Court Opinion

ID: 5462287
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:40:10.916471+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:56.505604
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Potter, J.
Letters testamentary may be, and should be, granted by the surrogate at any time after the will shall be proved, to the person or persons named in the will as executors, unless an affidavit is made and filed by the widow, .legatee, next of kin, or creditor of the *59testator, setting forth that such person intends to file objections against the granting of such letters, and stating that he is advised and believes that there are just and substantial objections to the granting of such letters to the persons named as such in the will. When such an affidavit is filed, then the duty of the surrogate is prescribed. In this case, no such proceeding was had; no such affidavit was filed. The duty of the surrogate was plain ; he pursued it and issued the letters. There are certain objections at law, which, if they exist when the will is proved, the surrogate will, as it will be his duty to do, refuse to grant letters testamentary, on the ground of incompetency of the person named, and will issue letters of administration with the will annexed. The statute defines these objections of incompetence to persons as follows:
“ 1st. Incapable in law of making contracts, (except married women.) 2d. Under the age of twenty-one years. 3d. An alien, not being an inhabitant of this State. 4th. Who shall have been convicted of an infamous crime. 5th. Who, upon due proof, shall be adj udged incompetent by the surrogate to execute the duties of such trust, by reason of drunkenness, improvidence, or want of under- . standing.” (2 R. S. 69, § 3.)
We are to assume, then, that none of these reasons, not even that of improvidence, existed against the defendant at the time of proving the will and the issuing of letters testamentary. If after such letters have been granted by the surrogate, such executor becomes incompetent by law, for any of the aforesaid reasons, or that the circumstances of such executor are so precarious as not to afford adequate security for the administration of the said estate, it is the duty of the surrogate to inquire into the complaint. (2 R. S. 72, § 18.)
This precarious condition of the executor is the basis *60upon which the plaintiff moves in this case, and it is'this question of precariousness which the surrogate was called upon to decide. • It was not incompetence no such charge was made. There was no charge of improvidence accruing since the issuing of the letters; no proof of indiscretion in the management of the estate; no want of exercise of a reasonable judgment; no dishonesty, not even insolv- 11 ency; she had made no attempt to dispose of .the estate, | or expressed an intent tó do so. What, then, is this pre- 1 cariousness upon which this proceeding is based ? It- was ; not even her poverty. She had a reasonable support for \ life in the property itself. Though bankruptcy might fur-. nish a reason, poverty does not. The. trust of this estate : was committed to her; of that, a part of which had once been her own, and intrusted by one who, better than any other, knew her integrity and her capacity, and who had declared her to be an excellent manager; who had helped him to acquire the estate; and in whom he had perfect confidence. If the mere chance that property committed to a trustee might be lost, would render his circumstances precarious, there is not an executor occupying that place that could not be removed. The experience of the world, if appealed to, would demonstrate the truth, that it is not those who have most means in possession that are found to be the safest and best trustees. They are more generally, and doubtless more appropriately, selected from those possessing integrity of character, habits of economy and industry, and having moderate estates, acquired by honest industry. Such - persohs, it may be said, are in circumstances less precarious than many who possess far greater wealth. The selection of a trustee is the indication of the highest degree of personal confidence; and character, rather than pecuniary responsibility, controls the selection. It would be arbitrary, as well as unjust, for a court to adjudge that a person of sufficient capacity *61to maké a will, had not sufficient to select a trustee to manage his estate as executor.
If such were the views of the surrogate in this ease, in the absence of all adjudication upon, or judicial construction of the meaning and intent of the term precarious, as employed in this statute, then his decision has a basis of good sense to support it. Statutes must have reasonable construction. A construction that would give to the term precarious, as used in this statute, the literal construction contended for, would be impracticable and mischievous. Webster illustrates the meaning of “ precarious” by a quotation from Eogers, who says: “ Temporal prosperity is precarious.” This applies to the case of every, trustee. With this illustration for a true definition of this term, the circumstances of every executor are precarious, and he can be removed for that reason. I think in every case, when such a complaint is made, it must depend upon its own peculiar features and circumstances; of which the surrogate .is the appropriate judge. It seems to me that the circumstances of an executor are precarious only, within the meaning and intent of the statute, when his conduct and character present such evidence of improvidence or recklessness in the management of the trust estate, or of his own, as in the opinion of prudent and discreet men, endangers its security. There is, it seems to me, no such evidence in this case; nor, in my opinion, is there any evidence that renders the circumstances of the defendant, as executrix, precarious within the meaning and intent of this statute. It was a remark of Lord Hardwicke, “that a trust is an office necessary in the concerns of life, between man and man, and which, if faithfully discharged, is attended with no small degree of trouble and anxiety, and it is an act of great kindness in any one to accept it. If there is no mala fides—nothing willful in the conduct of the trustee—the court should regard all his acts with a favorable eye.”
*62[Third Department, General Term, at Elmira,
September 6, 1870.
I have not found in the decision of the surrogate any error that demands the reversal of the judgment. It should be affirmed, with costs.
Judgment affirmed.
Miller, P. J., and Potter and Parker, Justices.]