Security Trust Co. v. Jaqua, Admr.

150 N.E. 418, 85 Ind. App. 234, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 123
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1926
DocketNo. 12,428.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 150 N.E. 418 (Security Trust Co. v. Jaqua, Admr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Security Trust Co. v. Jaqua, Admr., 150 N.E. 418, 85 Ind. App. 234, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 123 (Ind. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

*236 McMahan, J.

Appellant, as executor of the last will and testamefit of Pierre Gray, filed its final report, to which exceptions were filed. The court found the report was not correct and should not be approved; that by reason of confusion and commingling of the funds of the estate with the. funds of the executor, the many changes in the investment of the funds of the estate, loans made out of such funds to the advantage of the executor, or some officer thereof, and to the disadvantage of the estate,, the keeping of large balances of cash on hand, its ever changing amounts, all without order or permission of the court, it was impossible to determine what the income from the estate actually was, and especially so after 1913; that the estate properly managed should have produced a net income of four and one-half per cent, annually after 1913; that a payment of $2,000 to the executor, for which credit was taken in its report of February, 1910, should be disallowed and charged back to the estate and that no fees to the executor for services should be allowed after 1913; that all reports made after 1913 should be disregarded .and disapproved and that the executor should make a new report charging itself as of the date of its report in 1913 with $45,224.03 and interest from May, 1913, in the sum of $16,008.03, a total of $61,232.06.

The court allowed appellant credit for $20,800 paid to the widow of the decedent according to the terms of the will, and with certain other items aggregating in all $21,561.74. The court found that the executor should charge itself with the $2,000 item referred to in its report of 1910, with four and one-half per cent, interest for twelve years, the total'of said item with interest being $3,080, and making the total amount with which appellant as executor was to charge itself as of January, 1922, $42,750.29, and that the executor should charge itself with four and one-half per cent, interest *237 on this amount for two years and five months, which interest the court calculated and fixed at $4,560, making the total amount which the court found to be due the estate from appellant $47,310.29. A judgment having been rendered ip accordance with this finding, appellant appeals.

The errors assigned are that the court erred in overruling appellant’s motion to modify the judgment, and in overruling its motion for a new trial. The action of the court in overruling the motion to modify the judgment need be given no consideration as such question is presented in the motion for a new trial, the specifications of which are that the decision is not sustained by the evidence, is contrary to law, and that the amount of the recovery is too large.

The evidence in this matter was heard by the regular judge of the Morgan Circuit Court who died without having entered any finding or judgment. The cause was thereafter submitted to a special judge, and it was stipulated that a transcript of the evidence introduced on the trial before the regular judge should be read in evidence and when read should' constitute the evidence in the cause, and all of the evidence except certain exhibits which were not copied into said transcript having been lost, substituted copies thereof should be included in said transcript and the contents of those which could not be secured should be supplied where possible from oral evidence contained in the transcript, and that recitals in reference to their contents in the transcript should be taken as true.

Appellees contend that the bill of exceptions on its face shows that all of the evidence is not in the record and therefore no question requiring a consideration of the evidence is presented for our consideration. The evidence which appellees contend is omitted is a memorandum signed by the president of appellant company *238 and addressed to another officer of appellant, and marked as exhibit “G,” in which the former said: “I will turn over to the Gray estate some of the stock from time to time. I do not want to lose control of them and will take them out as needed at the figure they are put in.” Exhibit “G” was lost and the parties were not able to produce it at the trial before the special judge. It was therefore not introduced and read in evidence at the last trial, but in the testimony of one of the witnesses as the same appears in the transcript of the evidence read and introduced as the evidence before the special judge, this exhibit was sufficiently iidentified and its contents proved. When exhibit “G” was shown to this witness, for some reason, it was then marked exhibit “S” and again read in evidence. The evidence without any conflict shows that these two exhibits were the same instrument. The said exhibit being referred to and set out in full in the testimbny of such witness, appellee’s contention cannot prevail.

Pierre Gray died November 25, 1907, testate, and directed among other things that his executor pay his widow $200 per month during widowhood. The widow remarried January 10, 1922, and on March 3, 1922, the final report, to which the exceptions were taken, was filed.

The first current report of the executor was filed in February, 1910, and contained a detailed report of the trust up to and including February 15, 1910. In this report the executor charged itself with an income from personal property of $41,604.01, and personal property 'unsold of the estimated value of $5,000, making a total of $46,604.01. Credit was claimed for disbursements aggregating $21,412.99, none of which are involved in this appeal, except one item of $2,000 for a note which appellant reported the decedent owed it at the time of *239 his death. This report was approved and as approved appellant stood charged with “personal income of $20,191.02, and personal property of the estimated value of $5,000.” The executor also charged itself with the income received from the rent and sale of real estate and of mortgages held on real estate sold and real estate unsold, as follows: cash $11,056.20, mortgage notes and real estate unsold $23,483.33, or a total in the real estate account of $34,559.53. In the real estate unsold was included a lot in Morton place estimated at $7,000. After taking and being allowed credit for certain disbursements on account of the real estate, appellant stood charged with a balance as follows: Personalty account $25,191.02, realty account $28,714.33, a total of $53,905.35. In the order approving this report, the executor was allowed $3,000 for services of itself and its attorneys.

The second report was filed April, 1913, and covered the administration to April 12, 1913. In this report appellant charged itself with the balance on hand as per report of 1910, as follows: $20,191.02, and $5,231 transferred from the realty account and with cash received on account of sale of personal property and real estate, $23,772.16, a total of $49,194.18. Appellant was therein charged with receipts on account of the real estate account and allowed credits in both the personal and real estate accounts, so that the total cash and securities then on hand and with which it was charged amounted to $38,224.03. In addition to this, appellant was also charged with real estate estimated at $9,400 which included the lot in Morton place valued at $7,000 and which had not been sold.

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Related

Jaqua v. Reinhard, Admr.
190 N.E. 887 (Indiana Court of Appeals, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
150 N.E. 418, 85 Ind. App. 234, 1926 Ind. App. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/security-trust-co-v-jaqua-admr-indctapp-1926.