Mills v. . Smith

36 N.E. 178, 141 N.Y. 256, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 388, 96 Sickels 256, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1127
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 9, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 36 N.E. 178 (Mills v. . Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mills v. . Smith, 36 N.E. 178, 141 N.Y. 256, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 388, 96 Sickels 256, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1127 (N.Y. 1894).

Opinion

Gray, J.

William Wickham Mills, by his will, gave to his executors the sum of $20,000, in trust “ to loan the same on bond and mortgage upon real estate and to apply the net income thereof, at their discretion, to and for the use of his son, Theodore Mills, during his natural life, and, upon his. *261 decease, to divide, etc., etc., among the children of said Theodore, etc.” Testator died in January, I860. The plaintiff, the sole surviving child of testator’s son, Theodore, was horn in November, 1865. The will was admitted to probate in January, 1865, and letters testamentary ivere issued to the persons named as executors, to wit: To Eliza A. Mills, testator’s widow, and to Washington Mills and William W. Mills, two of testator’s sons. Theodore, the plaintiff’s father, died in January, 1886. Plaintiff, upon attaining his majority in November, 1886, demanded of William W. Mills, the then sole surviving executor of the testator, the fund given in trust for his father, Theodore Mills ; but the executor was unable to respond to plaintiff’s demand and, as it appears, was insolvent. Plaintiff then brought this action ; making the residuary legatees under the testator’s will, or their legal representatives, parties defendants. His complaint is based upon various charges of unlawful conduct and fraudulent acts by the defendants and others of testator’s children, since deceased, in matters connected with the administration of the testator’s estate. Those relating to the admission of the testator’s will to probate and to the appraisement of the testator’s property are unnecessary to consider. He charged that the defendants unlawfidly contrived to prevent the legacy bequeathed to the plaintiff from being discharged by the surrogate and from being invested upon bond and mortgage, as required by the will; that they unlawfully caused the surrogate to settle the accounts of the testator’s executors, with the effect of defrauding the plaintiff out of his legacy; that the executors failed to appropriate and to invest the sum of $20,000, as provided by the said will, and, finally, that they, with intent to defraud the plaintiff, unlawfully combining together, distributed all of the testator’s estate among themselves, in disregard of the plaintiff’s rights. Nesting upon these charges, the plaintiff claims to be entitled to compel the residuary legatees to account as for moneys fraudulently appropriated and distributed to them and to have them satisfy his claim to the trust fund of $20,000 thereout. Hpon the trial, proof was given of certain proceedings, which *262 took place after testator’s death, with reference to the probate of his will, to the appraisement of his estate and to settlements of his executor’s accounts. Beyond that documentary proof, the only other evidence was in the testimony of the defendant William W. Mills, the sole surviving executor. The trial judge found as facts, that, at the time of the accounting by the executors and of the surrogate’s decree thereupon, the trust fund of $20,000, invested in bonds, secured by mortgages, as recpiired by the will, was in the hands of the executors and held in trust by them ; that no part of the same was ever paid to the residuary legatees; that there was no evidence assailing the correctness of the accounts, or to show any conspiracy, combination, or consent to defraud the plaintiff, or to misapply the trust fund. Upon such and other findings the trial judge dismissed the complaint, and his conclusions have been sustained by the General Term. We think the learned judge could have come to no other conclusion upon the proofs. There is not a particle of evidence to sustain any of the allegations of fraudulent conduct in the residuary legatees, or to show any diversion of the trust funds into their hands. This action is simply an attempt to fasten upon the distributees of testator’s residuary estate the responsibility for the subsequent default of the executors, as trustees for plaintiff’s father. That cannot be done. Where the loss of a fund is due to the waste, or misconduct, of the executor and trustee, he and his estate alone can be looked to. No claim for contribution arises against residuary legatees in such a case. They are liable to refund in a case where, having been paid from the estate, it is discovered that there is a deficiency of assets for distribution under the will, caused by the diminution of the estate through the premature payment of legacies.

It may be perfectly true when, in 1871 and 1872, proceedings were had for an accounting by the executors, which resulted in a decree of adjustment and distribution, that the plaintiff and his father should have been cited to appear and that, for the want of such citation, or of an appearance, the proceedings and decree as to them were irregular and of no bind *263 ing force. But admitting to the fullest extent this plaintiff’s rights to complain of that defect, that fact, however otherwise available againt the executors, does not furnish any support for the present action. If there was the omission to cite his father, or him, or to cause his appearance by guardian, it may have been a serious irregularity; but it, in no Avise, furnishes any basis for imputing to the residuary legatees any fraudulent intention. They Avere not called upon to verify the regularity of the procedure and nothing connects them Avith a purpose to deceive plaintiff and his father, Avith respect to the accounting. In the accounts filed upon that accounting, it Avas sliOAvn that bonds and mortgages, representing in the aggregate the amount of $20,000, and particularly described, Avere held as a trust fund for Theodore Mills, plaintiff’s father. The accounts of the executors AArere verified and were made the subjects of objections. Testimony was taken before the surrogate at some length. In the decree of the surrogate, as rendered upon that accounting, the executors are credited with the amount of the trust fund, as set apart for Theodore Mills. Neither in that proceeding for an accounting, nor in anything previously done between the executors and the parties interested in the estate, does anything appear which, in the slightest degree, tended to prove any collusion or conspiracy to injure the plaintiff or his father. To the contrary of any theory of a combination betAveen the executors and the legatees, there is evidence to show that the former Avere held strictly to the performance of their duties. When Ave come to consider the evidence given by the surviving executor, at this trial, upon his examination by the plaintiff’s counsel, Ave find him testifying that he received the mortgages and securities that Avere set aside for the trust fund by him for Theodore Mills; that he and his brother took them out of the safe and that his brother, Washington Mills, the deceased executor, then took charge of them, lie does not explain Avhat became of them; simply saying that he never did anything with them thereafter and never had any control over them. The inference of a devastaA'it is, of course, plainly deducible. All the evidence in the *264 case goes fairly to prove that the trust fund, created for the plaintiff’s father, was invested, held and set apart by the executors and existed in that condition at the time of the rendition of the surrogate’s decree.

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.E. 178, 141 N.Y. 256, 57 N.Y. St. Rep. 388, 96 Sickels 256, 1894 N.Y. LEXIS 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mills-v-smith-ny-1894.