Thiefes v. Mason

55 N.J. Eq. 456
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1897
StatusPublished

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 456 (Thiefes v. Mason) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thiefes v. Mason, 55 N.J. Eq. 456 (N.J. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Grey, V. C.

This cause came on for hearing at the same time as another between the same parties regarding the real estate of Gertrude Loewendahl, and it was in open court agreed that all the testimony taken should be deemed to be testimony in either cause, so far as applicable.

The correspondence submitted indicates that the defendant made an effort to obtain the consent of the beneficiaries under Israel Loewendahl’s will to settle the claim of the complainant for the $500 which Israel had in his lifetime received and converted to his own use, but the evidence shows that before the attempted settlement was finally agreed upon the interested parties differed in their views, and the defendant gave notice that the claim was disputed.

The complainant sues as administrator cum testamento annexo for discovery and to recover a definite sum of ■ money paid to the defendant’s testator in his lifetime as, either, executor of the complainant’s testator or as life tenant entitled to the enjoyment of it under her will, and also to recover the value of certain goods of the complainant’s testator which it is shown the defendant’s testator had received in his lifetime either as executor or as legatee for life. The sum of money and the goods were portions of the estate of the complainant’s testator, and were proven to have been so converted by the defendant’s testator in his lifetime (except the piano &c. hereinafter referred to) — that they no longer existed in specie at the time of the death of the latter.

As to the money received by Israel in his lifetime, there is no pretence of proof that it remained in specie, nor, indeed, was the money received by Israel ever the property of Gertrude in the form in which it came to him, for at her death, in 1885, it was a mere right or chose in action to receive a share of her parents’ estate; this was so realized that in 1889, after Gertrude’s death, it was satisfied by the remittance of the $472.29 to Israel. He used it as his own in his lifetime, and at his death it was either consumed or so mingled with his own estate as to be undistinguishable, and the defendant, Israel’s executor, never received this fund in any identifiable shape.

[460]*460The other personal property of Gertrude (except the piano &c. hereinafter dealt with) was likewise disposed of by Israel in his lifetime, and when his executor, the defendant, assumed charge of his property, none of her personalty (except as stated) could be in any way identified.

The complainant is the administrator cum testamento annexo of Gertrude. Israel, in his lifetime, was the executor of her will. He did not prove the will, but he was none the less executor. An executor may receive and dispose of the personal estate of the testator before probate. Brazier v. Hudson, 8 Sim. *67; Wankford v. Wankford, 1 Salk. *301. He derives his power from the will and not from the probate. Comber’s Case, 1 P. Wms. *768. It is only in order to assert his right to sue as executor that he must first have probated the will. Humphreys v. Ingledon, 1 P. Wms. *753. When Israel converted the estate of his testatrix to other uses than those directed by the will, he became liable to the legatees for his wrongdoing, and they have a right of action against his executor to recover for the injury. The complainant in this case does not represent these legatees of Gertrude in any way. He is administrator cum testamento annexo of Gertrude. In this capacity he has authority to take the goods of the testatrix, but he has no power to recover for an injury done by his predecessor, the executor of the will, by disposing of or converting the estate of the testatrix. Brownlee v. Lockwood, 6 C. E. Gr. 256. Eor such a conversion of the estate of the testator the representative of the deceased executor must account to the legatees. Carrick v. Carrick, 8 C. E. Gr. 367. A very clear exposition of the principle on which this rule is based will be found in the opinion of the late Justice Bradley in the case of Beall v. New Mexico, 16 Wall. 540.

The letters on which the complainant sues are apparently those of immediate administration cum testamento annexo, and not those of limited administration de bonis non administratis by the executor. In actual fact, as appears in this ease, there had been a partial administration by Israel Loewendahl, the preceding executor, though without proof of the will, and he had by his disposition of the testatrix’s estate so converted a great [461]*461part of it that it no longer existed in specie as. it had at her death. The form of the letters issued by the probate court does not alter the fact that there has been a partial preceding administration, by reason of which the complainant can only administer those goods &c. of Gertrude which remain not administered, nor can it deprive those legatees interested in Gertrude’s estate of their direct right of action against Israel Loewendahl’s executor because of the wrong he did them by his disposition of Gertrude’s estate; for it is obvious that the legatees and the new administrator cannot both have a right of action for the conversion by the executor. On the same form of administration with the will annexed the plaintiff sued in Wankford v. Wankford, ubi supra, seeking to enforce a claim against the heirs of a deceased executor, but the king’s bench sustained the defendant, holding that the executor, who had partially disposed of the testator’s goods, though without probate of the will, was, in fact and in law, executor of the will, and entitled to all the rights of an executor. Necessarily, such an executor became charged with all the responsibilities of the place, one of which was the liability to the legatees of his testator for his disposition of the estate. The representatives of the deceased executor are still liable to those legatees for this default, and his successor in the administration of the estate has no right to call on those representatives to account to him for the goods converted, or, technically stating it, administered. Beall v. New Mexico, ubi supra.

This leaves the claim for the piano, books and music the only further question in this case. These articles appear to have been a part of the personal estate of Gertrude Loewendahl which came to the hands of the defendant in specie as they existed at the time of Gertrude’s death. The defendant sold them the piano for $15.70 and the books and music and a book-case for $2.50, making a total of $18.20. There is no other proof of the value of any of those articles than the prices at which they were sold when disposed of by the defendant, nor is there any indication that these prices were not their full value. The defendant has in his answer objected that the remedy of the complainant, if he had any, is in a court of law, and he now insists [462]*462that this court should not retain this bill to enforce a payment of so trivial a sum as $18.20. Lord Bacon’s ordinance declaring that all suits under the value of £10 are regularly to be dismissed has been determined to be forceful in this state in several cases. Swedesboro Church v. Shivers, 1 C. E. Gr. 453 ; Allen v. Demarest, 14, Stew. Eq. 164.

The claim of the complainant is merely for the payment of money. There is no allegation of fraud or other element of equity jurisdiction which should induce the court to retain the further consideration of this case.

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Related

Beall v. New Mexico
83 U.S. 535 (Supreme Court, 1873)

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 456, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thiefes-v-mason-njch-1897.