Weyman v. Thompson

50 N.J. Eq. 8
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 50 N.J. Eq. 8 (Weyman v. Thompson) 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
Weyman v. Thompson, 50 N.J. Eq. 8 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

Christian Weyman, of Beverly, in Burlington county, died on the 26th of May, 1882, having made his will on the 14th of February, 1879, and a codicil to it on the 27th of May in the same year.

[9]*9By the will he appointed the defendants Henry C. Thompson, Jacob Wilson and James L. Kemble its executors, directing that they should not be required to give security.

The will was drawn by James L. Kemble, one of the executors, who for more than thirty years had been a justice of the peace in Burlington county.

Henry C. Thompson, another of the executors, was a lawyer in Philadelphia, who, when the will was made, and until the year 1890, was reputed to be of considerable wealth and of undoubted integrity and ability. He was prominently connected with the management of two trust companies, and was also executor or trustee of several estates. His residence was in Philadelphia, but he had a summer home on the Delaware river at Beverly. For several years before Mr. Weyman’s death he was Mr. Weyman’s legal adviser and business agent, attending to his investments and the collection of the income therefrom, and rendering such legal assistance as from time to time was required of him. When Mr. Weyman died all his securities and valuable papers were in Mr. Thompson’s possession.

. Jacob Wilson, the third executor, was the treasurer of a church board of education. He resided in Beverly and attended daily to his business in- the city of Philadelphia. The acquaintance and friendship between him and Mr. Weyman originated in their mutual interest in' Sunday school matters. He was frequently the messenger between Mr. Thompson at Philadelphia and Mr. Weyman in Beverly, and understood that for a long time Mr. Thompson had been Mr. Weyman’s legal adviser.

The testator left his widow and one son, his only child, surviving him. That son, Joseph Weyman, is the complainant.

The will provided, that immediately after the testator’s death $100 should be paid to his son and $200 should be paid to his widow; that the executors should set apart $10,000, invest it, and hold the investments in trust, and pay the income therefrom to his widow for her life; that the widow should also, during her life, have the use of a certain house with some land adjoining it; that •such provisions should, be in lieu of her dower in his real estate; that upon her death the use of the house and land, given to .her [10]*10for life, should go to his son for the son’s life; that the testator’s-household furniture should go to his son; that §10,000 should' be held in trust by the executors of the will, and the income-thereof paid to the son for his life, and, upon his death, the principal should be divided and paid among his issue, and, in default of such issue, to certain persons who were named in the will;. that certain real estate should go to the Methodist and Baptist churches of Beverly when the testator’s widow should die; that $500 should be paid to Phoebe Rihl and $500 to Louise Osman,, and $500 to the wife of Lewis Weyman, subject, however, to-there being sufficient estate,to provide the two trust funds of $10,000 each, to be invested and held for the widow and son; that certain lots in the Beverly Monument Cemetery, except six, which were reserved for the testator’s own burial plot, should go to the cemetery and be sold by it to raise a fund which should be held in trust and the income therefrom forever devoted to the care of the testator’s burial plot and the avenue’s of the cemetery ; that upon the death of his widow $3,000 should be expended to put a wall of specified dimensions and character in front of the cemetery, and that the residue of the testator’s estate should be divided between the Old Man’s Home and the Penn Asylum for Indigent Women, in Philadelphia, upon indicated trusts.

On the day when the testator died, as Mr. Wilson arrived in the evening from Philadelphia, he was notified of the death, and, after conference with Mr. Thompson, he arranged the details of the funeral. He had then .heard that he was an executor of the will of Mr. Weyman. About that time, also, he took possession of $400 of Mr. Weyman’s money and expended it in paying the wages of the decedent’s nurses, the expenses of the funeral, and the legacies of $100 and $200 respectively to the complainant-, Joseph Weyman, and his mother. He paid out more than the $400, and was reimbursed the excess in his payment by Mr. Thompson from funds of Mr. Weyman that Mr. Thompson then controlled.

After those payments had been made the will was proved before the surrogate of Burlington county, all three of the executors joining in the written application for- probate and in the usual [11]*11executor’s oath when probate was granted. Letters testamentary were issued to all three of them.

Mr. Wilson testifies that it was not his wish to qualify as an executor, but that he was induced to do so by Mr. Thompson,, who assured him that he should not be troubled with the management of the estate. It is noted, however, that there is no evidence that the reluctance, which Mr. Wilson now asserts, was expressed by him to any beneficiary under the will prior to-the present emergency.

After the probate of the will and the qualification of the executors, neither Mr. Kemble nor Mj\ Wilson made any examination of the assets of the estate, or any inquiry of Mr. Thompson with reference to them, nor did they engage in the management of the estate. Mr. Thompson retained possession of the assets and dealt with them without aiiy hindrance- from his co-executors, or inquiry by them as to the course of his conduct. All that Messrs. Kemble and Wilson did with reference to the trust they had assumed appears by their own testimony. ■

At one time Mr. Kemble, by appointment with Thompson, went to Thompson’s office in Philadelphia for the purpose of assisting to prepare an inventory of the assets. He met Mr. Thompson there with a bundle of papers before him, apparently engaged in an examination into Mr. Weyman’s affairs. Mr. Wilson was not there, and giving Wilson’s absence as reason,. Mr. Thompson stated that nothing could be done that day. Mr. Wilson testifies that he had not been notified of the meeting.. It does not appear that either Mr. Kemble or Mr. Wilson sought another meeting with reference to an inventory.

At another time, which is not given, Mr. Kemble received a letter in behalf of the Old Man’s Home, one of the residuary legatees, asking for payment of the legacy to that institution, and in response to it, called upon Mr. Thompson and urged him to pay the legacy.

At another time, or at other times, other legatees applied to Mr. Kemble for payment, and he went to Mr. Thompson to see if they could not be paid, but failed to obtain any satisfaction.

[12]*12Mr. Kemble testifies that three weeks after the death of the testator, Joseph Weyman applied to him for payment of income •to which he was entitled, and that he, Kemble, then told Joseph that Mr. Thompson had all the assets of the estate. Once, after .Joseph Weyman had importuned Kemble for money, Kemble .saw Thompson and urged the sale of some land, and Thompson replied that the land could not be sold to advantage.

Mr. Wilson appears to have had such unlimited confidence in Mr. Thompson’s integrity that he took Thompson’s personal assurance upon every subject without question. He says that he .qualified as executor after an. understanding with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.J. Eq. 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weyman-v-thompson-njch-1892.