Pettingill v. Pettingill

60 Me. 411
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 60 Me. 411 (Pettingill v. Pettingill) 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
Pettingill v. Pettingill, 60 Me. 411 (Me. 1872).

Opinion

Barrows, J.

The case on the part of the appellant, as reported, is deficient for want of any agreement or evidence showing the appellant to be so interested in the settlement of the executor’s account, as to be entitled to an appeal. In the hearing of a probate appeal, the first duty of the appellant is to establish his right to appeal. Ordinarily, unless this is made affirmatively to appear, the appeal will be dismissed without further examination.

In the present case, however, one or two questions of some importance have been raised and commented upon by counsel, apparently with the understanding that the right was to be conceded, and, contrary to the usual course of proceeding, we will assume that it exists, and consider the questions stated in the reasons of appeal.

It is suggested, first, that the appellee never gave such a bond as the statute required, and, consequently, never was legally^ executor, and so not entitled to settle an account of his doings in that capacity. He gave a bond which was approved by the judge of probate when the will was proved in May, 1840, conditioned for the seasonable return of a true and perfect inventory, and for faithful administration according to the will, and for the rendering of a just and true account of his administration within one year.

When the executor nominated in a will has done thus much, and thereby secured the approval and recognition of the judge of probate for his county, we think that the statute provisions, respecting the conditions of the bond which he shall give, must be so far considered as only directory, that he may have the benefit of such of his doings in the premises, as are found conformable to law and the will of the testator, and that the account, which he has bound himself to render, should be considered, and, so far as it is found correct and well vouched, allowed.

A mistake or omission in an executor’s bond, when it has been duly approved by the probate judge, ought not to be held to vitiate [420]*420what he has rightfully done in the discharge of his trust, unless the opposite party has been in some manner prejudiced thereby. The same remark applies to the objection alleged against the reception of this account, that the executor never returned an inventory and did not settle an account of his administration of the affairs of the estate within a year. This appellant, under the provisions of the will, could have no interest, share, or right whatever in the person-mi property, rights, or credits, and the failure to return an inventory and render a seasonable account could not, in any wise, affect her interests or liabilities unfavorably. The executor’s remissness in these respects would be a proper subject of inquiry in a suit upon his bond, for the benefit of any one who had suffered by reason .of these neglects, and while, under ordinary circumstances, the want of an inventory would subject an account to suspicion, and .call for more careful scrutiny in its allowance, the relations which these parties sustain to each other, under this will, are such, that we cannot view these neglects as affording any reason for precluding the executor from rendering an account now.

The testator gave by his will to his 'beloved wife, Amy Pettingill, ten dollars to be paid her by my executor, in addition to the provisions made for her comfortable support and maintenance in - sickness and in health during her natural life by my legatees, agreeably to the conditions' of a bond entered into by them for that purpose, which is to be in lieu of her dower in my estate, and I hereby charge all my property, real and personal, hereinafter devised, to the true and faithful performance of said bond, and in the event - of the non-performance of the conditions of the same, so much of my estate in the hands of my legatees is to be sold, by my executor at public or private sale, as will produce a sum necessary for the proper and comfortable support of my wife, at any and all times .when said legatees fail to provide such support in conformity with .the conditions of their bond.’

Then he devises three different parcels of real estate in fee-simple to his sons, Benjamin, and Foxwell F., ‘ subject, however, to the charge contained in this will in relation to the support and [421]*421maintenance of my beloved wife, in the proportion of two-fifths of the amount required for that purpose, and also to the payment of all debts by me owing at the time of my decease in the same proportion.’

He then gives and devises the remainder of his estate, real and personal, to a third son (this executor) and two daughters, ‘ in equal proportions,’ charged with the support and maintenance of the wife and with the payment of debts, ‘ in the proportion of three-fifths of the amount required for that purpose.’

The bond of the legatees, with the performance of the conditions of which the property thus devised is charged, appears to have been designed to be executed upon the same day with the Will, and it is set forth in the condition, that the property is thus devised upon ‘ the understanding and agreement, that his said children, in the proportion of one-fifth each, are to provide for ’ the support and maintenance of their mother so long as she shall live, in sickness and in health, ‘ at such place as she may from time to time choose,’ and if they do this in the manner prescribed, and also pay her annually a sum not exceeding ten dollars ‘ in quarterly payments, to be applied to such uses as said Amy may choose,’ the bond is to be void.

The bond was not executed until nearly two months after the date of the will, and not until after the death of the testator. Hereupon the counsel for the appellant contends that the provisions in the will having reference to a bond, cannot relate to this one, and that those provisions which charge the testator’s real estate for the performance of its conditions are void. But we have no doubt, that although the conditions of the bond are not fully recited in the will, and the instrument was not executed the day the will was made as at first intended, it is nevertheless the identical bond therein referred to, valid and binding upon the obligors, capable of being enforced by suit in the name of Amy Pettingill, and constituting a valid charge upon the real estate devised by the testator, in the manner directed in his will. This seems to have been the view taken of the matter in Pettingill v. Patterson, executor of Foxwell Pettingill, 32 Maine, 569.

[422]*422It seems that Amy Pettingill has always chosen to live with the executor, and that she is still living at the age of eighty-eight; that after Eoxwell Pettingill’s death, judgment was recovered in her name against the executor of his will at the October term, 1851, for the fifth which he was bound and failed to contribute to her support, at the rate of $22 a year from the date of the bond up to that time. Now Benjamin Pettingill has died without ever having contributed anything, so far as appears, to the support of his mother, and without having taken any steps to relieve the land devised' to him, from the payment charged upon it in the will; and the executor, never having before settled an account, comes forward to settle one, apparently for the purpose of determining how much of that land must be sold, under the power given to him in the will, to coyer the expense of the support and maintenance of Amy Pettingill hitherto.

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Bluebook (online)
60 Me. 411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pettingill-v-pettingill-me-1872.