121 N.J. Eq. 35 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1936
The first problem is whether the trust in which complainants assert an interest has been effectively annulled.
By indenture dated May 26th, 1920, Erasmus Freeman transferred to Henrietta, his wife, and Alfred, his son, $5,000 in trust. The life beneficiary of the trust was James F. Clark, a grandson of the donor, with remainder to the issue of James. James F. Clark, who was fourteen years old when the trust was created, married shortly after coming of age and has two children, Florence, born in 1930, and Elizabeth, born the next year. James and the two infants sue for an accounting.
The trust indenture declared that it should be lawful for the grantor and his wife, by writing "to be by them jointly, or their survivor, sealed and delivered," to annul or alter all or any of the uses set forth in the indenture or to appoint new or other uses. In 1924, while Erasmus was still alive, his wife sealed and delivered an instrument whereby she declared that she terminated the trust and directed the fund to be paid over to trustees of a certain other trust which had been created by Erasmus Freeman in 1917.
The instrument executed by Mrs. Freeman in 1924 is said by defendants to have terminated complainants' interest in the trust fund. Obviously, this cannot be so in the absence of some other factor, inasmuch as it was made in the lifetime of Erasmus Freeman and he did not join therein, although the power of revocation ran to Erasmus and his wife jointly and to their survivor. A gift in trust inter vivos is irrevocable unless the power to revoke is reserved. Gulick v. Gulick,
Defendants support the attempted termination of the trust by another instrument dated December 31st, 1921, executed by Erasmus Freeman, whereby he renounced and declined to exercise any powers reserved to him in the deed of 1920. Defendants contend that after this renunciation by Erasmus and even during his lifetime, his wife was the "survivor" within the meaning of the power and hence that her revocation of the trust was effective. A survivor is one who outlives another person or lives beyond some happening, as one who survives a flood. By the survivor of two persons is ordinarily meant the one who lives after the other has died. Supp v. Second National Bank and Trust Co.,
Counsel have assumed that Erasmus Freeman's renunciation prevented him from thereafter exercising in conjunction with his wife, the power in question. I do not so understand the law. The power was based on a special confidence, not annexed to an office or engrafted on an estate held by the donees of the power. A person entrusted with such a power cannot extinguish it, but may exercise it notwithstanding his covenant to the contrary.Norris v. Thomson's Executors,
The next question is whether complainants are barred by the statute of limitations or by laches. Two of the complainants are infants, expressly excepted from the operation of the statute, and not chargeable with laches. Comp. Stat. p. 3614 § 4; Scheel
v. Jacobson,
Meanwhile, the property which had once been held in trust for James was being administered by Mrs. Freeman and Alfred as an integral part of the trust of 1917. In 1931, Alfred resigned as trustee and his sister, Mrs. Lees, was appointed in his stead. But he was reappointed in 1934. Mrs. Freeman died January 30th, 1935. The defendants are Alfred, Mrs. Lees, and the executors of Mrs. Freeman's will.
"The effect of delay in the assertion of rights in a court of equity is not only peculiarly interwoven with and dependent upon the special circumstances surrounding the individual case, but is also measurably dependent upon the nature of the primary right asserted, and also upon the nature of the relief sought. * * * Where the substantive right asserted is the enforcement by acestui que trust of an express and subsisting trust, neither lapse of time nor the statute of limitations will ordinarily be allowed to defeat the relief sought." Cox v. Brown,
In Kane v. Bloodgood, Chancellor Kent intimated that the statute of limitations applying to actions of debt and account should, by analogy, bar equitable relief to a cestui que trust
six years after the trustee's possession had become adverse. I find no New Jersey case which has adopted this rule, althoughKane v. Bloodgood has been often cited. Our decisions, instead of following the statute in cases of express trusts which are cognizable and enforceable only in equity, deal with delay from the standpoint of laches. Smith v. Drake,
The defendants plead certain provisions of the 1917 deed intended to limit the rights of beneficiaries under that trust. These provisions do not bind complainants, inasmuch as they are not beneficiaries or parties to the trust deed. They have no concern with that trust except they discover in the hands of the trustees property which does not rightly belong in the fund but does belong to the trustees under the deed of 1920.
I will advise a decree for an accounting. *40