Reed v. Taliaferro

259 P. 815, 37 Wyo. 107, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 73
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1927
Docket1362
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 259 P. 815 (Reed v. Taliaferro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reed v. Taliaferro, 259 P. 815, 37 Wyo. 107, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 73 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

R. Harvey Reed died on January 30, 1907, a resident of Sweetwater County, leaving a last will and testament, in which he appointed his sons Gail Reed, then about twenty-three years of age, and Penrose Reed, then about twenty years of age, as his heirs, and in which he directed his executor to act as trustee under the will to invest the net estate 'at interest or in such manner as he should see fit, *111 to pay the interest and profits thereof from time to time to bis beirs, and to pay tbe principal to them when Pen-rose Reed should arrive at the age of forty years. The will was duly admitted to probate on March 4,1907. T. S. Tal-iaferro, Jr., named therein as executor, was duly appointed as such, and he, after giving bond, proceeded to administer the estate, paying the last item of indebtedness, aside from premiums on his bond, on June 30, 1910. An inventory and appraisement was filed on March 13, 1907. The executor filed a report on January 18, 1908, another on May 25, 1916, and his final report on July 14, 1923. He testified that he filed other reports which were lost. Objections were made by the heirs to the final report of the executor and to the supplemental report thereto. A hearing on said reports and said objections was had before the court on December 24, 1924. Judgment was rendered on July 25, 1925, in which the court charged the executor with receipts in the sum of $6355.50, credited him with the sum of $2051.18 expenses, with the sum of $963.23 for money advanced to the heirs and with the sum of $319.75 executor’s fees, leaving a balance of $3021.34. On this balance the court charged the executor with interest at the rate of four per cent per annum, compounded annually from July 1, 1909, amounting to the sum of $2653.28. The executor was directed to pay such interest to the heirs and to hold the principal sum of $3021.34 for distribution in accordance with the terms of the will. From this judgment the heirs have appealed.

1. The court, in fixing the principal upon which the interest to be paid by the executor should be computed, first deducted the expenditures, and the sum of $319.75, as fees allowed to the executor under the statute (Sec. 6853, W. C. S. 1920). It is contended that the deduction of the executor’s fees should not have been made as of that time; that his fees were not payable until the final accounting, and that interest should have been computed *112 against Mm, compounded, at the legal rate, the same as on other amounts. The result would be that the executor would not alone lose all of his commission, to which the statute appears to give him an absolute right, but he would in addition be required to pay at least an equal amount thereof to the heirs. Counsel rely upon In re Hagerty’s Estate, 97 Wash. 491, 166 Pac. 1139, and eases therein cited. Without stopping to analyze the rule there announced, and as to when it should be applied, we feel that we are not warranted in the case at bar to reverse the action of the trial court in tMs respect. The court followed the rule announced in Mathis v. Mathis, 18 N. J. L. 59; Callaghan v. Hall, 1 Serg. & R. 241, and 24 C. J. 87, to the effect that—

“in charging an executor or administrator with interest - on funds iñ Ms hands at a final settlement, Ms commission or recompense * * * should be deducted before a balance is struck and the interest is finally computed against Mm.”

2. The executor was and is an attorney at law. He employed two other attorneys, Mr. Preston and Mr. Rea-vill in connection with some of the matters of the estate, and paid them the sum of $400, divided equally between them. The services were performed mainly in connection with the cancellation of two contracts, made by the decedent in connection with some lands in Idaho, and calling for payments largely in excess of the total amount of assets of the estate. No objection is made to the amount paid to Mr. Preston, but exceptions are taken to the amount paid to Mr. ReaviH. The court found that his services were necessary, and we cannot interfere with that finding. Counsel for appellants contend that the total amount that could have been paid to attorneys was, in any event, limited to $319.75, and they base that contention on section 6854, W. C. S. 1920, which provides that *113 tbe fees that may be paid to the attorneys of an executor shall not exceed the amount allowed to the executor or administrator except in case of actual litigation. "Without determining the full effect or scope of the section, or whether there was actual litigation in this matter within the meaning thereof, we take it that the fees that may be paid to attorneys under it may at least equal the sum allowable to the executors or administrators, and that the amount is not dependent upon fees actually paid executors or administrators, for otherwise an attorney could not, at times, be paid at all, if for some reason — in ease of waiver, for instance — nothing were paid to an executor or administrator. Now under section 6853, an executor or administrator receives certain commissions — amounting to $319.75 in the case at bar — and the court may allow him fifty per cent thereof in addition. Hence it is clear that the sum paid to the attorneys in this ease is not in violation of the amount allowable under the statute.

3. The court, after allowing the executor’s fees, claims and expenses paid in the sum of $2051.18 and $963.23 advanced to the heirs, found the balance due from the executor, as already stated, to be the sum of $3021.34, and fixed July 1, 1909 as the date from which such balance should draw interest. The executor’s action in charging himself with two per cent interest on the money received by him up to that date was approved. The amount of interest charged is small and the date somewhat arbitrary. The executor, however, held himself in readiness, at all times, according to his testimnoy, to pay the amount due, and apply it on the contemplated purchase of a home for the heirs; and a number of claims due from the estate were paid even after the date above mentioned, the last item, aside from those due for the bond, being paid on June 30, 1910. The proceeding is one in equity; we are constrained to pay due deference to the views of the trial court, and on the whole we are not prepared to hold "that *114 we should be warranted in interfering with the finding of the trial court in these respects. We cannot, however, approve of the action of the court in the charge of interest from July 1, 1909, which was at the rate of four per cent compounded annually. This rate was fixed on the theory that it is the maximum rate charged under our depository law and is the rate usually allowed by banks, and about the rate payable on securities of the United States Government in which an executor is allowed to invest trust money. It is true that trust funds do not, generally, draw a high rate of interest, safety, instead of yield, being considered of paramount importance, and had the funds been invested as above mentioned, we should, probably, not be warranted in interfering with the action of the trial court. But they were not. The executor reported and testified that he mingled the trust money with his own property; that he used the money by putting it into his sheep business, where, he says, ‘ ‘ it remains.

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Bluebook (online)
259 P. 815, 37 Wyo. 107, 1927 Wyo. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-v-taliaferro-wyo-1927.