Vermont-Peoples' National Bank v. Robbins' Estate

166 A. 6, 105 Vt. 283, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedMay 2, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 166 A. 6 (Vermont-Peoples' National Bank v. Robbins' Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vermont-Peoples' National Bank v. Robbins' Estate, 166 A. 6, 105 Vt. 283, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 218 (Vt. 1933).

Opinion

Powers, C. J.

C. 0. Robbins and Dennison Cowles, under the firm name Robbins & Cowles, carried on a partnership business in Brattleboro for a long time prior to January 1, 1918. The firm did its banking business with the Peoples’ National Bank, and from time to time borrowed money therefrom. On or about the date mentioned, the members of the firm formed a corporation under the name Robbins & Cowles, Inc., and the business continued under the same ownership and management. The corporation assumed the bank debts of the partnership, and on September 15, 1918, to cover such debts, it gave the Peoples’ National Bank a four months’ joint note for $10,000 signed by the corporation and by C. O. Robbins and Dennison Cowles. On the face of this note, the individual signers were joint makers, but in fact the note was given for the sole benefit of the corporation. All this was known to the bank when the note was taken. The Peoples’ National Bank was afterwards consolidated with the Vermont National Bank under the name Vennont-Peoples’ National Bank, and the note passed into the hands and became the property of the new corporation. On October 18, 1918, C. 0. Robbins died testate. His widow, Alice W. Robbins, was the executrix of his estate. Commissioners were appointed and this $10,000 note, then overdue and unpaid, was presented to them. The commissioners allowed the note by indorsing on it the word “approved” over their signatures, and returned it to the plaintiff. When the commissioners made their report to the probate court for the district of Marlboro, wherein the estate was being settled, this note was therein characterized as a contingent claim. The plaintiff, understanding that the note was allowed as an absolute debt, did nothing toward its enforcement until after Mrs. Robbins’ death as hereinafter recorded. It took from the corporation, from time to time, renewal notes, but not in payment of this note which it never surrendered, nor did it ever intend to release the signers of it.

Mrs. Robbins proceeded with the administration of her husband’s estate, paid or settled all the other claims allowed against it, but paid nothing on the $10,000 note here involved. Bach year she filed her account with the probate court and the same was examined and allowed. These reports showed the payments *287 made on the claims proved and her other charges and expenditures. On December 6, 1928, she filed her final account which was also examined and allowed, and the probate court thereupon decreed to her the rest and residue of the C. 0. Robbins estate, the value of which was $968.08. This final account made no reference to the note in question, nor did any of the annual accounts. As the probate records stood, it was wholly ignored and left undisposed of. No notice of the hearings on any of these accounts, annual or final, was given to the plaintiff by publication or otherwise, and it knew nothing of them until after the death of Mrs. Robbins, which occurred on April 16, 1930 — over a year after the Robbins estate was closed on the books of the probate court. During the time she was acting as executrix, Mrs. Robbins received from the estate, under an order of the probate court-made December 2, 1918, an allowance for her support of $100 per month, which amounted in all to $5,533. 'During this time, on numerous occasions, Mrs. Robbins called at the bank, and talked with the assistant cashier about this note; and she frequently went to the store of Robbins & Cowles, Inc., and talked with Mr. Cowles about their paying the note so that she could close her husband’s estate. But she did not disclose to the bank that the note was allowed as a contingent claim, and, perhaps, was under no obligation to do. so. But she left the bank with the impression that the estate was holden for the note. And the plaintiff was, in fact, misled into allowing the matter to drift along until it was too late to save itself: The .probate court never made an order requiring the administratrix to pay this note or any of the other allowances.

The plaintiff brings this bill in chancery claiming that it should recover the whole amount of the $10,000 note, less the amounts paid on the renewal notes amounting to $1,100. The defendant demurred to the bill, and excepted to the chancellor’s adverse ruling thereon — the benefit of which exception was saved by order of the chancellor. Fairbanks v. Keiser, 86 Vt. 210, 213, 84 Atl. 610. The chancellor then heard the case on its merits, filed his findings to the effect above stated, and thereupon rendered a decree for the plaintiff for the above sum of $968.08, with interest thereon from December 6, 1928, and costs. Both parties appealed.

Neither the indorsement made by the commissioners on the back of the note, nor the allowance of the claim evi *288 denced thereby amounted to a judgment thereon. The things that count in such matters are the report made to the probate court and its acceptance by that court. Not until such acceptance was indorsed thereon or otherwise evidenced did the action of the commissioners become a judgment. Hodges, Exr. v. Thacher, 23 Vt. 455, 464; Adarene v. Marlow’s Estate, 33 Vt. 558, 559; Riley v. McInlear’s Estate, 61 Vt. 254, 261, 17 Atl. 729; Sowles v. Quinn, 61 Vt. 354, 356, 17 Atl. 493. The judgment actually rendered, then, established this claim as contingent. But it was wholly unwarranted'. There was nothing contingent about it. "Contingent” implies futurity. It properly applies to a claim that may never become absolute; but not to one that has already become absolute. A contingent claim under G. L. 3390 is one "where the liability depends upon some future event which may or may not happen, and therefore makes it more wholly uncertain whether there ever will be a liability. ’ ’ Sargent’s Admr. v. Kimball’s Admr., 37 Vt. 320, 321. It must be one that "cannot be proved as a debt before the commissioners.” This note was nothing of this kind. It was a fixed liability and could be proved as a debt.

The obligation of a surety is measured by his contract. Standard Oil Co. v. National Surety Co., 234 Ky. 764, 767, 29 S. W. (2d) 29; Ryan v. Shannahan, 209 Cal. 98, 285 Pac. 1045, 1046; Gordon & Delworth, Inc. v. Abbott, 258 Mass. 35, 154 N. E. 523, 524. So the fact that Robbins was a surety on this note did not affect his primary liability to the plaintiff, but only shows the relation of the makers to each other. East Bridgewater Savings Bank v. Bates, 191 Mass. 110, 77 N. E. 711, 712. In the hands of the bank the note was the joint note of the signers. Upon the death of Robbins, by force of the statute, G. L. 3303, Hogan & Hogan v. Sullivan, 79 Vt. 36, 39, 64 Atl. 234, it became a valid and absolute claim against his estate. It was, therefore, the duty of the commissioners to allow it as such, and they had no right to allow it as anything else. Their report was wholly unwarranted. As we have seen, the court never made an order for the payment of the claims allowed. It is quite probable that its approval of the annual accounts would amount to the same thing as a previous order to pay, as to all claims shown thereby to have been paid in whole or in part.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 6, 105 Vt. 283, 1933 Vt. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vermont-peoples-national-bank-v-robbins-estate-vt-1933.