Mattocks v. Moulton

24 A. 1004, 84 Me. 545
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 5, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 24 A. 1004 (Mattocks v. Moulton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mattocks v. Moulton, 24 A. 1004, 84 Me. 545 (Me. 1892).

Opinion

Emery, J.

Cynthia C. Beale, in her last will after making sundry particular legacies, devised the remainder of her estate to the executor and trustee therein named, "in trust, however, for the following purposes, that is to say: said trustee shall take, hold, raanag'e and invest all the estate which shall come to his hands and possession under this clause of my will, in such manner as he shall deem for the best interest of all concerned therein, and shall keep the same so invested till Edmund Kim-ball shall reach the age of thirty years,” at which date the trustee was to turn the estate over to him.

In the same will she appointed the appellant to be executor and trustee under the will. Upon her death the will was duly proved, and the appellant commissioned as executor in October, 1885. His final account as executor was filed in November, 1886, and, after the usual public notice, was allowed as presented, by the Probate Court for Cumberland county. In this account the executor charged himself with the amount of the inventory, and with sundry other amounts "asper schedule A and claimed credit for disbursements "as per schedule B.” In schedule B, was this item of credit, viz: " amount transferred to my hands as trustee under the provisions of the will of the deceased to balance this account, as per schedule C, filed herewith.” This item balanced the account leaving nothing to the debit of the executor. Schedule C, (filed with schedule B,) was a list of various notes, stocks, bonds, &c., among which was a note of the Union Packing Company of Portland, collateralled by stock of the same company, and also a note of one Nutter secured by a second mortgage of real estate in Scarborough. These two investments had not boon made by the testatrix, but were made by the executor from cash of the estate in his hands.

After settling the above account, the appellant (the executor) qualified as trustee under the will, but filed no new inventory. He filed his account as trustee in November, 1889. In this [548]*548account he charged himself as trustee in schedule A, with the same amount he had claimed credit for in his executor’s account as transferred to trustee. He claimed credit as trustee in schedule B for numerous items of disbursements, &c., and also for the following item, viz: "Personal property in hands of trustee as per schedule D, filed herewith.” In this last schedule D were listed among other items, the following, viz :

1,. 50 shares stock Union Packing Co. (par value $50,) $2500 00

2. Note of Union Packing Co. for dividend, 158 19

3. Nutter Note, collateralled by 10 shares stock

Union Packing Co. 401 63

' It will be noticed that the appellant had changed the security of the Nutter note from a second mortgage on real estate to shares in the stock of the Union Packing Company, and had also ■changed the note of that company into its stock.

This company was organized in August, 1884, at Portland, under the general law, for the purposes of canning and packing fruits, meats, fish and vegetables and for dealing in the product. ■Its capital was fixed at fifty thousand dollars of which thirty dollars only was paid in. The company did not begin business till 1885, and it then fixed the par value of its shares at fifty dollars. Ninety-five shares only wei’e ever issued. Sixty shares were issued in payment for real estate and plant in Scarboro’, which, at that time for that business, were worth three thousand dollars. The remaining thirty-five shares were issued at various times at their par value for the purchase of machinery and tools for leased factories. The whole of the capital stock issued was thus absorbed in real estate, machinery and tools, leaving nothing for a working capital. The company owned one factory in Scarboro’; and had leased two others, one at Hallo well, and one at Winterport. It carried on business on credit, as was usually done by such companies in the packing business. The stock of the company was never offered, nor quoted, nor did it have any selling value in the open market.

At the times the appellant made the investment of the trust funds in the notes and stock of this company, its business was in healthy condition as regards payments and credits. It has [549]*549paid no dividends, however, since 1888. In making these investments of the trust funds, the appellant acted in good faith after a personal examination, and in the belief that the investments were for the best interest of all concerned; but without consulting any outside parties as to the standing of the company, the value of its stock, or the propriety of such an investment for trust funds.

At the February term of the Probate Court, Mr. Moulton, the administrator of the original cestui que trust, then deceased, appeared and objected to the allowance of the three items above quoted from the trustee’s schedule D. The Probate Court sustained the objections, and the trustee appealed to the Supreme Court of Probate. Evidence was then put in before the appellate court, of which the above narrative is an abridgement, and the cause was then reported to the law court for determination.

The appellant now contends that the original investments made by him as executor in the notes of Nutter, and in the note of the Union Packing Company, were adjudicated by the Probate Court to be proper investments, by the allowance of his final account as executor, in which account these investments were listed in schedule C; and that the cestui que trust, not having appealed from that adjudiction, is now bound by it.

We do not think that the Probate Court, in settling the executor’s account in the form in which it was presented, had any occasion to adjudicate, or even consider the propriety of the investments made by him of the funds of the estate. The purpose of the account was simply to show the balance, if airy, remaining in the hands of the executor after paying debts, expenses, &c. It is, at least, questionable whether the Probate Court had the power to allow the item in Schedule B, of " amount transferred to trustee to balance account.” To do so was to adjudicate that the trustee was entitled to receive the balance. This was assuming to construe the will and to determine who was the residuary legatee, a jurisdiction not at that time conferred upon Probate Courts. Hanscom v. Marston, 82 Maine, 288. Even the statute ch. 49, Laws of 1891, passed since this matter came before the court, does not authorize such a determination until after the account is settled and the balance-ascertained.

[550]*550But, in his account, the executor made no claim to be allowed for any loss or depreciation in these particular assets or investments. By. listing them in his schedule C, he alleged them to be of full face value. He only claimed credit for having turned them over to the trustee at their par value. By claiming such credit, he alleged that the trustee had received them at such valuation, thereby acquitting the executor. The two offices of executor and trustee, though held in this case by the same person; were legally as distinct as though held by different persons. Plimpton v. Richards, 59 Maine, 115.

Under the circumstances above stated, it is difficult to see how the question of the propriety of these investments arose, or was adjudicated in the proceedings upon the executor's account.

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Bluebook (online)
24 A. 1004, 84 Me. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mattocks-v-moulton-me-1892.