In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of the Mercantile Trust Co.

11 Mills Surr. 121
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedApril 18, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Mills Surr. 121 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of the Mercantile Trust Co.) 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 Judicial Settlement of the Account of Proceedings of the Mercantile Trust Co., 11 Mills Surr. 121 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1913).

Opinion

Clarke, J.

The decree charged the trust company, as ex ecutor, with the net proceeds of the sales of 2,500 shares of Anaconda Mining Company stock actually sold, and with the value as of July 8, 1907, of 2,700 additional shares of such stock at $60.35 a share, although not sold at that time, nor at that price. Upon the sum of $64,265, the principal of the" account as restated, the executor is charged with interest at four per cent from July 9,1907, to June 10,1909. From June 10, 1909, the decree charges the executor with interest at four per cent [123]*123on $62,598.71 principal and on $5,411.71 income. It charges the executor with the costs and disbursements of these proceedings and deprives it of its commissions on account of $38,632.-50 of principal and $4,934.15 of income.

The executor appeals from so much of the decree as surcharges it with the difference between what it actually received for the stock sold and what the court determined it should have sold it for, and if it is to be so surcharged, it appeals from so much of the decree as deprives it of its commissions thereon. The contestants appeal upon the ground that the executor should have been charged with the market value of the whole 5,200 shares of stock as of the 18th or 20th day of May, 1907, and with interest at six per cent upon the balance as stated as of that day, and from the allowance of any commissions. A further question is presented as between the contestants as to the nature of the estate as between the widow and the son.

The fundamental question is whether the executor had any discretion as to the time within which it should have sold the stock belonging to the testator, and if it had, whether such discretion was exercised fairly and with ordinary prudence.

On April 14, 1907, Charles Kessler Smith died in the city of New York, leaving a widow and a son. His will provided: “ To my wife * * * the use and benefit of all the property real or personal of which I may die possessed I give to her for her natural life conditioned: that she shall educate and support our son Charles Stuart von Lutnow Smith until he shall be able to support himself. It being my intention that my wife shall during her life have the full enj oyment of all my property real and personal, I appoint her guardian of our son. On the death of my wife I devise and bequeath all my property to my son, * '* *. It being my intention that on the death of his mother the property enjoyed by her during life shall become absolutely the property of my son.” The Mercantile Trust Company was named as executor.

[124]*124Testator left some trifling personal effects, $57.87 in cash, and 5,200 shares of the capital stock of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company that had been bought by him through, and was being carried on margin by, Harriman & Co., who had a lien thereon at the date of the testator’s death to the amount of $257,999.05, and a dividend of $9,100 that had been declared on said stock on March 26, 1907, which was subsequently and on April 19, 1907, paid to said Harriman & Co. and credited to the account.

The first information of its designation as executor, and of the nature of the testator’s estate, was received bysthe Mercantile Trust Company on April 15, 1907, when Oliver Harriman of Harriman & Co. delivered to its secretary said will and stated that the testator had been trading in Anaconda Copper Mining Company stock for years through said Harriman & Co. as his brokers, and that, so far as he knew, the testator’s estate consisted of certain personal effects in a room uptown and 5,200 shares of Anaconda stock that were being carried in a speculative account on margin by Harriman & Co. and on which testator owed said Harriman & Co. about $250,000. On the same day the trust company ascertained the names and residences of the widow and next of kin, her residence being at Paris, France. A petition for probate was filed and citation issued on April seventeenth and made returnable June fourteenth. The officers of the trust company asked Harriman & Co. to carry said account until letters testamentary were issued. Harriman & Co. refused to do so unless the trust company would guarantee the account which it declined to do. On April nineteenth Harriman & Co. called on the trust company to furnish further margin for the protection of the account. On April twenty-second the trust company applied for temporary letters of administration which were issued on April twenty-fifth. As the price of Anaconda went down Harriman & Co. from time to time called for further margin and requested said [125]*125trust company to take up the account, and continued to call for further margin until about August 14,1907. Between April 14 and May 8, 1907, the price had varied from $59 to $65 a share.

On May eighth the trust company submitted a petition to the surrogate in which it said: “ That it is certain that jurisdiction of Charles Stuart von Lutnow Smith cannot be acquired until the term of publication of the summons is completed, to wit, until on or about the 1st day of June, 1907, and the grant of Letters cannot occur until after the return of said citation. * * ® That the property of said decedent, so far as petitioner has been able to ascertain, consists wholly of 5,200 shares of the capital stock of Anaconda Copper Mining Company which are held by Messrs. Harriman & Company, brokers, * * ® and which are of the present market value of about $63 per share, together with $18,300 dividends upon said stock, which are in the hands of said brokers. Against the said stock and dividends the said brokers have a claim against the said decedent, which is a lien and charge upon said stock and all moneys in their hands amounting to about the sum of $257,400; ® * * that as petitioner is informed and believes the stock market in the City of New York and elsewhere in the United States is in a fluctuating condition and that unless petitioner is authorized to sell sa-id 5,200 shares * ® * and reduce said estate to cash and pay off the debt or charge against the same in favor of Messrs. Harriman & Company, brokers, who hold said stock, the said estate may be wholly lost by a sudden fall in the price of said securities. That in the event of a sudden fall in the market price of said stock the said Harriman & Company would have a right to sell said stock, as petitioner is informed and believes, to protect themselves and to liquidate their claim against said estate; that the present .value of said stock and cash, ® ® * after deducting the amount of said Harriman & Company’s account [126]*126or claim against the same, is about the sum of $77,000, but, as-above stated, said value is liable to be increased or decreased by the fluctuation of the stock market. * * * Wherefore,, your petitioner prays that an order may be made herein authorizing petitioner, as such temporary administrator, to sell after appraisal said 5,200 shares of stock * * * upon the New York Stock Exchange for the benefit of said estate,, and authorizing your petitioner to liquidate and pay from the proceeds of said sale the account of Messrs. Harriman & Company with said estate, and the indebtedness of said estate to Messrs.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mills Surr. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-account-of-proceedings-of-the-nysurct-1913.