Young v. Wickliffe

37 Ky. 447, 7 Dana 447, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 168
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedDecember 18, 1838
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 37 Ky. 447 (Young v. Wickliffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Wickliffe, 37 Ky. 447, 7 Dana 447, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 168 (Ky. Ct. App. 1838).

Opinion

Chief Justice Robertson

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an action of debt against Philip Love and Bryant T. Young, executors of William Love, deceased, suggesting a devastavit.

Love failed to plead; and Young pleaded plene ad-ministravit, which being traversed by a general replication, a jury sworn to enquire of damages as to Love, and to try the issue formed on Young’s plea, found a general verdict for the debt in the declaration, and also for the interest due thereon, in damages: for which the Court rendered a judgment.

In the revision of the judgment, three questions are - . . presented: first — is the verdict good? second — did the Circuit Judge err in giving instructions to the jury? and, third — did he err in overruling an instruction proposed by Young?

did not authorize the judgment. Two questions are involved in the issue: first — whether Young had legally administered all the assets which had ever come to his First. The verdict is not responsive to the issue, and hands as an executor; and, secondly — if he had not so administered fully, what amount of the assets in his [448]*448hands had he wasted. Fairfax’s Executor vs. Ann Fairfax, 2 Cand. Rep. 178. Such a verdict, which, according to the common law, is necessary on such an issue in an action against an administrator or executor, merely as such, is peculiarly proper in this State, in an action of debt for a devastavit, in which plene administravit may be pleaded in virtue of a statute of 1810. The fact that there has been a waste of assets, does not subject the executor who wasted them to a judgment beyond the amount ascertained to have been misapplied; and therefore, as the judgment is in personam, it is more important to the executor that the amount of waste should be ascertained by the verdict, in an action for a devasta-vit, than in an ordinary suit against him as a fiduciary, in which the judgment, if against him, must be in rem, to be levied of assets in his hands.

Ex’rs are bound to take proper eareofall money and assets of the estate that come to their possession , or over which they exercise any control. An ex’or may be held accountable for money or assets which he has rec’d, tho’ ho intended to re ceive them, not as ex'or, but as agent for a co-ex’or ; and he will not be exonerated from liability, by having passed them over to a co-executor who' has wasted them.— Yet, one ex’or may act as agent for another, as by being clerk of a sale of the tes • tator’s goods; & may even take notes payable to himself and ano • ther as co-ex’rs, without incurring any liability as an ex’or — provided, he has never had an actual pos session or control of any of the assets.

[448]*448If the verdict in this case imports that there had been a waste of assets, it certainly does not imply that an amount equal to the judgment, or any other specific amount, had been wasted. And consequently, as Young was not, upon the issue tried, liable for more than the value of assets which he had wasted, the judgment rendered against him, is not sustained by a sufficient foundation.

Wherefore, the Circuit Judge erred in overruling a motion to arrest the judgment for a fatal defect in the verdict.

Second. An'attempt was made to convict Young of a devastavit, on the ground that, though, after he was qualified as an executor, he had been generally passive; yet he was at the sale of the testator’s effects; acted as clerk; permitted the notes of the purchasers to be made payable to his co-executor and himself jointly, and received from other purchasers some of those notes, and some small sums of money, which he forthwith handed over to Love, who appears to have been the more active, if not the only acting executor; and also, that he bought and received at the sale, a part of the property there sold, at the price of about one hundred and three dollars, and had received from his co-executor [449]*449about one hundred and twenty five dollars, in payment of an open account he had against the testator.

To resist the prima facie effect of most of these facts, Young attempted to prove that he had never acted as executor, and that, on the day of the sale, he, like others who were employed in similar offices, was the mere agent of Love, who controlled the sale, and acted alone as sole executor.

Upon these facts the Court gave to the jury the following instruction: — “That if the jury believe the sale of “property was made in the presence of both executors, “ the money which was paid, was paid to Young, and the “sale notes taken to both the executors, with the “knowlege of Young — he is answerable for the amount “ of the sales. But that, if they believe Young was passive, and did not act, he is not responsible for the “ assets wasted by Love. But if he acted in the busi- “ ness at all, he is liable to the extent of the assets “ which came into his hands; and that, even if he act- “ ed as the agent of Love, being executor, he is liable “ as executor for the amount of assets which came to his “ hands as such.”

This instruction is certainly very ambiguous, and might have deluded the jury. It would be difficult to tell what the Circuit Judge meant in the latter part of the instruction, in which he decided, first — that if Young had acted “ in the business at all,” he was liable “ for the assets which came to his hands;” and, secondly— that “ even if he acted as the agent of Love” he was liable as executor, for the assets which had come to his hands “as suck,” If the Judge intended to say only, that if Young had acted at the sale, as executor, he was liable for the assets sold at that sale, so far the instruction was undoubtedly correct. But such is not the true consistent ¡import of so much of the instrugtion as decided that Young was liable “ if he had acted in the business at all;” which certainly should be understood, (when applied to the facts which had been proved,) as meaning that, if he had acted even as Love’s agent at the sale, he was liable. And the next and last member of the instruction should be understood [450]*450as importing the same idea; for it would have been idle to instruct the jury, that Young, being de jure an executor, was liable for all the assets which came to his hands as such, even if he had only acted as an agent', unless the Court intended thereby that, as he was an executor, his acts as a mere agent of his co-executor, subjected him to responsibility as executor. We must, therefore, thus interpret this part of the instruction. And, so understood, it was not exactly a correct exposition of the law.

-UVoies’taken by an ex’or, upon a sale of property ■of the decedent, • are not assets ; & the mere fact that they were taken by one executor,who passed them over to another, does not make the former liable. Nor will the fact that the notes were made payable to both of ’•two ex’rs, make ■one accountable who did not receive the proceeds — though it may strongly con duce to prove that he acted as ex’or in setting the assets for which the notes were taken; and, if he did so act, he will be ac. countable. Whether he did so act, or not, is a question for a j“7-

[450]*450If, as agent merely, Young had possession, even for an instant, .of any money or other assets,

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Bluebook (online)
37 Ky. 447, 7 Dana 447, 1838 Ky. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-wickliffe-kyctapp-1838.