| Mass. | Jul 11, 1907

Hammond, J.

One of the questions is whether Berry as trustee under the will of Francis W. Sayles had power to sell and assign these mortgages. The decision of this question rests of course upon the terms of the will as modified by any action of the Probate Court. The will after making several bequests provided that the residue of the estate should go to certain persons “ to the uses, and upon and for the trusts, intents, and purposes, and with and subject to the powers and provisions hereinafter mentioned and expressed of or concerning the same; —That is to say, — Upon trust that they the said trustees do and shall stand and be possessed of one third part of said rest and residue in trust for the use and benefit of my wife, the said Jane, and that they do and shall pay all the net income and produce of the same to the said Jane, or otherwise authorize and empower her to receive and take the said income and produce for her own use during her life; the said principal sum to go at her decease to such person or persons at such time or times and for such estates therein as the said Jane shall, by her last will and testament, . . . direct and appoint; and on default of such direction, the said principal sum to go to the legal heirs of the said Jane.” The provisions as to the remaining two thirds of the trust fund, so far as material to the subject of the present inquiry, are substantially the same.

It will be noticed that there is no power expressly given to the trustees to sell any part of the trust property real or personal, or to change investments. The trustees are empowered simply to “ stand possessed ” of the trust fund as left by the testator, and to “pay over the income and produce ” to the beneficiaries until the time shall come for the termination of the trust and the distribution of the principal of the trust fund. This is not an express power to change investments during the life of the beneficiaries "for life.

And we are of opinion that there is no implied power to sell • any of the trust property until the time comes for the termina*219tian of the trust. This is not a case where a part of the trust fund consists of perishable personal property, nor where, as in the case of an executor or administrator, the duty may be to reduce the assets to cash for the payment of debts and legacies or for distribution among the heirs; nor where the trustee is instructed to keep the property safely invested. On the contrary, as stated above, the trustee is to stand possessed and to pay over the income. This he can do without changing investments. In view of the singularly bare language of the will upon this point, we think that the question of changing investments is not left to the trustees, but to the Probate Court.

It is contended however by the defendants that even if this be so, yet the power to sell these mortgages was given by the Probate Court. Upon this point the record recites that “the trust estate which came into the possession of Berry as trustee under the will of Sayles consisted wholly of personal property invested in certain stocks and promissory notes secured by mortgages of real estate,” and that “Berry-as trustee sold and converted into money certain shares of stocks, having obtained permission of the Probate Court to sell the same for reinvestment ; and he afterwards invested a part of the proceeds thereof in the” mortgages in question. No copy of the decree is before us, but it is stated in the brief of the defendants, and we assume the statement to be correct, that no restriction was expressly imposed by the Probate Court. Under these circumstances it is argued by the defendants that, inasmuch as no particular form or description of investment was prescribed by the Probate Court, this matter was left entirely to the discretion of the trustee, that the decree was not exhausted by making one investment of the proceeds but that the trustee could thereafterwards change the investment of the whole or part of those proceeds without further application to the court. We do not think that this is the legal effect of the decree. The trustee held under the will. By its terms he had no power to sell. He desired to change an investment, — that is, to sell something he had and to buy something he had not. This the Probate Court permitted him to do, and so far and for that purpose authorized him to act. It is true that in considering what to buy as a substitute for what he had, he could exercise proper discretion, but when he once had made *220the change he had exhausted the power granted by the decree, and held the new security upon the terms by which prior to the decree he had held the old, — namely under the terms of the will. This interpretation of the decree gives ample scope for its action for the purpose for which it was needed, and leaves the trust estate where the language of the will places it.

Under that decree Berry sold a part of the stocks held by him as trustee and invested some of the proceeds in these two mortgages, and they became a part of the trust estate under the Sayles will. Having made the change he had to that extent exhausted the decree, and he held the mortgages under the terms of the will.

It follows that he had not the power to sell, and that, even if the defendants bought in good faith, their title must be regarded as subject to the same trust as before the attempted transfer of the legal estate to them.

1Decree for the plaintiff.

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