Perrine v. Petty

34 N.J. Eq. 193
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedMay 15, 1881
StatusPublished

This text of 34 N.J. Eq. 193 (Perrine v. Petty) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perrine v. Petty, 34 N.J. Eq. 193 (N.J. Ct. App. 1881).

Opinion

The Ordinary.

The 118th section of the orphans court act (Rev. 778) provides that whenever application shall be made to the orphans court, by which letters testamentary or of administration or guardianship were issued, or to the president judge thereof, by petition by or on behalf of any person interested in any estate in the hands of any executor, administrator, guardian or trustee, verified by affidavit, alleging that such executor, administrator, guardian or trustee has wasted, embezzled or misapplied the estate entrusted to him, the court or judge, by an order, may compel discovery to be made of the condition of the estate by the production of books, papers and documents relating to the estate or by the examination of such executor, administrator, guardian or trustee, and witnesses, and may take such proceedings for the protection of such estate, by order or decree, as may be taken in like cases in the court of chancery, and compel obedience to such order or decree by the same process and in the same manner as orders or decrees of the court of chancery are enforced.

The 119th section (Ibid.) provides that whenever proof shall be made to the satisfaction of the orphans court that the property in the hands of any executor or trustee, under a will, is unsafe, insecure or in danger of being wasted, the court, at the instance of any person interested in the estate of the testator, or in such trust estate, may require such executor or trustee to give security to the ordinary of this state by bond, with sureties, in such [195]*195amount as the court shall deem proper, conditioned for the faithful performance by such executor or trustee of his duty under the will of the testator.

These sections are remedial, and therefore are to be construed liberally. The object of the first is to protect estates against the misconduct of the guardians thereof in embezzling, wasting or misapplying them, by compelling such guardians, when such misconduct has been established, to make restitution. The design of the other is to protect estates in the hands of executors or trustees, under wills, .against the danger of such waste or loss, by requiring the executors or trustees to give security. Where an •executor or trustee under a will applies to his own use the money of the estate, or the fund entrusted to him for investment, giving, as security for its repayment, only an insufficient pledge of his own property, it is no stretch of construction to hold that ke has been guilty of misapplication, within the meaning of the 118th section, above quoted. And where one of two executors ■or trustees lends the money which they are bound to invest, to the other on insufficient security, he has, at least so far as the security is insufficient, been guilty of waste. And under the two sections above quoted, there is ample power of protection. Whatever the court of chancery might do in the premises in such case, the orphans court may do. Chancery may require the faulty fiduciary to account for the money, and bring it into court. The 119th section of the orphans court act, above quoted, authorizes the orphans court to require security where the property is not ■secure or in danger of being wasted.

In the case in hand, Nelson Petty, deceased, by his will, gave, to Nelson P. Rockafellow $2,000, to be put out on bond and mortgage, and to be paid to him when he arrives at the age of ■twenty-one years, with interest accruing thereon.” The will was admitted to probate August 26th, 1869. The respondents, John and Isaac Petty, are the surviving executors. On the 5th of May, 1875, they invested that legacy in a mortgage, given by ■John Petty, one of the executors, and his wife, to Isaac, the other executor, as such executor, on a farm of the mortgagor of one hundred and two and a quarter acres, in Middlesex county. [196]*196The bond which the- mortgage was made to secure is conditioned for the payment of the $2,000, and interest from June 16th, 1871, to Nelson P. Rockafellow, when he arrives at his majority, or in case of his death, to such person as may be entitled to receive the money. The respondents settled their final account (which was joint), as executors, in the term of September, 1875, of the Middlesex orphans court. The letters testamentary were granted in that court. They prayed and obtained allowance for the $2,000 legacy as being in the hands of Isaac Petty. In November, 1879, Thomas E. Perrine, guardian of Nelson P. Rockafellow, filed his petition in that court, alleging that the legacy had been invested on wholly inadequate security, and that there had never been any investment of the interest, and praying a discovery and relief, according to the statute. An order for discovery was made. It was, however,, discharged March 2d, 1880, on the ground that the respondents had made a' satisfactory discovery of the condition of the estate; but, at the same time, the court granted the petitioner leave to ask the further aid of the court, on filing a new petition for the purpose.

On the 15th of March, 1880, in pursuance of that permission, a new petition was filed, setting forth the filing of the former one, and the proceedings under it, including the discovery as to-the before-mentioned investment, alleging that Nelson P. Rockafellow will not attain his majority until December 27th, 1884; that there will then be due and payable, on the mortgage, at simple interest merely, the sum of $1,894.41; that he is also entitled to $112.76, for interest on the legacy from August 26th, 1870, one year from the date of probate of the will, to the time,. June 16th, 1871, fixed in the mortgage as the period at which the interest thereon began, and that on the principle of investing the interest, as it becomes due annually, he will, at twenty-one,, be entitled to the further sum of $879.97. It prays an account and an order directing John Petty to pay over to his executor the interest already due on the mortgage, with the amount which would have accrued thereon if invested annually, or to pay over the principal, also, together with those moneys; and it prays,. [197]*197also, for such order as to the court may seem proper, having for its object the safe investment of the $2,000, and the interest already accrued thereon.

After hearing, that petition was, by order of December 15th, 1880, dismissed, on the ground that the petitioner was entitled to no relief. From that order this appeal was taken.

The evidence (which is that which was taken under the petition for discovery) discloses the fact that the farm on which the mortgage is, was purchased by John Petty, the mortgagor, in 1869, for $32 an acre, or $3,272, and it is shown that land in that neighborhood will not bring as much (some witnesses say not over half as much) as it did in 1869. John Petty testifies that he considers the farm worth $60 an acre, or $6,135 for the property.

His three witnesses estimate the value at from $40 to $55 an an acre, or from $4,090 to about $5,625 for the farm. On the other hand, the five witnesses on the part of the petitioner estimate it at only from $20 to $30 an acre, or from $2,045 to about $3,067 for the property.

The property appears to be but au indifferent one at best. It seems that much of the land is wet, and it is even said by some of the witnesses that about fifty acres of it are covered with bulrushes and about fifteen with scrub-oaks.

The valuations of the witnesses of the parties range, it will have been seen, from $2,045 to $5,625.

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Bluebook (online)
34 N.J. Eq. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perrine-v-petty-njsuperctappdiv-1881.