Reiley v. Healey

187 A. 661, 122 Conn. 64, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 45
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 9, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 187 A. 661 (Reiley v. Healey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiley v. Healey, 187 A. 661, 122 Conn. 64, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 45 (Colo. 1936).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

The questions presented by the appeals in this case arise out of the proceedings for the settlement of the estate of Edward B. Reiley, who died intestate August 6th, 1929, leaving his wife and a minor son. On August 16th, 1929, his wife was appointed administratrix of his estate, qualified by furnishing a bond, upon which an attorney in Waterbury became surety, and proceeded with the settlement of the estate. On December 18th, 1930, the attorney was relieved as surety and a new bond given wherein the American Surety Company became surety. The Waterbury Trust Company filed a claim against the estate which was disallowed; the company instituted an action to recover the claim and on June 18th, 1932, recovered judgment for $22,672.50. Meanwhile it had made application to the Court of Probate to remove the administratrix or require her to furnish an additional bond, and on April 3d, 1933, the Court of Probate ordered an additional bond to be filed. The administratrix failed to do this and on July 29th, 1933, she was removed as administratrix, and Patrick Healey was appointed and qualified as administrator d. b. n. On June 30th, 1934, the administratrix filed a final account and at a hearing held on August 8th, 1934, the *68 Court of Probate disallowed it. An appeal was taken from that decree by the administratrix and by the American Surety Company to the Superior Court. There the Surety Company filed what purported to be an account of. the administratrix and prayed the Superior Court, sitting as a probate court, to allow it and render judgment accordingly. Subsequent proceedings in that court were based upon this account. Judgment was entered confirming the action of the Court of Probate in disallowing the account filed with it, and stating a final account of the administratrix which was adjudged to be correct. From that judgment the administratrix, the Surety Company, and the administrator d. b. n. have appealed, the first two from a disallowance of certain credits claimed by the administratrix, and the last from the allowance of certain credits to her.

All the items in dispute, except two, grow out of transactions of the administratrix with the Citizens-Manufacturers National Bank. At his death the decedent was indebted to it to the amount of $49,165 and it held collateral to secure that debt of an “appraised value”—which we take to mean, as appraised in the inventory of the estate—of $69,559.50. Just before his death he had ordered, through it, one hundred and ninety-eight shares of stock of the Sterling Securities Company, worth at his death $4752; on October 8th, 1929, the administratrix turned this stock over to the bank; and it sold it for $5733.60 and applied this sum to reduce the debt. Then came the stock market crash and the value of the collateral held by the bank fell rapidly. In the beginning of 1930 it made frequent calls upon the administratrix for more collateral, threatening that unless it was furnished or the debt reduced it would sell the securities in its hands and apply the proceeds to the debt. The administratrix *69 called at the bank several times urging it not to sell them, but did not furnish any additional collateral. On April 11th, 1930, the bank sold certain shares of the stock it held and reduced the debt by the amount realized. Thereafter at various times before October 1st, 1930, the administratrix turned over to the bank shares of stock belonging to the estate, as additional collateral. The bank continued to make further demands upon her, with the result that on December 19th, 1930, she assigned to it five savings-bank accounts which were a part of the estate, amounting in all to $12,813.10. As the administratrix, in response to its continued demands, neither furnished further collateral nor made any payments on the debt, the bank at several times on or before August 1st, 1931, withdrew the amounts in the accounts except one in the Merchants Trust Company and applied the money upon the indebtedness.

On October 3d, 1931, the bank made a strongly-worded written demand upon the administratrix either to furnish more collateral to the amount of $5000 or reduce the debt, threatening to liquidate the indebtedness by the sale of the collateral unless she did so on or before October 5th, 1931. As a result, on October 6th, 1931, she paid to the bank, to be applied on the debt, $2500 of her own funds. This left as the amount of the debt, $22,609.79. Until July 6th, 1932, the administratrix continued to pay to the bank interest upon the indebtedness, the payments until and including October 1st, 1930, amounting to $3201.82, and ■those thereafter made, to $3232.92. When the administratrix was removed, the bank held as collateral securities of an “appraised value” of $66,145.80, including the stock turned over to it by the administratrix, except the Sterling Securities stock which it had sold, and also the assignment of the savings-bank account *70 in the Merchants Trust Company, which amounted to $3245.23. The Merchants Trust Company went into receivership and after the removal of the administratrix the bank, through Home Loan bonds which it took in lieu of the deposit and sold, realized $2200, which it applied on the debt. While the proceedings were pending in the Superior Court the bank sold several items of the stock held by it, liquidating the debt, and delivered to the administrator d. b. n. the rest of the collateral, which included most or all of the securities furnished it by the administratrix.

The trial court has found that the administratrix acted at all times in good faith, for what she thought were the best interests of the estate; but that she was inexperienced in business, consulted no one who was experienced, and made no application to the Court of Probate for advice or approval of her acts; that she relied solely upon her own judgment and that of a woman who had been stenographer in her husband’s office, to whom she left both the bookkeeping and actual management of the estate; that in furnishing the additional collateral to the bank and continuing to pay interest after October 1st, 1930, she seriously jeopardized the interests of the general creditors and in fact gave preference to the bank; that after October 1st, 1930, a reasonably prudent investor would have requested the bank to sell the collateral it held and apply the proceeds upon the debt; and that the reasonable period for the final liquidation of the estate did not extend beyond a period of fourteen months, although the estate could not be settled within the time because of the pendency of the action brought by the Waterbury Trust Company upon its claim.

While the reasons of appeal raise other questions, the only claimed errors of the trial court as far as concerns the dealings of the administratrix with the *71 bank which are pressed upon the brief, are in regard to these items: The trial court allowed the administratrix credit for the amount realized by the bank upon the sale of the Sterling Securities Company stock; it did not allow her credit for the savings-bank accounts which were assigned to the bank as collateral after October 1st, 1930, nor for the payment made from her personal funds after that date; it allowed her credit for the interest payments made to the bank before that date; but it did not allow credit for those thereafter made.

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Bluebook (online)
187 A. 661, 122 Conn. 64, 1936 Conn. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiley-v-healey-conn-1936.