123 N.E. 135 | NY | 1919
This action was brought by the beneficiary of a trust for an accounting by trustees, and for the preservation of the trust estate.
On July 31, 1903, Cassius M. Carrier, Annie O. Carrier, his wife, and the Fidelity Trust Company of Buffalo, became parties to a written agreement. The agreement recites the desire of the parties of the first and second parts "to provide against the contingencies of business, and to provide further for the welfare of their two daughters," Olive, then of the age of twenty-three years, and Frances, then of the age of five. It recites the readiness of Mr. Carrier, the party of the first part, "to create a fund for that purpose," and his desire "to retain a power of investment and management of the fund so erected as long as he shall live." It recites his ownership of the residence 789 West Ferry street, Buffalo, "occupied by himself and his family as a home." Following these recitals, a transfer is made to the trust company of four promissory notes, amounting in the aggregate to $155,000, then held by the creator of the trust. A transfer is also made of the family residence. The house "shall continue to be used as a home for the family precisely as if the conveyance thereof had not been made." No sale is to be permitted unless the parties of the first and second parts shall jointly direct. The proceeds are to be used either in the purchase of a new home, or to be added to the general fund. The fund itself "shall at all times be managed and controlled by the party of the first part. He shall attend to the *119 collection of the notes," and "the same having been converted into money, he shall attend to the investment thereof, and in the matter of investment his discretion shall be absolute and uncontrolled." He shall not be limited by the "rules governing investments by executors or trustees, and the trustee shall follow his directions with regard to investments without question or demur." In case the income falls below six per cent of the principal, he undertakes from his own means to make up the difference.
The fund thus created and managed is to be held upon the following trusts: The income "is to be used for the maintenance of the family which consists of the parties of the first and second parts and their two daughters, and out of the income the expenses of maintaining the family establishment are to be defrayed." On the death of the party of the first part, the income is to be paid to the use of the party of the second part for her support and the support of the two daughters. After both parents are dead, the fund is to be divided into two parts, one for the benefit of each daughter. The principal is to be paid to each daughter as she attains the age of thirty-five. In the event of her death before that age, it is to go to her issue. If there are no issue, it is to go to the other daughter or to the issue of the other; and if there are none of these, to the heirs of the party of the first part. If both daughters die before the party of the first part, he shall have a power of appointment, and after the death of the party of the second part, the money shall then be distributed as he shall direct. The party of the third part, the trust company, "shall not be responsible to anybody or in any manner for the execution of the trust," except for the safe preservation of any money or securities in its hands, until the death of the party of the first part. On his death, "it shall assume active management of the trust," but in making any investments it shall follow the directions of the party *120 of the second part. "After the death of both the parties of the first and second parts, then the party of the third part shall be subject to the ordinary duties of a trustee."
On February 29, 1904, the daughter Olive died. Soon afterwards, Mr. Carrier abandoned his wife, and since then has refused to live with her. The family home was sold in 1905. The proceeds were placed in the trust company, and are still there with the accrued interest. Interest at the rate of six per cent per annum has been paid also upon the four promissory notes. The income thus earned has been in part accumulated and in part devoted to the purposes of the trust. The personal and living expenses of the husband do not exceed $2,000 a year. He has a yearly income of about $4,700 from other sources. The payments made to his wife for the support of herself and her child have ranged from $3,600 to $5,000 a year. A large surplus of income, amounting to about $19,000, has been accumulated. Almost the entire principal of the estate has been reduced to cash. The promissory notes have been collected to the extent of $144,045.39. Only one note, for $10,868.92, is outstanding. The estate is thus in a form in which it may readily be withdrawn from the jurisdiction of the court. Since 1909 the husband has been a resident of Florida. He has substantially no property in New York. He is engaged in highly speculative ventures. In 1912 he made a contract to buy over 128,000 acres of timber land in Florida. The total price was $867,000. Most of it is still unpaid. The profitable development of the land requires the construction of a railroad and other improvements at a cost of about $1,200,000. The finding is that Mr. Carrier "claims that he has the right under said trust agreement to use said trust fund as his own money in paying for said Florida lands, and intends to use all of said trust fund to make said payments if the same is needed for that purpose." The wife is fearful that this use may dissipate the fund. In 1911 *121 she sued her husband in two actions. One was an action for separation. It was tried immediately before this one, and was decided by the same judge. Separation was decreed, and an award of alimony was made for the support of the plaintiff and her child at the rate of $6,000 a year. Payments from the income of the trust were to be credited on the award. The second action is the one before us. The plaintiff alleges that the trust fund is in peril, and likely to be lost to her and her daughter or removed beyond the jurisdiction of the court. The court is asked to preserve it.
