87 N.J. Eq. 504 | New York Court of Chancery | 1917
This bill is for an account and was referred to a master, whose report has been excepted to in the particulars- hereafter mentioned.
Amos Clark died October 30th, 1912, at the age of eighty-two, in Boston, where, in the latter years of his life, he made his home. He had large real estate holdings in Elizabeth and Union county, and some in Tarrytown, New York. His son, William A. Clark, had the sole and exclusive management and control of his property, attending to the collection of rents, and negotiating • sales of the realty, and handled his financial affairs.generally. William A. Clark died -a year after his father, and this bill was filed against his executors by his father’s executors, for an accounting. The master was directed to take an accounting for the period of six years next preceding the death of Amos Clark, and he has reported that during this time
The first and second exceptions are to two items of charges of $1,000 respectively. These sums were part consideration price of the sales of two tracts of land: one to William C. Hau-' gaard, the other to -the Murray Hill Heights Company. " The single ground of objection is that the moneys were not traced into the hands of the agent and therefore the proofs fall short of the legal requirement. No such duty is imposed upon the complainants. The transfers-and amounts are admitted, and as the son negotiated the sales exclusively, which is also conceded, the inference is inevitable that he collected the-proceeds. Moreover, the evidence satisfactorily establishes the charges and sustains the master’s findings.
.The third exception relates to a charge of $4,556.21 the proceeds of a bond and mortgage made to Amos Clark by Dorothy Miller. That William A. Clark cashed this mortgage is not disputed. . The contention is that it was his property by gift from his father. The mortgage was assigned by. Anios Clark to William A. Clark on March 28th, 1910, and by the latter hypothecated with-the Plainfield Trust Company for a personal loan-of $3,500, three days later, and afterwards assigned to the Fidelity Trust Company. One thousand dollars was paid on account of the loan out of trust funds, and the balance liquidated by the -assignee; the surplus being deposited by William A. Clark in his trust account. Letters by Amos Clark to his son, and found in the latter’s possession, written at the time the mortgage was assigned, concerning the purpose of the assignment, and others of much later dates, inquiring as to the interest and the disposition, if any, made of the mortgage, and the application by William A., -Clark of part of the proceeds to the credit of the trust estate, evinces beyond peradventure that the assignment from the father to the son was made for con
There is another reason for sustaining the charge. There is no proof to establish the alleged gift. The written assignment alone—and this is all the defendants rely upon—is not sufficient. The rule is that “In all transactions between persons occupying relations, whether legal, natural or conventional in their origin, in which confidence is naturally inspired, is presumed, or in fact reasonably exists, the burden of proof is thrown upon the person in whom the confidence is reposed and who has acquired an advantage, to show affirmatively, not only that no deception was practiced therein, no undue influence used, and that all was fair, open and voluntary, but that it was well understood.” Hall v. Otterson, 52 N. J. Eq. 522; Parker v. Parker, 45 N. J. Eq. 224; Corrigan v. Pironi, 48 N. J. Eq. 607; Coffey v. Sullivan, 63 N. J. Eq. 296.
The fourth exception is to a charge of $17,500, the proceeds of the sale to Thomas A. Sperry of a tract of land of thirty-six and. fifty-four hundredths acres, and of “the grist mill lot and the lot of forty-five hundredths acres” adjacent. The tract of thirty-six and fift3r-four hundredths acres was conveyed by Amos Clark to his son on May 29th, 1907, for a consideration of one dollar. The title to the grist mill lot and the one adjoining was also at one time in Amos Claik. The history of these lands is fully set forth in the evidence and the master’s report, and it is only necessary to remark that it satisfactorily appears that they at all times belonged to Amos Clark, and that in his dealings with them William A. Clark recognized and acknowledged the beneficial ownership of his father.
The grist mill lot and the fort3r-five hundredths acre lot formed an inconsequential part of the sale to Sperry, and was not adverted to in the argument, except to reflect William A. Clark’s ownership of the larger tract conveyed to him by his father. It is not pretended that any consideration was paid for this latter conveyance, but the contention is that as the deed is absolute
Fifth exception: The master allowed $15,000 commissions for services, at the rate of $2,500 a year, to which both complainants and defendants except, the former contending that none should have been allowed, or at the most $2,000 j5er annum, while the defendants claim that the services were reasonably worth $5,000 a year.
There is no evidence of an express contract to remunerate. The declaration of William A. Clark that his father was paying him $2,000 a year, is not competent to prove an agreement, although it might be considered in limiting the amount of compensation.
The character of the services and the circumstances under which they were rendered, were such as to imply a promise to pay for them. Although they were performed by the son for the father, they were not rendered as members of the same household in the usual family relationship, and no countervailing presumption arises that they were discharged gratuitously. Disbrow v. Durand, 54 N. J. Law 343.
Compensation, however, is allowed only when the servant has faithfully performed his duty. Here, the son was guilty of most flagrant abuses of his trust. He kept no accounts; mingled the funds with his‘own; from time to time appropriated them to his own use and finished with a defalcation of ove? $71,000. This deficiency covers a period of six years only, and- how much more of the estate was absorbed before and from the time the trust began, can only be conjectured. I am unable to comprehend upon wliat-theory, with principle and authority against
Sixth exception: The master reported that the interest upon the amount of the defalcation be computed at the rate of four per cent, from the death of Amos Clark. There is no room
The defendants’ exceptions will be overruled, and the complainants’ exceptions sustained, with’ costs. The master’s report will be confirmed, except as .to the compensation and interest, and as to these it will be corrected, and a decree advised accordingly.