264 A.D. 429 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1942
In this action to settle the accounts of the respondents, as trustees, the adult defendants, who are children and grandchildren of Mary E. Cannon, the settlor of the trust, interposed no objections, while the guardian ad litem appointed to represent the infant defendants, who are the grandchildren and great-grandchildren of the settlor, filed a report raising eighteen objections to the settlement of the account as requested by plaintiffs. The trial court disposed of all but two of the objections on the trial of the action in favor of the accounting trustees; and by its decision and judgment overruled the remaining two objections. The facts which underlie the litigated objections are as follows:
In August, 1926, Mary E. Cannon entered into a deed of trust with the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company, of New York city, under which she delivered to the latter, as trustee, certain securities, including 300 shares of the capital stock of the National City Bank of New York, of the par value of $100 per share. The trust agreement authorized the trustee “ to retain, so long as it may seem proper, any securities at any time in its hands ” and directed that the entire net income of the trust fund be paid Mary E. Cannon during her life. There was also reserved to the settlor and life beneficiary the right to amend or revoke the trust in whole or in part at any time during her life. On three occasions between December, 1926, and November, 1928, the trustee, at the request of the settlor, exercised rights to subscribe to additional shares of the National City Bank stock, thereby increasing the number of National City Bank shares in the trust to 3,000 of $20 par value
Upon the affiliation the trustee, along with all other stockholders of the National City Bank, exchanged the bank shares contained in the trust for new stock certificates containing the indorsement of a beneficial interest in the stock of the trustee, and so notified the settlor of the trust. On July 1, 1929, immediately after the completion of the affiliation of the trustee with the National City Bank, the quotation for the bank stock averaged $400 per share, indicating the value of the 3,000 shares held in the trust to be $1,200,000. These shares which were retained in the trust, where they remained at the time of the settlor’s death in May, 1938, had at that time a market value of $18 per share, or a total market value of $54,000.
As stated above, the trial court found that there was no such relationship between the trustee and the National City Bank to warrant the application of the rule of undivided loyalty invoked by the guardian ad litem. To use the language of the court in Meinhard v. Salmon (supra, p. 468), the trial court failed to find “ any nexus of relation between the business conducted by the manager and the opportunity brought to him as an incident of management.” Whether the affiliation was tantamount to a merger of the trustee with the bank, or created a joinder of interests between the two institutions which militated against the performance of the trustee’s fiduciary duties need not be determined, for the affiliation resulted in a situation in which the trustee held as part of the trust assets its own corporate stock. The stock of the National City Bank after the affiliation cannot be considered merely as the stock of that bank. Formally it was the stock of the National City Bank; substantially it was the stock not only of the National City Bank but of the trustee itself. The conflict of interest here arose not from the trustee’s interest in the National City Bank, but from its interest in itself through the stock of the National City Bank. The interest of the trustee in the bank may be negatived by the manner in which the trustee’s stock was held, as may also the interest of the bank in the trustee. It is not necessary to determine the extent of the merger or of the joinder of the interests of the trustee and the bank, nor to inquire whether the interests of the bank were beneficially or adversely affected by anything that affected the interest of the trustee and vice versa. The two institutions might have been entirely separate and apart and yet, because of the manner in which the trustee’s stock was held and evidenced, the trustee placed itself in a position of divided loyalty by retaining the stock of the National City Bank hi the trust. It is no answer to the accusation of divided loyalty on the part of the trustee to say, as the trial court found, that the stock of the trustee was not owned by the bank but by the individuals who were the stock
We believe the rule stated in Matter of Trusteeship of Stone (138 Ohio St. 293; 34 N. E. [2d] 755), concerning the ownership by a corporate trustee of its own stock, to be applicable here. In that case it was said: “ Our studied conclusion, applicable to the instant case, is that a corporate trustee cannot acquire its own shares of stock as an investment, or retain its own shares in a trust, without express authorization by the terms of the instrument bringing the trust into existence, or by provisions of law. Without such authorization, there is disregard for the duty of absolute faithfulness to the trust, because of the conflict which may and does on occasion arise between the personal interests of the trustee on the one hand and the interests of the trust and its beneficiaries on the other.” While we hold that the trustee was guilty of a constructive breach of trust because of its position of divided loyalty in respect to its retention of the National City Bank stock containing a beneficial interest in the stock of the trustee itself, it must also be held on the proof presented that the settlor and life beneficiary of the trust acquiesced in and consented to the trustee’s occupation of such position. In Smith v. Howlett (29 App. Div. 182) it was said: “ Ratification can only occur where the party claimed to have ratified had full knowledge of the facts and of bis legal rights, in case it is sought to apply the doctrine as between trustees and a cestui que trust.” There can be no question but that Mary E. Cannon, the settlor and life beneficiary of the trust, had full knowledge of the facts which constituted a breach of trust on the part of the trustee. The divided loyalty here arose, as above noted, from the one fact that in retaining the National City Bank stock the trustee was also retaining a beneficial interest in its own stock.
Finding of fact No. 37 and conclusion of law No. VIII, in regard to the trustee, City Bank Farmers Trust Company’s interest in the stock of the National City Bank which would be served by withholding or discouraging the sale of the bank stock, and finding of fact No. 39 and conclusion of law No. X, in regard to the divided loyalty or conflict of interest on the part of the trustee, should be reversed and new findings made to the effect that the interest "of the trustee in its own stock, evidenced by the stock certificate of the National City Bank, was such as to place the trustee in a position of divided loyalty constituting a breach of trust as a matter of law; that there was no divided loyalty in fact; and that the settlor and life beneficiary had knowledge of the facts which created the breach of trust and of her right to remedy the same and that she consented to the trustee occupying a position of divided loyalty.
The judgment, in so far as appealed from, and the order should be afiirmed, with costs to all parties filing briefs, payable out of the estate.
Lazansky, P. J., Johnston and Taylor, JJ., concur; Carswell, J., concurs in the result on the findings made and the grounds stated by the trial court.
Judgment, in so far as appealed from, and order unanimously afiirmed, with costs to all parties filing briefs, payable out of the estate.
Findings of fact 37 and 39, and conclusions of law VIII and X are reversed and new findings will be made, as set forth in opinion herein by Close, J.
Settle order on notice. (See 265 App. Div. 863, amdg. decision.)