Upon these facts the trial court has granted a judgment restricting the powers of the trustees in the administration of the trust. Mr. Carrier and the trust company are enjoined from investing the principal fund or any part of it in securities other than those in which trustees are authorized by law to invest trust funds, unless thirty days' notice of intention to invest in other securities is given to the plaintiff. Upon receipt of such notice the plaintiff may apply to the court for an order restraining the defendants from making any such investment on the ground that the safety of the trust may be imperilled thereby, unless a bond is given by Mr. Carrier with prescribed conditions. Out of the income of the trust the sum of $6,000 is to be paid to the plaintiff for herself and her daughter. The rest of the income is to be paid to the husband for his own use. Limitations are imposed upon his power to borrow the principal. The trust company may loan the principal to him for his life or for a shorter period, but only upon his executing a surety company bond for its return when due, and for the payment of $6,000 of income to the plaintiff annually during her life. On his death the fund is directed to be held in trust for the plaintiff and her daughter, and thereafter it is to be held and distributed as provided in the trust agreement.
An appeal to the Appellate Division followed. That *122 court of its own motion raised the objection that the trusts were void. Upon the trial Mr. Carrier had admitted that they were valid. The Appellate Division found an illegal suspension of the absolute ownership (Personal Prop. Law, sec. 11; Consol. Laws, chap. 41). There was first a trust for the joint lives of husband and wife. Then there were other trusts for the benefit of the daughters with contingent remainders to their issue. The valid and invalid limitations were held to be inseparable. On that ground the judgment was reversed and the complaint dismissed.
At the threshhold stands the question of the validity of the trusts. The grantor no longer concedes that his conveyance is valid. If he did, his concession could not coerce us. The statute limiting the suspension of the absolute ownership is an expression of the public policy of the state (Matter ofWalkerley,
By the judgment of the trial court a trustee has been in effect commanded to do what the statute says he shall not do. There was, of course, no such purpose, but this does not change the effect. The limitations of the trust deed have been restated. The court has instructed the trustee to follow them in his disposition of the property. It has not merely held aloof, and permitted the trusts to stand. It has given active aid in confirming and enforcing them. No consent of the parties can charge a court with such a duty (Matter of Walkerley,
We agree with the Appellate Division that the trusts *124
for the two daughters after the death of father and mother involve an illegal suspension of the absolute ownership for more than two lives in being. We do not concur, however, in the conclusion that the deed of trust is, therefore, void in its entirety. We think there is no reason why these ultimate trusts may not be rejected, and the primary trusts retained (Kalish v.Kalish,
The plaintiff comes before the court, then, as the beneficiary of a valid trust. The question remains whether good cause has been shown for curbing the powers of her trustee. When we speak of her trustee, we mean her husband, for the duties of the trust company are merely formal. The Supreme Court has jurisdiction "to remove a trustee who has violated or threatens to violate his trust, or who is insolvent, or whose insolvency is apprehended, or who for any other cause shall be deemed to be an unsuitable
person to execute the trust" (Real Prop. Law, sec. 112, subd. 2; Consol. Laws, chap. 50). "This gives a broad power to the court, and leaves the question of the removal of the trustee very largely to its discretion" (Wilson v. Wilson,
We cannot say that this combination of circumstances *127 did not call for some preventive measures. The question is not whether the husband was a suitable trustee at the beginning. The question is whether, by reason of changed conditions, he is suitable to-day. Some persons might conclude that no one more unsuitable could readily be found. He had not emancipated himself from removal for incapacity or unfitness because, in addition to being a trustee, he was also the creator of the trust. Some measures of protection were, therefore, proper. Those that the court adopted are not unreasonable. The trustee is required to give notice to the beneficiary if he puts the money in investments not commonly permitted to trustees. The only effect of notice is to give the beneficiary the opportunity to protect herself if she finds that waste is imminent. The judgment does not say that she shall be entitled to an injunction as of course. She is to have the opportunity to apply for one. The court that hears the application will determine the gravity of the peril. Even then, the trustee may do as he pleases if he is willing to give security. Finally, the trustee is prohibited from loaning the principal to himself, except upon the condition that he give security for its return, and for a proper yield of income. He could have been restrained from loaning the money to himself at all. He is not aggrieved because a privilege which might have been withheld altogether is burdened with conditions. He is no longer bound by the covenant that the income shall equal six per cent of the value of the principal. The guarantee is one that there can no longer be an occasion to enforce. His duty to his wife is fulfilled by the payment yearly of $6,000, a sum due, in any event, by reason of the award of alimony. Any surplus income he retains for himself. These are the only restrictions that have been laid upon his powers. We cannot say that in imposing them, discretion has been abused. They will not bear oppressively on one who is acting in good faith. *128
The judgment of the Appellate Division should be reversed, and the judgment of the Special Term should be modified by striking out those provisions regulating or affecting the disposition of the trust fund after the death of the plaintiff and her husband, and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs to the appellants in this court and in the Appellate Division payable out of the estate.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., HOGAN and ANDREWS, JJ., concur; CHASE, COLLIN and CUDDEBACK, JJ., dissent on the ground that the agreement was not divisible and illegally suspended the absolute ownership.
Judgment reversed, etc.