Williams v. Taylor

70 A. 643, 81 Conn. 90
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 5, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 70 A. 643 (Williams v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Taylor, 70 A. 643, 81 Conn. 90 (Colo. 1908).

Opinion

*92 Hall, J.

Archibald E. Rice, late of Waterbury, died testate in March, 1893, leaving a widow, Sarah H. Rice, and three children, Frederick B. Rice, Mary B. Munson, and Ella S. Williams. His estate was inventoried at $89,726.83, consisting of the homestead, described in the second clause of his will, of the value of $15,000, and personal property of the value of $74,591.31, which included 409 shares of the stock of the Apothecaries Hall Company, a corporation located in Waterbury, with a capital stock of 800 shares of the par value of $25 each, appraised in said inventory at $30,675, and household furniture appraised at $150.

The following are provisions of the testator’s will, of which said Frederick B. Rice was the executor:—

“2d. I give, devise and bequeath to my wife, Sarah Houghton Rice, the sum of thirteen hundred ($1,300) dollars per year, the same to be paid quarterly for and during her natural life; and do further give to my said wife the personal use of my dwelling house, No. 83 Grand Street,- together with the household furniture, pictures and books therein contained, so long as she shall desire personally to occupy the same.
“ 3d. I direct that my executor hereinafter named, shall hold and possess my stock in The Apothecaries Hall Company, and from the dividends thereon, to pay said sum of thirteen hundred ($1,300) dollars to my said wife and the surplus of said dividends to divide annually among my three children hereinafter named, share and share alike.
“ 4th. I give, devise and bequeath all the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and personal, to my three children, Mary B. Munson, Frederick B. Rice and Ella S. Williams, share and share alike, to be to them and to their respective heirs and assigns forever.”

Frederick B. Rice proceeded to settle said estate, and on February 8th, 1894, presented his administration account to the Court of Probate, which was allowed and was not appealed from, showing the payment of all the debts and the expenses of settlement of the estate, and payment to *93 the legatees under the will, of the remainder of the estate, excepting said homestead and furniture and said 409 shares of stock and $56.64 in cash, which property and money are described in the account as “ to be held in trust.”

On the 20th of May, 1895, said Frederick B. Rice filed an account of “ F. B. Rice, Trustee, Estate of A. E. Rice,” in which he charged himself with the trust property shown to have been in his hands upon the settlement of his executor’s account of February 8th, 1894, and on the 31st of January, 1901, filed a trustee account of said estate in which he charged himself with the Apothecaries Hall Company stock and other trust property; both of which accounts were accepted by the Court of Probate.

Frederick B. Rice died March 28th, 1893, and Archibald E. Rice and Helen M. Rice are his executors and sole devisees and legatees.

Sarah H. Rice, the widow of the testator Archibald E. Rice, died in October, 1906.

On the 17th of July, 1906, upon the application of the appellant, Ella S. Williams, the Court of Probate appointed Franklin A. Taylor administrator d. b. n. c. t. a. of the estate of said testator Archibald E. Rice, and said Taylor thereupon caused a certificate of said 409 shares of stock to be issued to himself, as such administrator, and on the 28th of August, 1907, when ordered by the Court of Probate upon the application of the appellee Mary B. Munson, filed an account in which he charged himself with the 409 shares of Apothecaries Hall Company stock at $102,250, the homestead at $20,000, and the furniture at $150.

On the 20th of March, 1907, the appellant, Ella S. Williams, made a written application to the Court of Probate, alleging that said 409 shares of the stock of the Apothecaries Hall Company belonged to the estate of Archibald E. Rice; that said Taylor was administrator and trustee thereof ; that it was necessary to sell said stock- to settle said estate; that if sold in a block it was worth $100,000; that such a sale would best promote the interest of the .owners thereof and of the estate, — and asking for an order *94 for the sale of the same, as one block of stock. This application was denied by the Court of Probate, and said applicant appealed to the Superior Court.

Upon the trial of the appeal in the Superior Court these facts appeared: At the time of the death of Archibald E. Rice’s widow, Sarah H. Rice, the appellee Mary B. Munson, and her two daughters, and Isaac P. Kellogg, the husband of one of said daughters, already owned 276 other shares of the stock of said Apothecaries Hall Company, and therefore the distribution to Mary B. Munson of one third of the 409 shares left by her father would make her and her said family owners of a majority of all the stock of the company. Said Isaac P. Kellogg has for some years been a director and the president and general manager of said Apothecaries Hall Company, at a salary of $3,000 a year. Archibald E. and Helen Rice, representatives of Frederick B. Rice, deceased, also requested that the order of sale applied for should be made, and they and the appellant, Ella S. Williams, stated in substance at the trial that if the.409 shares in the hands of the trustee and administrator should be sold as one block of stock, thus giving to the purchaser of them a majority of the stock of said company, they would pay $100,000 for it, but that if said shares should be distributed to the legatees in three parcels they would sell the stock received by them at the rate of 409 shares for $60,000, that is, $40,000 for the two thirds of said shares which they would together receive; and the trial court adopted these as the respective values of the 409 shares in the hands of the administrator and trustee if so sold as one block, and if distributed in three lots, and held uncombined with other stock, sufficient to make a majority of all the stock of the company.

The trial court held that it was not necessary to sell said .stock in order to settle the estate ; that it was not for the best interest of the estate that it should be sold, and that it was not now subject to sale at the order of the Court of Probate, and rendered judgment dismissing the appeal.

While we recognize the force of the arguments in sup *95

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 643, 81 Conn. 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-taylor-conn-1908.