Opinion
Docket No. 87101.
Decided December 1, 1986.
Goldstein, Serlin, Eserow Steinway, P.C. (by Stewart Goldstein and Barry M. Rosenbaum), for petitioner.
Cross, Wrock, Miller Vieson (by James W. Metz), for respondent.
Petitioners appeal as of right from a probate court's order denying their petition to void two leases. The instant action deals with whether the petitioners, as personal representatives of the estate of Helen Ellison, had the authority to enter into leases of real estate devised in the will. Petitioners are now attempting to have these leases voided.
First, petitioners argue that the will did not empower them to lease the property but only bestowed the power to mortgage and sell. Petitioners contend that the power to mortgage and sell does not include the power to lease. We disagree. Petitioners are relying upon Parkhurst v. Trumbull, 130 Mich. 408; 90 N.W. 25 (1902), which refused to permit an executor to mortgage property he was empowered to sell. Parkhurst, however, is distinguishable because the court therein was concerned with keeping the property free from encumbrances.
Furthermore, we find that the executors acted within their sphere of authority. The relevant portion of the will stated:
[My personal representatives] shall have full power in their discretion to do any and all things necessary for the complete administration of my estate, including the power to operate the business, to mortgage and/or sell at public or private sales, and without Order of the Court, any real or personal property belonging to my estate and to compound, compromise or otherwise to settle or adjust any and all claims, charges, debts and demands whatsoever against or in favor of my estate as fully as I could do so if living.
We find that this clause of the will granted the executors sufficient authority to lease the property. We do not find the probate court's judgment to be erroneous. In re Wojan Estate, 126 Mich. App. 50; 337 N.W.2d 308 (1983), lv den 418 Mich. 873 (1983). Additionally, we note that petitioners herein are also the persons who eventually inherited. In such a case we find it difficult to perceive how any harm could come from their actions.
As petitioners' other arguments are based on the assumption that the will does not empower the administrators with the proper authority, we need not address these issues.
Accordingly, we affirm the probate court's decision.
Affirmed.
I concur in the result reached by the majority. I am not prepared to say that, in all cases where a will contains a grant of authority to the fiduciary to mortgage or sell, that grant inherently includes a power to lease. In this case, the will empowers the fiduciaries "to do any and all things necessary for the complete administration" of the estate. After this broad grant of authority, the will states that the grant includes the power to operate the business and mortgage or sell real property. Given the sentence structure and the use of the word "including," I conclude that the decedent intended the enumerated powers to be illustrations of the fiduciaries' powers rather than limitations thereon.