Mounger v. Sellers and Hagwood

7 Tenn. App. 507, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 11, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Tenn. App. 507 (Mounger v. Sellers and Hagwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mounger v. Sellers and Hagwood, 7 Tenn. App. 507, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The complainants have appealed from a decree of Special Chancellor, Hon. Horace M. Carr, who tried this cause in the lower court and denied complainants most of the relief they sought. Defendants were taxed with the cost.

We are presented at the outset with a very large record. This case has been warmly contested, some feeling is exhibited between litigants and the cause was thoroughly argued at the bar. The complainants are James G. Monger, Mallie Monger and Richard W. Monger, children of the late James E. Monger of Anderson county. The defendants are M. H. Sellers and J. M. Hagwood and their bondsmen on their bond as executors of the estate of James E. Monger deceased. The bill also made William Monger and Gug Monger, sons of James E. Monger, defendants. It is charged in the bill that the executors had failed to make proper settlement of the estate of complainants’ father. Complainants sought an accounting and charged the executors with waste.

The executors filed an answer denying all the material allegations of the bill and insisting that complainants had been overpaid.

It appears that the defendant M. H. Sellers did all the. active ■work in connection with winding up or administering the estate of James E. Monger, and his codefendant Hagwood was an executor nominally. The bill also charged that the executors had exceeded their power in selling a farm belonging to their testate; that this farm should have been partitioned among the five heirs. This feature of the bill, however, was apparently abandoned.

Numerous depositions were taken. It appears that the defendant Sellers is a rural mail carrier and that when matters were not so active with the lawyers connected with this lawsuit a day would be used in taking a part of defendant Sellers’ deposition. He was called on numerous days and after many questions were propounded and answers thereto given an adjournment would be taken until *509 some future date. Counsel almost put the defendant Sellers in testifying in a class with Tennyson’s Brook. After the pleadings were made up and some proof taken there was a reference to the Clerk and Master to take and state an account between the parties. The Clerk and Master heard additional proof and filed a very elaborate report. Exceptions were made, by both sides to this report, but with some minor modifications the report of the Clerk and Master .was confirmed by the Chancellor. The complainants excepted to this final decree, prayed and were granted an appeal to this coxirt and have assigned seventeen errors.

The first groirp of these errors complain of the action of the court in sustaining defendants’ exception to the Master’s report in regard to Richard "W. Monger. The Clerk and Master reported that the executors were indebted to Richard W. Monger in the sum of $635.84. The first, second, third, tenth, -eleventh, thirteenth and seventeenth assignments of error all go to the question of the court’s action in rendering a judgment against complainant Richard "W. Monger for $520.16 and in not rendering a judgment against defendants in favor of said Richard W. Monger for the sum of $635.84. The fourth assignment complains of certain credits allowed the executors for services, of $300 each, and their attorney, O. T. Tindell $100, which the Clerk and Master had charged and had paid out and were proper. The fifth assignment insists that the executors should have been charged with interest from November 15, 1922. The sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth assignments all complain of the action of the Chancellor in sustaining certain exceptions in behalf of the defendants, and will be treated together. The fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth assignments all complain of error in the Chancellor’s allowing certain charges against the complainant James G. Monger.

The Clerk and Master’s report shows that the defendants’ executors received $3108.87 in personalty. They sold the farm of their testate for $8118.66, making a grand total of $11,227.53. The executors were allowed credits amounting to $1923.23. The farm was first sold to one of the heirs for $7500. The purchaser failed to comply with the terms of the sale. Sometime thereafter it was sold for $8000. Part of the consideration was on time and the executors collected $118.86 interest. The net due the estate was $9304.30, • — one-fifth of this being $1860.86. The only complaint as to the $9304.30 is the $600 allowed the executors and $100 allowed their attorney, Tindell. Out of this expense of $1923.23, the executors had paid $200 to two grandchildren of their testate, according to the tercns of his will.

As to the credits for executors’ commissions and attorney’s fees, the executors had been allowed these credits in the county court of *510 Anderson county where they made settlement, and we are of opinion that these credits were proper, just and equitable. The fee of $100 was a small fee for advising these executors. The executors were slow in distributing this estate. The Special Chancellor taxed them with all costs. On the other hand the two main complainants here, — James G. Monger and Richard W. Monger, received much aid and assistance from the executor Sellers. They depended upon him and they needed his assistance. It appears that at the time of the death of their father James Monger and his wife did not have sufficient clothing to attend the funeral and Sellers became obligated for more than $30 for necessary clothing so that James and his wife could attend the funeral of his (James G. Monger’s) father. Richard Monger was convicted and sent to the State prison. He was confined in the prison at Petros for several years. It appears that he made his escape and the defendant Sellers and another friend persuaded Richard to return to the State prison at Petros. They carried him there in an automobile and interceded with the warden or superintendent of the prison in behalf of Richard and asked that his good time not be taken from his sentence on account of his escape. While Richard was in prison he had the defendant Sellers to make numerous advances for him from time to time. Richard Monger did not testify. Evidently James Monger, Sr., had the utmost confidence in Sellers and his coexecutor. It appears that Monger had four grown sons, but he chose two friends to be his executors.

The assignment complaining of the credits for commissions and attorney’s fees is overruled.

The Clerk and Master reported that the executors had overpaid W. C. Monger $25; that there was due Guy Monger $129.22. The Chancellor reduced this to $9.22, because defendant Sellers had paid Guy Monger $120 for which the Clerk and Master had failed to give credit. The Clerk and Master reported that there was due the complainant Mallie Monger $60.86. While she has appealed, there is no complaint here as to the amounts due Guy Monger or Mallie Monger and no complaint of the overpayment of $25 to W. C. Monger. The Clerk and Master reported that James G. Monger had received $1509.25 and there was still due him $351.59. However, it appeared that James G. Monger shortly after these defendants qualified as executors became involved in a divorce suit with his wife. He was also in trouble, having assaulted someone. The defendant S'ellers and other friends interceded for James G. Monger. The wife had attached by garnishment all of James E. Monger’s estate. A compromise agreement was made, whereby the wife procured two-thirds of James G.’s share of the estate and James G. was to receive one-tliird.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Tenn. App. 507, 1928 Tenn. App. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mounger-v-sellers-and-hagwood-tennctapp-1928.