McMahon v. Krapf

80 N.E.2d 314, 323 Mass. 118, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 565
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 22, 1948
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 80 N.E.2d 314 (McMahon v. Krapf) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McMahon v. Krapf, 80 N.E.2d 314, 323 Mass. 118, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 565 (Mass. 1948).

Opinion

Ronan, J.

These are appeals from decrees respecting three accounts of Francis M. McMahon, executor of the will of Marjorie Paddock Bragaw.

The testatrix died on September 16, 1942, leaving as her sole heir and next of kin her son Geoffrey B. Krapf, who was then about fifteen years old and was a helpless invalid requiring constant care and nursing. Although the testatrix had lived in Dalton nearly all of her life, she was described in the will, which was drafted by Mr. McMahon, as of Miami Beach, Florida. After providing in her will for the disposition of some of her property in accordance with a certain list which has never been found, the testatrix left the residue of her property in trust for the benefit of her son. Mr. McMahon, Charles W. Dewey and George W. Krapf, the former husband of the testatrix, were named trustees. The income of the trust or so much as was needed was to be used for the care and support of Geoffrey, and the trustees were authorized to resort to the principal if in their judgment an emergency should exist which would warrant payments out of the principal. The will made no provision for the distribution of the trust property upon the termination of the trust.

After the death of the testatrix, Mr. McMahon went to Florida to secure the probate of the will and his appointment as executor. The will was admitted to probate but, being a nonresident, he was ineligible for appointment as executor and one Wiseheart was appointed in his place. A copytof the will was ordered filed and recorded in the registry of probate for the county of Berkshire on December 24, [120]*1201942, and Mr. McMahon was appointed executor. According to the inventory, which was not filed until December 14, 1943, the estate consisted of real estate valued at $61,350 and of personal property valued at $79,793.89. Other than bank deposits amounting to nearly $65,000, the personal property consisted of furs, jewelry and house furnishings. Wiseheart had taken to Florida all the securities from a safety deposit box together with certain jewelry.

' Elizabeth Crane Paddock, the mother of the testatrix, predeceased her on May 27, 1942. Her will created a trust fund of $50,000 for the benefit of Geoffrey, and left a substantial amount of property to Mrs. Bragaw. Mrs. Paddock was a woman of considerable means, but all that was received by the accountant from her estate during the period of these accounts were certain articles of personal property of the value of $3,444.12, although some money was paid by the administrator with the will annexed of the estate of Mrs. Paddock to the trustees under the will of Mrs. Bragaw and was expended in making payments to the guardian of Geoffrey.

Mr. McMahon and Dewey qualified as trustees on June 10, 1943. Dewey at that time was in the army and was then stationed in Connecticut and at other times in not too far distant places, so that Mr. McMahon was able to and did confer with him. Krapf was in the army and had gone overseas before Mr. McMahon had been appointed executor and did not return to this country until May or June, 1944. He qualified as trustee on September 19, 1944. There was correspondence between Mr. McMahon and Krapf while the latter was serving in the army.

The testatrix, Mrs. Bragaw, had lived for many years in a cottage which her parents had constructed for her at the time of her first marriage upon the same premises where they resided in a large dwelling, referred to in the record as the big house.1 These two dwellings were located upon a fifteen acre parcel which was laid out with driveways, flower beds, gardens, shrubbery and lawns. It contained some [121]*121meadow lands and trees. Mr. McMahon kept the big house open during almost the entire period of his executorship, employing two women to live there, paying then wages, and furnishing them with food, fuel, electricity and telephone service. He employed men to care for the grounds. In addition he incurred expenses for tools, seeds, care of the trees, plowing out driveways, and repairs on both the big house and the cottage where Geoffrey resided as he had for many years before the death of his mother. Mr. McMahon made no effort to dispose of the big house. He paid the taxes assessed upon this parcel of land, water bills, and premiums on fire, theft and workmen’s compensation insurance.

Sidney M. Benedict was appointed guardian of Geoffrey soon after the death of Mrs. Bragaw, and Mr. McMahon turned over to him various amounts for the support and maintenance of Geoffrey, and in addition Mr. McMahon at the expense of the estate furnished fuel, food, medicine, household furnishings and equipment for the ward without consulting the guardian. The guardian’s attorney wrote to the executor on May 14, 1943, that it was not wise or desirable that the big house should be kept open but that it should be closed and sold. The attorney for the guardian under date of July 28, 1944, wrote to the guardian (and furnished Mr. McMahon with a copy) that it was not planned to dispose of the personal property in the big house before the first of September and that in the meanwhile it would be necessary to keep the maids as they would be needed in connection with the disposition of the personal property. To this letter the guardian replied that Krapf preferred that the disposition of the personal property and the closing of the house be deferred to a later date. There was no direct evidence that the guardian knew that Mr. McMahon was furnishing articles for the ward, but the inference is not unwarranted, from the nature of these articles and the extent to which they were supplied, that he knew that Mr. McMahon was contributing toward the maintenance of the ward although he might not have known all the particular articles which he was supplying. The guardian made no complaint of this conduct of Mr. McMahon. We need not [122]*122decide whether the consent of the guardian would bar the ward, Mooers v. Greene, 274 Mass. 243, 252; McInnes v. Whitman, 313 Mass. 19, 27, because it will appear from the findings of the judge, hereafter referred to, that the estate of the ward benefited and was not harmed by these expenditures of the accountant.

We first consider the objections urged by the executor to the decrees entered upon his accounts.

Certain payments were disallowed and others reduced, resulting in surcharging the executor for $29,758.58. The judge made detailed findings of fact which stated the grounds upon which his conclusion was based in dealing with the various items for which the accountant sought á credit. We also have a transcript of the evidence. In accordance with the familiar rule these findings of the judge are not to be reversed unless they are plainly wrong. Allen v. Moushegian, 320 Mass. 746, 752. American Employers’ Ins. Co. v. Webster, 322 Mass. 161, 163.

1. The judge allowed the executor $3,800 for his services during the period covered by the accounts, which was from December 24, 1942, to October 3, 1945.1 He found that the problems of the executor were more simple than, usually encountered in an estate having personal property of about $80,000 of which approximately $65,000 was represented by bank deposits, although eventually the substantial fortune willed to the testatrix by her mother would come into her estate; that the arrangement made with The Berkshire Trust Company, the administrator de bonis non with the will annexed of Mrs. Paddock’s estate, to supply funds to the trust created by Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.E.2d 314, 323 Mass. 118, 1948 Mass. LEXIS 565, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcmahon-v-krapf-mass-1948.