The appellant, who is the trustee of certain express trusts of real property, under the will of Francis W. Lasak, deceased, has been authorized and directed by the order of the Supreme Court to enter into a stipulation, which provides that a judgment shall be entered adjudging the will void as a will of real property, and thus annihilating the real estate trusts created by it. We know of no power possessed by any court to compel a trustee to consent to a
*328
destruction of the trust, and the statutes of this state have denied tc a trustee the power to do any act of his own volition which will accomplish such a result. The will of Lasak was admitted to probate by the surrogate of Westchester county after a prolonged contest, having for its foundation an alleged want of testamentary capacity, and his decree has been affirmed by this court.
(In re Lasak,
It is true that Courts of Chancery and other equity tribunals have always exercised a supervisory power over the management of trust estates and the conduct of trastees, but they have never, save in exceptional cases, asserted the power to dissolve a trust before the expiration of the term for which it was created. The exceptions have been rare, and have always belonged to a well defined class,- where the interference of the court did not disturb or destroy the trust scheme, but was rendered necessary in order to prevent its entire failure. Trusts which have become impossible of performance because of the
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existence of conditions not anticipated or foreseen when they were created, are of this character; also marriage settlements where the marital relation has heen annulled; and other kindred cases. There was also a larger class, where the court would decree dissolution of the trust upon the application of all the interested parties, but this was strictly limited to cases where the whole design and object of the trust scheme had been practically accomplished, and all the interests created by it had become vested. (2 Perry on Trusts [3d. ed.] § 920;
Bowditch
v.
Andrew,
Tins statute received a construction very soon after its adoption by the Chancellor in
Wood
v.
Wood
(
“ Large as its jurisdiction is, both in law and equity, I know of no such power, even in the Supreme Court, to dispense with the enactment of the legislature, and make that valid which the lawgiver has declared shall be void. The parties interested sanction, it is said, the act, and desire that it may be done. But the law says, in such a trust, the parties beneficially interested cannot assign, or in any manner dispose of, their interest. How, then, can their consenting to, or joining in, the mortgage, improve its efficiency ? It is void as the act of the trustee, and void as the act of the beneficiary, and must, therefore, in this view, be void in toto.”
This language was quoted with approval by Judge Earl in
Douglas
v.
Cruger
(
The same doctrine was reiterated by Ch. J. Andeews in
Lent
v.
Howard
(
' The authorities to which our attention has been called by the respondent’s counsel, all relate to matters resting in the discretion of the trastee. If he has been invested with a discretionary power in the trust deed, the court will closely scrutinize his acts, and interfere to control his conduct whenever necessary to prevent him from so exercising his discretion as to oppress the beneficiary or cause loss to the trust property. In other words, the jurisdiction of the court can always be invoked for the conservation of the trust, but never for its destruction. In the present case the trustee has no discretion to exercise. It has been suggested that he might allow judgment to be taken in this action adjudging the trust provisions of the will to be void, either by the service of an offer, or by a failure to answer. We cannot approve of this view of his powers. The absolute and positive duty is imposed upon him to defend the life of the trust whenever it is assailed, if the means of defense are known to him or can with diligence he discovered. The statute above referred to, which enjoins upon him to refrain from doing any act, which will defeat the trust, embraces defaults and other omissions of duty as well as open and avowed acts of hostility. If a stipulation which permits a judgment to he entered rendering void the trust conveyance is not an act “ which contravenes the trust,” it will be difficult to conceive of any action on the part of the trustee which could produce such a result.
It is urged that inasmuch as one of the beneficiaries of these trusts is an infant, and his estate is endangered by the litigation, the court had power to intervene and compel the trustee to enter into a compromise which secures a fund for the benefit of the infant, which may otherwise be lost.
*333 Where only the rights of the infant are involved a court of equity undoubtedly possesses large discretionary power which it may exercise for the protection, of the property of those who are in law deemed to be its wards; and which may be exerted to control the action of the custodian of the minor or of his estate. But this jurisdiction cannot be employed to deprive others of the title to property which they have lawfully acquired, and the trustee holds the estate committed to him for the benefit of all the parties who are presently or will be eventually entitled to share in its enjoyment.
The orders of the General and Special Terms must be reversed and the petition dismissed, with costs out of the estate.
All concur, except Earl, J., not voting.
Ordered accordingly.
