Roach's Estate

92 P. 118, 50 Or. 179, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 194
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 92 P. 118 (Roach's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roach's Estate, 92 P. 118, 50 Or. 179, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 194 (Or. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moore.

It is contended by Humphrey’s counsel that the clauses of the will quoted imposed upon their client executorial duties upon the performance of which he became a trustee, and that, having fully discharged the first obligation, as is evidenced by his semiannual report of October 14, 1895, a trust in the property of the estate immediately attached, whereby the jurisdiction of the county court terminated and that of the circuit court attached; and, this being so, the former court was power[186]*186less to act in the matter, and hence an error was committed in refusing to dismiss the proceedings.

Our statute prescribes the time and order of payment of charges and claims against a decedent’s estate (B. & C. Comp. § 1212), upon the discharge of which the legatees are to be paid and the remaining proceeds of the personal property distributed among the heirs or other persons entitled thereto: B. & C. Comp. § 1220. This enactment would seem to make it incumbent upon the personal representative of the decedent to settle the estate committed to him within a reasonable time after assuming charge thereof, and it would also appear that when, by the terms- of a last will, an executor is required to carry out the direction of a testator, the performance of which cannot reasonably be accomplished within the time implied from the statute, a trust is thereby imposed.

1. However this may be, in a general sense every executor is a trustee for the legatees and the next of kin (Willard, Executors, 36), and it will be assumed, without deciding the question, that the will under consideration required Humphrey, after paying the debts of the estate and the bequests that had ma■tured, to perform the duties pertaining to a testamentary trustee.

2. In the discharge of such a trust the county court, as a probate tribunal, had no control, but the circuit court, as a court of equity, alone had jurisdiction of the subject-matter.

3. When a person has been appointed by a testator to execute the bequests of a will, and also vested by such testament with an interest in or a power over the property which, after the testator’s death, he is to perform for the benefit or to the use of another, the relation of the person so appointed to the estate, when legally committed to -him, must,. upon principle, be the same as if a branch of the duty were delegated to one person as executor and the remaining part to another as trustee. In the case supposed, a moment’s reflection would seem to induce the conclusion that, when an executor lawfully secures possession of the property 'of a decedent’s estate, any inter-[187]*187meddling therewith by a testamentary trustee, until the executor has been discharged, would be regarded by the probate court as the usurpation of its authority, for, as the testator’s debts, funeral expenses, etc., must be paid before any trust can attach to the property, under a devise or bequest thereof, the jurisdiction of such court necessarily precedes that of an equity tribunal, and is therefore exclusive.

4. When the same person has been appointed by a will to - perform such dual duty in respect to the property of an estate, no service is demanded of him as testamentary trustee until he has fully performed his executorial obligation and secured an order of the probate court discharging him and liberating his bondsmen. Thus in Prindle v. Holcomb, 45 Conn. 111, it was held that the probate records should show that an executor’s account had been settled, before a testamentary trustee was entitled to take and hold the property of the estate for the purposes of the trust. In White v. Ditson, 140 Mass. 351 (4 N. E 606: 54 Am. Rep. 473), in speaking of an executor, the court say: “While Healy fully completed the administration of the estate by the payment of all the debts, legacies and expenses, he settled no final account as executor, and did not, by any open, notorious act, discharge himself as such in the probate court by assuming to transfer the residue of the property to himself’as trustee, or by any other act indicating an intention thereafter to hold the same fo.r the purposes of the trust. * * As actual payment cannot be made by one to himself, it has been held that, where the same person is executor and trustee, he must give bond in his character of trustee before he can exonerate himself from his liability as executor.”

5. In the case at bar, it does not appear that Humphrey gave a new undertaking as trustee. He did not secure an order of the county court, discharging him as executor; nor did he do anything from which it can reasonably be inferred that he intended to change his relation to the property, except in failing to file semiannual reports of the receipt and disbursement of money, until compelled to render a final account. Such neglect, however, is ineffectual to change his executorial relation, [188]*188and his duty to the estate and the rule of law by which he should be governed is tersely stated in the case of Bellinger v. Thompson, 26 Or. 320 (37 Pac. 714, 40 Pac. 229), where Mr. Chief Justice Bean, in speaking of another executor, observes: “It may be that the will gave him two characters, those .of an executor and trustee, but the duties of the. one are separate and distinct from and independent of the other; and until -he was discharged from the former and assumed the duties of the latter, his liability as executor still continued.” In support of the legal principle thus announced, see, also, 18 Cyc. 1112; 1 Woerner, Am. Law Admr. (2 ed.) 346; Dougherty v. Bartlett, 100 Cal. 496 (35 Pac. 431); Prior v. Talbot, 10 Cush. 1; Cruce v. Cruce, 81 Mo. 676; Foster v. Wise, 46 Ohio St. 20 (16 N. E. 687: 15 Am. St. Rep. 542); Wallber v. Wilmanns, 116 Wis. 246 (93 N. W. 47).

The only adjudication which we have found that at all seems to controvert the rule thus proclaimed, and that does not involve the power of a probate court to compel the filing of a final account, is Vohmann v. Michel, 109 App. Div. 659 (96 N. Y. Supp. 309), where it was held that when a testatrix devised her residuary estate to trustees, as such, who were also executors, a loan made by them of a part of the residuary estate, secured by a mortgage, was not an executorial performance,' but the act of trustees, though they had not, at the time of the loan, accounted as executors, or been discharged as such, or formerly transferred the property of the estate to themselves as trustees. The effect of that decision, however, is very much, ■weakened by a modification of the decree on appeal, where the conclusion ultimately reached was placed on other grounds: Vohmann v. Michel, 185 N. Y. 420 (78 N. E. 156: 113 Am. St. Rep. 921).

6. The jurisdiction of the county court of Multnomah County was admitted when Humphrey secured from .it a confirmation of his • nomination as executor. Its authority was recognized when he made to it his semiannual reports, and, as nothing has ever been done by 'him to defeat the right of that, court to hear and determine the matter, it was empowered to [189]*189compel a final settlement of the estate, and no error was committed in refusing to dismiss the proceedings: In re Osburn’s Estate, 36 Or. 8 (58 Pac. 521: 5 Prob. Rep. Ann. 148).

7. It will be remembered that the county court awarded the legatees $16,926.40, arid that the circuit court gave them $22,-344.22.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P. 118, 50 Or. 179, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roachs-estate-or-1907.