King v. Wade

166 So. 327, 175 Miss. 72, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 8
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1936
DocketNo. 31774.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 166 So. 327 (King v. Wade) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Wade, 166 So. 327, 175 Miss. 72, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 8 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

H. W. King died testate in the early part of the year 1930, and his will, which named his son, Kit King, as executor, was duly admitted to probate. After the executor had qualified. and published notice to creditors of the estate to file their claims, a contest of the will was instituted, and, upon the motion of the contestants, *76 the executor was relieved of his duties, and the appellee, John T. Wade, chancery clerk of Marshall county, Miss., was appointed as temporary administrator to take charge of, preserve, and administer the estate, and he was required to execute a bond in the penalty of thirty thousand dollars. The decree appointing the temporary administrator and directing the issuance of letters of temporary administration authorized, empowered, and directed him to administer and preserve the said estate and all the goods, chattels, and credits thereof, to ask, levy, recover, and receive the same, and to pay the debts for which the testator was bound so far as his effects would extend, according to their right and the law, to make and return into court all necessary inventories, to make; when required, an account of his acts and proceedings, and in all things to assert the rights and perform the duties of the trust according to law. The temporary administrator qualified on May 31, 1930, and continued in the active discharge of the duties imposed thereby during the pendency of the contest of the will, which was concluded on November 17, 1932, by a consent decree admitting the will to probate and relieving the temporary administrator of further duties and requiring him to render an account of his actions and to deliver the estate to Kit King as executor of the will. On December 20,1932, the temporary administrator filed his final account, and on January 5, 1933, he filed a supplement thereto. On December 21, 1932, Kit King qualified as executor.

On January 11, 1933,.the executor filed exceptions to many items of disbursement shown on the final account of the temporary administrator, and after a full hearing of,evidence bearing upon the issues presented thereby, the court entered a decree sustaining some of these exceptions but overruling many others, including exceptions to the allowance of compensation and attorney’s fees to the temporary administrator, and an item of one hundred twenty dollars premium on a bond executed by *77 the temporary administrator to himself as administrator of the estate in the state of Tennessee, and taxing* the bulk of the costs of the proceeding's upon these exceptions against the estate. From this decree the executor appealed, but in his argument he has challenged only the allowance of compensation and attorney’s fees to the temporary administrator, the allowance of the one hundred twenty dollars bond premium, and the taxation of the greater part of the costs against the estate.

The estate was inventoried by tíie temporary administrator at thirty-five thousand two hundred ninety-one dollars and thirty-four cents, and his first annual account filed October 23, 1931, showed disbursements of four thousand seventy dollars and forty-four cents, which included partial attorney’s fees of six hundred dollars. The inventory showed a time deposit of eleven'thousand two hundred seventy-three dollars and fifty-one cents in a bank in Tennessee. The temporary administrator was first authorized by the court to accept from this bank a bond to secure the prompt payment of this deposit, but, upon the failure or refusal of the Tennessee bank to execute this bond, he filed a petition praying* for authority to institute an ancillary administration in the proper court of the state of Tennessee for the purpose of bringing this money within the jurisdiction of the chancery court of Marshall county, Miss. Upon this petition the chancellor entered a decree authorizing and directing* the temporary administrator to institute ancillary administration proceedings in the state of Tennessee to have himself appointed as administrator of the estate in that state, and to do all'things required of him to bring such administration to a conclusion and to place the said money within the jurisdiction of the chancery court of Marshall county. Thereupon administration proceedings were instituted in Tennessee, by attorneys employed in that state, and J. T. Wade was appointed as administrator of the estate in that state.

Thereafter the appellee filed a petition alleging that *78 under the laws of the state of Tennessee the administration in that state could not be concluded in due course until after the lapse of two years, and that, in order to secure earlier release of said funds from the jurisdiction of the probate court of Shelby county, Tenn., it was necessary for the temporary administrator in Mississippi to give an indemnity bond to himself as administrator in Tennessee, guaranteeing’ and indemnifying such administrator against loss because of the removal of the Tennessee assets inté Mississippi and discharge of the administrator in Tennessee earlier than the statutory period. Upon this petition the court entered a decree finding that the best interest of the estate would be served by closing the administration in Tennessee as early as possible, and authorizing and directing the temporary administrator to execute the said bond, and to expend not exceeding one hundred twenty dollars of the funds of said estate in the payment of the premium therefor. The money on deposit in Tennessee was paid to the temporary administrator upon the execution of the bond authorized by this decree, and the premium of one hundred twenty dollars paid for this bond is one of the items challenged on this appeal. The Tennessee court allowed the administrator one hundred dollars as compensation for his services and also three hundred fifty dollars for attorney’s fees necessarily incurred in the Tennessee administration.

In his challenge of the amount of compensation and fees allowed the temporary administrator, the argument of appellant seems to proceed throughout on tlie theory that during the temporary administration the appellee and his attorneys managed and administered the estate as though the temporary administrator was clothed with the full powers of a general administrator, and that his compensation and fees were fixed on that basis, while such compensation and fees should have been allowed for the performance of the more limited duties authorized by statute.

*79 Section 1624, Code 1930, provides that “Whenever it shall be necessary for the care and preservation of the estate of a decedent before the grant of letters testamentary or of administration to the person entitled thereto, . . or whenever a last will and testament shall be contested, or its probate intercepted or unreasonably delayed, the chancery court, or clerk, may, and on petition of any creditor or other person interested shall, appoint a suitable person, to be known and designated as ‘temporary administrator,’ to take charge of, preserve and administer the estate until the person entitled to letters testamentary or of administration shall be appointed.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
166 So. 327, 175 Miss. 72, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-wade-miss-1936.