Matthews v. Hoagland

48 N.J. Eq. 455
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 48 N.J. Eq. 455 (Matthews v. Hoagland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matthews v. Hoagland, 48 N.J. Eq. 455 (N.J. Ct. App. 1891).

Opinion

Green, V. C.

Henry Matthews died January 22d, 1886, at Lambertville, in [this state, leaving Almira S. Matthews, his widow, and Mary E. Hoagland and John H. Matthews, children by a former wife, his ■only heirs at law.

He was possessed of considerable personal property, and, after •a protracted contest in the orphans court of the county of Hunterdon, administration of his estate was granted March 24th, 1886, to his widow Almira S., his son John H. and his brother George H. Matthews, who took upon themselves the administration of the said estate, filed an inventory of such property as they admitted came into their hands, and in time settled up all claims against the estate, and filed‘their final account in the orphans court of said county, fully accounting for all the personal estate they reported as received by them.

All the debts of the decedent were paid, and the persons entitled, by the statute of distribution, to any estate, remaining in the hands of the administrators and unadministered, being the widow and the two children, the balance was, by the decree of the said court, distributed to the complainant, to John H. Matthews and Mary E. Hoagland in equal parts.

John H. Matthews, since the settlement of the estate, has died, leaving Helen C. Matthews his widow, who by his will was made sole legatee and devisee of his estate and sole executrix of his will.

The complainant claiming to have discovered that her co-administrator John H. Matthews, with his sister Mrs. Hoagland, had taken possession of certain personal property belonging to [458]*458the intestate, which was not included in the inventory or administered upon, commenced this action on the theory that she, as widow, being entitled to one-third of the balance of the personal estate after the payments of debts, could, under the circumstances stated, proceed directly in a suit in her own behalf in this court to recover such portion. On the first day of the trial, however, .it was determined by her counsel to prosecute the suit by her, as administratrix of her husband’s estate, to subject personal property, charged to have been improperly diverted or retained, to administration as assets of said estate. Strictly speaking, the suit was not brought by complainant as administratrix, nor against the representative of John H. Matthews as administrator, neither he nor she being styled as such in the process or in the commencement of the bill, or in the prayer for process, yet the bill correctly described .the character .and .station of the parties, sets forth fully facts which would give complainant a right as administratrix, and make defendants personally, or as executrix or administrator, liable as such, so that the court, upon the allegations of the bill, could give the proper relief. Under these conditions the course determined upon was one recognized as allowable in this court. Evans v. Evans, 8 C. E. Gr. 71; Ranson v. Geer, 3 Stew. Eq. 249; Plaut v. Plaut, 17 Stew. Eq. 18; White v. Davis, 3 Dick. Ch. Rep. 22. George H. Matthews, who was also an administrator of the estate of Henry Matthews, was not a party to the suit originally, and as he was a necessary party to a suit to be prosecuted on the theory adopted, the case .was ordered to stand over to make him a party defendant in case he declined to act with her as a party complainant. The bill was amended, bringing in George H. Matthews, as administrator of Henry Matthews, deceased, as a party defendant, and he appeared and answered as such, and the cause proceeded.

Henry Matthews, the intestate, at the time of his death, and for many years prior thereto, had resided in Lambertville. Previous, to his marriage with the complainant he had occupied one part of a double house, his son John and family living in the other. It was one house, but they lived as two families; Henry Matthews, after the death of his first wife, having a housekeeper and an¡ [459]*459unmarried daughter as members of his immediate household. He was the owner of considerable real and personal estate; so much of his personal property as consisted of bonds, mortgages, promissory notes, certificates of stock and such securities he kept in a tin box, usually placed in a secretary in a room on the second floor of the part of the house in which he lived. The box appears to have been locked most of the time and the key in his possession.

He was married to the complainant on the 10th day of November A. D. 1883, and then went to live with his wife at her residence in a different part of the town of Lambertville, and continued to reside there until he died. He did not, however, take his tin box containing his securities with him, but left that in the secretary in the second-story room of his former home, where it remained until after his death, .the key being, however, in his personal possession. The w'hole house after the old gentleman’s marriage was taken possession of by his son John H. Matthews and family.

The complainant alleges that after the death of Henry Matthews the box was opened by some one of the parties and certain securities taken from it. There is no denial in the answer or evidence that this is substantially true; it is admitted, or proved,, the box was opened by George W. Dunham with a key of his own procuring, in the presence of John H. Matthews and Mrs. Hoagland, and that certain securities, viz., two bonds of the Burlington and Cedar Rapids railroad, one for $500 and one for $300, a bond of the Lehigh Coal and Navigation Company of $1,000, a certificate for ten shares of the stock of the Camden and Amboy Railroad and Transportation Company of the alleged value of $2,200, and a certain sum of money in United States currency, together with a promissory note made by one Vincent R. Matthews to the order of Henry Matthews for the sum of $175, were' taken from the box by George W. Dunham and by him given tO' and retained by John H. Matthews, except the two bonds of the Burlington and Cedar Rapids Railroad Company, which were-taken to Newark by Dunham, sold, and $800 of the proceeds-given by him to John H. Matthews. It is not pretended that. [460]*460:any of these securities were included in the inventory by John H. Matthews, one of the administrators. Besides bonds, mortgages and notes the inventory filed includes only the following securities:

•which were also in the box at the time those in question were baken therefrom.

The defendants Mary E. Hoagland and Helen C. Matthews, •by their answers, claim that these securities, other thau the note •of Vincent R. Matthews, did not belong to the estate of the intestate, but were ’the property of Mrs. Hoagland and John H. Matthews ; that these securities represented a portion of the estate ■of the deceased mother of these parties, and that the ownership of the same had been vested in them by their father during his lifetime, in order that they should have the property which had ■come to him through their mother.

If it had not been stated with seeming sincerity that the defendants based their right to these securities on the ground that •they were the property of the mother of John H. Matthews and Mrs. Hoagland, it would seem unnecessary to consider such a •suggestion. The only evidence bearing on this point is that the first Mrs. Matthews brought her husband a considerable estate— ■stated by one witness as $12,000 — but this is not inconsistent with the fact that he had become legally entitled to it, and that •he had actually done so is only made the more certain from the promise Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
48 N.J. Eq. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matthews-v-hoagland-njch-1891.