks, copyrights and the good' will of the said business. Thereafter these men, who according to their own testimony had been' practically, carrying on the entire business during their father’s lifetime for a salary of $2,000 a year each, and whose compensation under the will was fixed at $3,000 a year, immediately raised the salary of each to the sum of $12,000 a year and so conducted and managed the business as to practically absorb for their own benefit. the' greater portion of the profits thereof. Whether [853]*853this agreement, under the peculiar, circumstances connected with its execution, was of any validity whatever, even as against those who did execute the same, it was of no force and effect as against Mrs. Hughes, who declined to be bound thereby. Whatever might have been the case if they had renounced their right to act as executors and refused to qualify they did not do so, and the moment that they did qualify their appointment as “ executors to carry on the business ” related back to the date of the testator’s death.

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Related

Gugel v. . Hiscox
110 N.E. 499 (New York Court of Appeals, 1915)
In re Hiscox
127 N.Y.S. 1125 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1911)
Gugel v. Hiscox
138 A.D. 61 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1910)

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Bluebook (online)
135 A.D. 848, 120 N.Y.S. 308, 1909 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 4081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-accounting-of-hiscox-nyappdiv-1909.