50 Colo. 217 | Colo. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an equitable action to trace trust funds, which belong- to an estate of which plaintiff is trustee, and which were misappropriated by a former trustee, and to impress a lien therefor upon the assets of an insolvent bankrupt estate which, it is claimed, was thereby augmented. The judgment was against plaintiff, and he has appealed. A brief recital of the story of financial operations disclosed by the record, unusual and interesting, will tend to elucidate the material issues involved. Charles F. Berry, of the city of Boston, was a trustee of a number of estates, including that of Charles E. Haley, aggregating in value several millions of dollars. By one clause of Haley’s will there was bequeathed to his executors, as trustees, of whom Berry was sole successor, the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, to be invested, and the income to' be paid to his daughter. One of the provisions of the same will gave to' the trustee full power to sell real and personal estate, at public or private sale, for cash or
The first item for which a lien is asked is the sum of five thousand dollars, which plaintiff says was paid by Berry as a part of the purchase price of the Kokomo- Mine, under the option held by the
If,' however, the evidence showed that these amounts of money were trust funds belonging to the Haley estate, and that they were misappropriated by Berry, the trustee, they were not the funds- with which Berry acquired- the Kokomo* Mine. This mine
But plaintiff insists that, since Berry afterwards secured another option upon the mine and complied therewith and obtained a deed of it, upon the familiar principle that equity will regard and treat that as done which ought to have been done, he says it is the duty of the court here to- impress upon'this subsequently acquired property, which ultimately passed to Berry’s trustee in bankruptcy, a lien for these previous advances which had been made under an entirely different contract. The argument further extended is that, since, under Berry’s contract with the holders of the option, they ag'reed to obtain a new option from the owners running directly to¡ Berry, to be held by him as collateral security for the advances Berry should make, and since Berry might have advanced, though he did not, enough money to enable the holders to obtain a deed of the Kokomo Mine, and since Berry, had he received the new option to be held as collateral security, might have obtained
Besides, if it he true that, as. between Berry and his beneficiaries under the Haley trust, the Kokomo Mine should he impressed with a preferential lien, it would he so only because the Haley trust funds were used in its purchase. The fact is, and the court so found upon uncontradicted evidence, that the money with which the Kokomo Mine was purchased under the option which Berry obtained from its owners was trust property of other estates which Berry held, and not trust property of the Haley estate at all.
Por another reason, the judgment as to these two. items was right. Among the securities belonging to the Haley estate, and which Berry, as trustee thereof, had in his possession, were four mortgages aggregating about $25,000.00. Berry, at the same time, was acting as agent for Reverend Henry
The plaintiff claims that there was no- completed sale by Berry to Foote of these mortgages, and that they still remained the property'of the Haley estate, and that their subsequent sale, for cash, which cash was commingled by Berry with other trust funds, still belonged to- the Haley beneficiaries; and plaintiff further claims that a part of the proceeds of such second sale, or resale, constituted the first two i tenis' aggregating about $11,000.00 already discussed, and additional sums., amounting to about $21,000.00, which were invested in worthless mining stock, which passed to Berry’s trustee in bankruptcy. This property, probably because it was worthless, plaintiff waives his lien upon, and asks that the lien be impressed upon the Eo-komo- Mine, which is the only property o-f .value belonging to the Berry estate — at least, the only property in Colorado which possesses any value.
Complaint is also made by plaintiff that the court did not permit him to trace these mortgages, after their acquisition by Foote, into property belonging to the Berry estate. The court did not permit any further tracing of the mortgages, themselves, but did permit the plaintiff to trace the proceeds of the Foote purchase — -that is, the money which Foote paid to Berry. — into the property of the insolvent estate. That was done, and $21,000.00 were so traced into worthless securities which are now in the hands of Berry’s trustee in bankruptcy, exactly in the same form they were when Berry received them. Plaintiff asserts, as a principle of equity, that he may waive his right to' these worthless se
. But, in the present case, the funds in question have been traced into- specific property now in the hands of the trustee in bankruptcy,- which is entirely worthless. It never augmented Berry’s insolvent estate. The estate got no benefit whatever from it, and the plaintiff here, as the trustee of the Haley estate, will not be permitted, by waiving his right
Our. conclusion is, that Berry had the right to withdraw from his contract with the mining company. The contract itself so provided. Even if this withdrawal were wrong, it did not necessarily, and, so far as the proof shows, did not, contribute to the forfeiture of the original bond and option by the owners of the property. All moneys, if any, belonging to the Haley estate, which Berry misappropriated in his advances to the holders of the first option, were a total loss to him, and to the Haley estate. When Berry afterwards, by a new contract, acquired the Kokomo Mine, the purchase price of which was made up of trust funds belonging to other estates, this circumstance does not entitle the Haley beneficiaries to a prior and superior lien, because Berry also misappropriated their funds, under another option which had previously expired. Plaintiff may not waive his lien to the specific property which may have been .acquired by the Haley funds and transfer it to the Kokomo Mine, in the absence of a showing that the Berry estate ever received any benefit from such funds, or that it was augmented thereby, and particularly where it appears that other trust moneys were used in the acquisition of the
■ The judgment of the court, being in accordance with our views, is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Mr. Justice Musses, and Mr. Justice Garrigues concur.