Summers v. . Reynolds

95 N.C. 404
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 5, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 N.C. 404 (Summers v. . Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Summers v. . Reynolds, 95 N.C. 404 (N.C. 1886).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

(after stating the facts):

I. The circumstances attending the sale of the house and lot in Statesville, the plaintiff’s answer to inquiries from persons intending to bid as to what currency payment would be required to be made in, which prevented them from bidding, and the private arrangement between himself and partner, H. B. Reese, to buy in the property for themselves, carried into effect through the agency of Boger, so strongly mark the mala fides with which the sale was conducted, and the utter disregard of fiduciary duty on the part of the plaintiff, as to fully warrant the ruling of the Judge in charging him with the real value of the lot in the present currency. And so far as he has paid out portions of the Confederate money, received from his own firm in discharge of the bid, to the ■legatees, he should be credited with the scaled value of such payments in his separate accounts with each.

II. The next exception, numbered 4 in the series, is taken •to the ruling by which the plaintiff is charged with the debt ■of $252, and interest, due by T. R. Watts to the testator’s estate. N. P. Watts, a son of the debtor, proposed to compromise the claim, which the plaintiff declined, saying that Watts could attend the sale and buy the judgment. The judgment was accordingly sold, and bought by Watts for $1.00, and he afterwards, in compromise, obtained $150.00 for it. It was a culpable indifference to fiduciary duty to entertain no proposition, and not even to inquire what sum would be *413 offered, and with this information of the debtor’s desire to-settle the claim, permit it to be bought for so inconsiderable-a sum. While he had authority to dispose of the debt at ■ public sale, his general obligation remained to see that the assets of the estate were not thrown away and lost.

But we do not concur in the opinion of the Court, that the plaintiff should be held responsible for the entire amount. Assuming that the sum paid the assignee was the full measure of its value, and that the executor could have obtained that sum, he ought to be held liable for $150, instead of $1; but not for the excess of the debt above that limit.

III. The next exception is to the plaintiff’s being charged with the full amount of the deposits in the bank. The first of the certifications, and,the others are substantially in the-same form, is as follows:

BANK OP STATESVILLE,
No. 1019. Statesville, N. C., January 8th, 1874.
O. L. Summers has deposited in this bank five hundred dollars, payable ten days alter notice is given to R. P. Simonton, Cashier, on the return of this certificate properly endorsed, with interest at the rate of eight per cent, per annum, on call.
§500.00. R. P. SIMONTON, Cashier.

The facts all show entire good faith, and a purpose to preserve the fund for distribution among the legatees, and not - to derive any personal benefit from the deposit, and the executor is charged with the full amount, because his fiduciary character is not annexed to his name, so as to mark the moneys as belonging to the trust estate, and this, in the opinion of the Court, is an act of maladministration, and a devastavit. The liability is adjudged solely upon the ground that the certificates were issued to the plaintiff, not designating the representative character in which, as declared to the cashier, the deposit in fact was made, and this, we suppose,, upon the authority of the case of Peyton v. Smith, 2 D. & B. Eq., 325. In that case, the deposits were to the credit of the- *414 ■depositor, and were not distinguishable from those of his own, not held intrust. “From these accounts, then,” says GastON, J., speaking for the Court, “ it is to be collected that the trust funds went into the mass of the executor’s property, and, by no visible marks or signs, were in any respect distinguished from his private moneys. They swelled the executor’s personal credit at bank; upon his death they become assets in the hands of his personal representative; and could not have been claimed as the assets of the testator by a representative of that estate; — they were liable to his creditors, were in all respects his property, he charging himself with the amount thereof in account with his cestui qui trusts.”

Such an intermixture of funds held in trust, with his own, so as to constitute one aggregate credit, it must be admitted, is an appropriation of the former to his own individual use, for which he at once becomes liable.

If the executor pays the money of the testator into ^a bankers, not on any distinct account, but “ mixing it with his own money,” (the italics are those of the author), “ it should seem that the executor will be answerable for the loss sustained by the failure of the banker.” 2 Williams on Ex., 1292.

In Shipp v. Hettrick, 63 N. C., 329, where the executor sought to bo delivered from the loss of Confederate money which came into his hands, but which he did not separate and set apart, so that it could be identified, the Court say: “If he, (the executor), had separated the money from all other moneys in his hands, and retained it as a special deposit for Louisa E. Hettrick, the case would have been different, notwithstanding the fact that it became worthless. But he did none of these things; pn the contrary, he kept it with his own moneys. If he had made a general deposit of this money in bank in his own name, it would not have relieved him; but if he had made a special deposit of a particular parcel for this particular purpose, it would have been otherwise.”

*415 The trastee is responsible, “if he deposits it at his banker’s mixed np with his own moneysAdams Eq., 60, and such is generally the language employed by the authorites. We do not suppose it is necessary that there should be personal funds of the trustee to his credit when those held in trust are deposited. It is sufficient to make the conversion, that the account is opened with the depositor in his individual name, and would blend with money of his own, when deposited, and thus a common credit be secured.

In Brown v. Durham, 2 Gray, 42, a guardian sold property belonging to his ward, and took therefor promissory notes, payable to himself or bearer, on some of which payments had been made. The guardian died, and his estate was insolvent. The minor, through a succeeding guardian, sued the administrator of the former for these notes, as the property of the ward. Delivering the opinion, Thosias, J.,,says: “ They were retained by the guardian, not negotiated nor pledged, nor in any way used for his own business. They are clearly identified and traced. The fact that they were made payable to the guardian, in his own name, and negotiable, without any evidence of appropriation, or of any attempt to appropriate them to his own use, is not sufficient evidence of his conversion of the money, and mingling it with his own.

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.C. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/summers-v-reynolds-nc-1886.