Robinson v. Harrison

2 Tenn. Ch. R. 11
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 15, 1874
StatusPublished

This text of 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 11 (Robinson v. Harrison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Harrison, 2 Tenn. Ch. R. 11 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1874).

Opinion

The Chancellor :

— The Hon. John Catron died in May, 1865, leaving a will, which was duly probated, and of which "the defendant, Harrison, was appointed and qualified as -executor. This will consisted of a number of specific devises and legacies, with a residuary clause in favor of Matilda Catron, the testator’s widow, who, however, dissented from the will, under the statute in such cases. The testator, among other legacies, by the second item of his will, bequeathed to trustees named — one of them being the defendant, Harrison — for the use of his negro man, Henry, “two thousand dollars in stock of the Nashville Gas-Light ‘Company,” with the qualification that “ the interest on the stock is to be drawn by Mrs. Catron (testator’s wife) during her life-time, and the next dividend after her death the trustees are to draw for Henry’s use,” and with directions as to the disposition of this stock, in certain contingencies, for Henry’s benefit. By a third codicil to Ms will the testator refers to this bequest, and states that the stock has since increased to 116 19-20 shares, amounting nominally to $5,802.50, and adds: “Now, I hereby give, as in said will, all of said gas-light stock, except the proceeds of the first two thousand dollars ($2,000), which are to vest in Henry at my death, and my executors are requested to pay the proceeds of said two thousand dollars over to Henry as said proceeds are received. The balance of the proceeds of said gas-light stock is to be received by my wife during her life-time, and is to go to Henry at Ms mistress’ death; and if he be then dead, Henry’s wife, Pauline, is to be Ms successor, and to receive the proceeds of said gas-light stock, and may dispose of the same by will or gift as she, Pauline, sees proper; and if she fails to dispose of the same, then the stock, at Pauline’s death, is given to her daughter, Mary, absolutely.” Henry died in 1866, and Pauline in July, 1872, without having disposed of said stock. Mrs. Catron died in 1873. The original will in this cause was filed by Mary M. Robinson, the daughter of Pauline, against Harrison, as executor of Catron’s will, and the personal [13]*13representative of Mrs. Catron, to recover the residue of the gas stock, after deducting the $2,000 thereof payable at the testator’s death, the receipt whereof by Henry was admitted. The defendant, Harrison, as executor, seems to have paid the legacies, and otherwise executed the will, except in the matter of the stock in question.

By her dissent from her husband’s will, the widow became entitled to one-third of the personalty of the estate. On the 9th of February, 1866, she and the executor had a. settlement of her interest in the estate, and entered into written articles of settlement, by which her one-third of personalty was agreed to be $10,477.74, and she received in satisfaction thereof, in money and personal effects not, specifically bequeathed, $8,139.95, leaving a balance due her of $2,337.79. This balance the agreement shows the executor paid her, and she received, in forty-seven shares of’ the gas stock bequeathed as above, amounting, at its par value of $50 per share, to $2,350. The instrument off agreement recites that the said Harrison has caused the said stock to be issued to her, “vesting in her such interest in. said stock as he is authorized by virtue of his office as executor to vest, and in the same manner as the stock in said, company given by the will to said Matilda Catron was-bequeathed.” The agreement concludes thus : “ The said. Matilda Catron hereby covenants with said Harrison, and. binds herself, her heirs, and representatives to save the said Harrison harmless from all liability which may accrue by-reason of this adjustment and the transfer of the gas stock.”’

The devisees and legatees of Catron’s will were made-defendants to the original bill for the purpose of having an. administration account, if necessary. The defendant, Harrison, filed a cross-bill to hold the personal representatives of Mrs. Catron to her contract of indemnity, as above, and. also to marshal the assets of the estate, and compel thei legatees to refund proportionally, if, as he insisted, the assets. were not sufficient to pay debts and legacies in full. The-personal representatives of Mrs. Catron also filed a cross[14]*14-bill, to recover the full amount of her one-third of the personalty of the estate, in the event the stock was recovered by the complainant.

It is clear that the complainant became entitled, on the death of her mother without having made any disposition of the gas stock by “ will or gift,” to the stock, under the codicil to the testator’s will. It was the duty of the defendant, Harrison, as executor and testamentary trustee, to have delivered the stock, upon the death of Mrs. Catron, certainly, and it may be on the death of complainant’s mother, to the complainant, with such dividends, profits, or “proceeds ” (to use the word of the will) as legally passed by the bequest in the events which had happened. If, as the executor suggests in his answer, the personal assets were insufficient to pay debts and the widow’s distributive share of one-third, it was his duty to have made the deficiency fall proportionally on all the specific devises and bequests, . and to have accounted with the complainant for the stock bequeathed to her, less her proportion of the loss. He had not the least-right to select the legacy of complainant to bear the burden of the widow’s dissent, whatever may have ‘been his right to dispose of the stock for the purpose, if necessary, of paying debts. The complainant is clearly entitled to a decree against the executor declaring her right to the stock in controversy. She has an election to take a decree for the value of the stock at the date of the conversion (Jameson v. Shelby, 2 Humph. 198), or to the stock itself, and the dividends and profits thereof, or an amount in money sufficient to replace the same at this time. Jones v. Harrison, 3 Hayw. 92; Henriques v. Franchise, Prec. in Ch. 205; Fowler v. Regnal, 3 Mac. & G. 500; Re Colliery Co., 25 W. R. 618. An account of the administration will be necessary to ascertain whether the complainant is entitled to the whole of the stock, or only to what may remain after scaling the legacy proportionally to meet any deficiency of ..assets to cover debts and the widow’s distributive share.

The written agreement between the executor and the [15]*15widow shows that the latter took the forty-seven shares of .gas stock, not only with full knowledge of the bequests of "the will, and with an obligation on her part to save the executor harmless by reason of the transfer, but, by the very letter of the agreement, “with such interest in said stock as he is authorized by virtue of his office as executor to vest, and in the same manner as the stock in said company given by the will to said Matilda Catron was bequeathed.” The plain meaning of this language is that she takes the stock subject to the provisions of the will. She became thereby a trustee for the complainant, as legatee — a trust never directly repudiated, so far as appears. The sale of the stock by her, although a breach of trust, could not affect her liability as an express trustee. Huntly v. Huntly, 8 Ired. Eq. 250; Pearce v. Pearce, 22 Beav. 248; Hennessey v. Bray, 33 Beav. 96. The statute of limitations is, therefore, no protection. Life Association v. Siddal, 3 De G. F. & J. 58; Rackham v. Siddal, 1 Mac. & G. 607.

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2 Tenn. Ch. R. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-harrison-tennctapp-1874.