Woodbury v. Schofield

292 P. 802, 131 Kan. 432, 1930 Kan. LEXIS 345
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 8, 1930
DocketNo. 29,119
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 292 P. 802 (Woodbury v. Schofield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodbury v. Schofield, 292 P. 802, 131 Kan. 432, 1930 Kan. LEXIS 345 (kan 1930).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Harvey, J.:

This is an appeal by an executor from an order of the probate court, which was affirmed, with a modification not now important, by the district court on appeal, requiring the executor to pay over to his successor a sum representing the money or value of certain property which was, or should have been, in his hands as executor. The legal question presented is whether there is evidence sufficient to sustain the judgment and order of the court below based upon the lack of good faith of the executor in handling the funds of the estate.

The appeal questions the judgment of the lower court on two items only. As showing the items appealed from, the record may be stated thus: Mary Ann Shintaffer, a resident of Brown county, died May 4, 1927, leaving a will. The terms of the will are not in controversy and need not be stated. F. C. Woodbury was appointed executor of her estate. At the time of his appointment, and for several years prior thereto, F. C. Woodbury was the president and an active managing officer of the Citizens State Bank of Sabetha. He filed an inventory showing that there had come into his hands as such executor five time certificates of deposit which had been issued by the Citizens State Bank of Sabetha to the testatrix [433]*433amounting, in the aggregate, to $5,650, and three promissory notes payable to .the testatrix — the R. R. Spring note for $500, the F. M. McMahan note for $1,000, and the Will Bestwick note for $1,000, and as “due the - said estate from the J. K. Shintaffer estate, $1,443.56.” J. K. Shintaffer was the husband of the testatrix. His death had preceded hers and his estate was about to be closed. The Citizens State Bank of Sabetha closed its doors March 21, 1928, and for several months thereafter F. C. Woodbury was absent. On July 17, 1928, the probate court made an order removing F. C. Woodbury as executor of the estate and appointing E. W. Schofield as administrator with the will annexed, and directing the executor, F. C. Woodbury, to file his final account. On December 5, 1928, F. C. Woodbury filed his final account, in which he charged himself with cash received on the five time certificates of deposit, with some interest received on each, and on two of the notes, and took credit for disbursements made, and showing a balance,of cash in his hands of $4,975.55. His final account also reported the three promissory notes as being on hand. It did not show the receipt by him of $1,443.56 from the J. K. Shintaffer estate, which a receipt in that estate showed had been paid to him. The probate court examined the final account, found the same to be unsatisfactory and, after a hearing, ordered the executor to pay to the administrator the $4,-975.55 shown to be in his hands as cash, and the further sum of $1,443.56 which he had collected from the estate of J. K. Shintaffer, and the further sum of $2,500 with interest, representing the amount of the .three promissory notes. From this order the executor appealed to the district court, where a hearing was had before the court. At this hearing the executor tendered to the administrator the three promissory notes. The administrator accepted the R. R. Spring note and the F. M. McMahan note, but declined to accept the Will Bestwick note. The hearing in the district court developed that the executor had opened an account in the Citizens State Bank of Sabetha in the name of F. C. Woodbury, executor of the Shintaffer estate, in which had been deposited the amount of the time certificates of deposit, interest items received, and a small balance in the account of Mary Ann Shintaffer at the time of her death, and that this account had been drawn upon so that at the time of the failure of the bank, March 21, 1928, there was a balance in the account to the credit of said executor of $2,116.07. After hearing the evidence the district court made an order and judgment that the [434]*434executor pay over to the administrator $4,975.55, balance cash on hand as shown by his final account, the $1,443.56 which he had received from the J. K. Shintaffer estate, and $1,000, the face value of the Will Bestwick note, with interest. From this order and judgment the executor has appealed.

In this court the appellant acquiesces in the judgment of the district court in so far as it relates to the item of $1,443.56, which he had collected from the J. K. Shintaffer estate, and in $2,859.48 of the balance of cash on hand as shown by his final account, and presents for review only that part of the judgment ordering him to pay the $2,116.07 shown by the books of the Citizens State Bank of Sabetha to be on deposit to his credit at the time the bank failed, and the $1,000 face value and interest of the Will Bestwick note. As to these items appellant contends that he could be charged with them and required to pay them in cash only in the event the evidence disclosed he handled those items in such a way that he could be charged with bad faith and so as to result in a loss to the estate, and contends that the evidence does not support a judgment based on such lack of good faith.

There is no serious controversy over the basic principle of law applicable to the case, which- may be stated thus: An executor is not an insurer of moneys and properties of an estate which come into his possession, but with respect to such property he is a trastee, not only for the benefit of the creditors of the estate, but of heirs, devisees, or legatees. As such trustee he is bound to use, as some of the authorities state, the utmost good faith. Others state he is bound to use ordinary care, but when used in that sense it means the ordinary care of a prudent, conscientious man who receives property in that position of trust. He can deposit money which comes into his hands, and should do so, and if he uses good care in the selection of the depository the fact that it failed will not render him liable; but if he places the money on deposit in a depository which he knows, or has good reason to believe, is unsound and in a failing financial condition, and leaves it there until the institution fails, he is liable. He has no authority to use the money for his own financial needs or to bolster the failing financial condition of a bank or other institution with which he is connected. He should use due care in collecting moneys due the estate, and should account for those collected. (24 C. J. 123; 11 R. C. L. 133, 134; Calnan v. Savidge, 68 Kan. 620, 75 Pac. 1010; Bank v. Grisham, 105 Kan. 460, 185 Pac. 54; Alumbaugh v. Hedges, 125 Kan. 449, [435]*435453, 265 Pac. 50; Beck v. Wacker, 127 Kan. 9, 272 Pac. 175, and cases cited in support of these authorities.)

The evidence discloses that for perhaps a year before the bank failed its president, F. C. Woodbury, knew that the bank had $75,000 to $100,000 “frozen assets,” consisting, in part at least, of notes secured by second mortgages on real estate, with the market value of real estate constantly declining. The bank examiners had made requirements with a view of improving the financial condition of the bank, only a part of which the officers of the bank had been able to comply with. They had made special trips to the bank commissioner’s office at Topeka with respect to those requirements. F. C. Woodbury had personally made two such trips. The embarrassed condition of the bank became known to some of its patrons, resulting in the withdrawal of some deposits. In about three weeks before the bank closed about $75,000 in deposits had been withdrawn. ' Soon after F. C.

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Bluebook (online)
292 P. 802, 131 Kan. 432, 1930 Kan. LEXIS 345, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodbury-v-schofield-kan-1930.