Opinion
December Term, 1857
James C. Smith, for the appellant.
John H. Reynolds, for the respondent.
The question in this case is conceded by the parties to depend upon the construction of the sealed instrument, dated Oct. 9, 1839, and executed by John Hillman and Jesse Anthony. The respondents insist that it operated as an assignment of all the right of John Hillman, by virtue of his marriage with the widow of James Wallace, to the property of Wallace, which she had as widow and as heir of one of his children. This construction cannot be sustained. The agreement was made with Anthony, the administrator of the estate of Wallace, who is called in the beginning of the paper his executor. It, however, contains no agreement by him, in terms, as representing the estate; nor had he, in his representative capacity, any authority to enter into the engagement which he, by its terms, assumed to make. The interest of Hillman, by virtue of his marriage, in both the real and personal estate, was a legal interest in him. In that share the children of Wallace had no interest, legal or equitable, and therefore they could have no right to complain of any agreement which the administrator and Hillman chose to enter into in respect to it. There can, therefore, be no presumption or intendment that any part of it was to be or to enure for their benefit, except in so far as the agreement itself expresses. Anthony personally engages to pay to Hillman $200 a year in consideration of Hillman's part of the rents, issues and profits arising from the estate of Wallace, so long as Hillman should board, lodge, wash for and give attention to Wallace's surviving children. Hillman was not legally bound to support these children of his wife by her former marriage, nor does he seem to have been desirous to take his wife's share of the property, but only to secure himself against being put to the expense of their support in case they lived with him. He, therefore, transferred his rights to Anthony, taking his engagement to pay $200 a year, and probably relying on his integrity to make a just disposition of the moneys which should come to his hands when the children should be of sufficient age to protect Anthony against the expense which he might incur by the payments he agreed to make. This reliance seems to have been well founded; for, when Anthony stated his account with Levi C. Hillman, representing the children and Mr. and Mrs. Hillman, Anthony did not claim to retain any part of the proceeds as his own, but paid over the unexpended balance. In this balance the children acquired no new rights by the agreement.
The Supreme Court and surrogate having erred in this particular, their judgment and decree should be reversed.
DENIO, Ch. J., SELDEN, BROWN, PAIGE and SHANKLAND, Js., concurred in this opinion. COMSTOCK, J., did not sit in the case.
Hillman, by his marriage, which took place in 1838, became the owner of his wife's interest in personal estate of her former husband, or at least it became his when reduced to possession. He had the right to reduce it to possession at any time, and to assign; sell and dispose of it before it was reduced to possession; and her share of the rents and profits of the real estate became his absolutely. The contract between him and the administrator, if it did not operate as a transfer of his wife's share of the personal estate to the appellant's ward and her brother, in whose behalf the administrator acted in making the contract, was an acknowledgment, on his part, that he had received such share in full, and was evidence before the surrogate that such was the fact. So far as related to the rents and profits of the real estate, the contract operated as a release of his interest therein, and as the administrator, in making the contract, assumed to act in behalf of the appellant's ward and her brother, who were then infants; the release enured to their benefit.
It is true that the administrator, as such, had no authority to interfere with the real estate left by his intestate, or with the rents and profits thereof, or to bind the infant children of the intestate by any contract relative to their shares of the personal estate; but he undertook to contract in relation thereto, and bound himself personally. Hillman, the other contracting party, therefore was bound; and as the terms of the contract had been complied with, by the parties thereto, to the time the appellant was appointed guardian, the latter then had no right to disaffirm it when such disaffirmance was detrimental to the interests of his ward. That it was thus detrimental must have been perfectly apparent to the appellant at the time he paid to Mrs. Hillman or accounted to her for the whole amount he had received from the administrator, when by the terms of the contract the whole belonged to his ward and her brother, except, perhaps, that part thereof which Mrs. Hillman, or her husband in her right, was entitled to as heir and next of kin of her deceased daughter; that the appellant was then aware of the existence of the contract is not questioned. But the husband of the appellant's ward was present when the appellant accounted to and settled with Mrs. Hillman for the funds received of the administrator, and assented to such settlement; and it is contended that he and his wife are therefore bound thereby, or at least are estopped from calling in question its correctness. The only question at issue on that settlement was, whether the appellant had accounted for all the funds received by him of the administrator, it being assumed that the whole, be it more or less, belonged to Mrs. Hillman. The rights and interests of the respondents were not in question. Neither of the respondents was a party to the settlement, and therefore neither is bound by it; and as the appellant and Mrs. Hillman had, at least, the same knowledge of the rights of the respondents as the latter had, and as the settlement was not in the least influenced by any act or declaration of either of the respondents, there is no estoppel in the case.
I think the surrogate was right in charging the appellant with two-ninths of the amount received of the administrator.
The only other point made by the appellant on the argument was, that the surrogate erred in charging him personally with the costs of the proceedings on the settlement. The costs were in the discretion of the surrogate; and as the appellant did not in his account charge himself with any part of the moneys received by him of Anthony, the administrator, which rendered it necessary for the respondents to produce the requisite evidence to charge him, the surrogate was right in charging him with the costs of the proceedings, at least there was no abuse of discretion in doing so.
I think that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs, and the proceedings remitted.
Judgment of the Supreme Court and of the surrogate reversed; account to be restated, costs to abide event.