75 P. 854 | Utah | 1904
after making tbe foregoing statement of facts, delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
Tbe first question presented by this appeal is, did tbe sale of tbe Charles Dickens mine under tbe foreclosure proceedings, and tbe purchase of tbe property by Dooly, terminate bis trust as to tbe two-tbirds of tbe
The rule is elementary that, when a person accepts a trust, he is bound to perform the duties arising therefrom, and he can not by his own acts discharge himself wholly or in part from its duties, or escape its responsibilities. 1 Perry on Trusts, 268-274; 1 Beach on Trusts & Trustees, 383. The defendant in this case having accepted the trust created by the deed from Norton to him, and entered upon the management of the trust property, he was legally bound to execute and carry out the trust, unless released by consent of the cestuis que trust or discharged by the order of a court having jurisdiction to act in the matter. The duties required of respondent as trustee were to sell the trust property, and out of the proceeds, first, pay the costs incurred in the management of the .trust estate, including a reasonable compensation to the trustee for his services; second, to pay the creditors of W. A. Norton; and then pay the residue, if any, to the heirs of said Norton. We know of no rule of law or equity that would permit respondent to exclude or divert any of the trust property from the trust, and by a. series of transactions with third parties, and in a circuitous manner, acquire a title in himself to the property so diverted, freed from the burdens of the trust; but, on the con
The junior counsel (law firm) for respondent in this case appeared for the plaintiffs in the case of Hamilton v. Dooly, supra, in which, as hereinbefore stated, precisely the same subject-matter and the same facts and questions of law were presented as are now involved in this suit, and, after making a detailed and minute statement of the facts in that case, in their printed argument, declared that ‘ ‘ there .never was a plainer case in the world where a trustee, taking money of the trust fund, bought in property for the benefit of the trust fund and must be held to account for whatever there may be in it.” And again they say: “The statute of limita-tations does not bar a trust established, as between a cestui que trust and his trustee. ’ ’ It necessarily follows that if Dooly, in that case, was legally bound to account for the proceeds of the Charles Dickens property, he is in the case now under consideration. His relations, duties, and obligations to the plaintiffs in this case are the same as they were to Hamilton and Rohrer — no greater, no less. The plaintiffs rely for a recovery upon the identical facts produced in the case of Hamilton v. Dooly, supra, and upon the same principles of law invoked therein, and upon which the cáse was determined and disposed of.
After a careful review of the entire record, including the records of the former cases, we are of the opinion, and so hold, that the findings of the trial court, so far as they are inconsistent with the views herein expressed, are erroneous, and not supported by the evidence.
The case is reversed and remanded, with directions to the trial court to set aside the judgment entered, and proceed in accordance with this opinion. Costs of this ' appeal to be taxed against respondent.