A judge of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts has certified to us, pursuant to S.J.C. Rule 1:03, as appearing in
The certified question arises from a third-party complaint brought by the third-party plaintiff, First Eastern Bank (bank), against the third-party defendant, Robert Trent Jones (Jones). The following are relevant facts contained in the record and memorandum accompanying the certification. On February 18, 1986, Jones and three other individuals executed the “Ipswich Club Development Co. Agreement and Declaration of Trust” (trust). The trust was established to plan and develop a county club complex and associated facilities in Ipswich, including a golf course designed by Jones, and to sell real estate surrounding the club. The trust was declared to be a “Massachusetts business trust,” see generally G. L. c. 182 (1990 ed.), and the instrument creating the trust was recorded in the Essex South registry of deeds. On November 6, 1988, the bank and the trust entered into a commercial loan agreement which provided in part that the bank would loan the trust $5,000,000 by means of a line of credit. As security for this loan, the trustees promised to assign to the bank promissory notes secured by mortgages on
On April 6, 1989, Charles Roy, stating that he was acting for himself and his wife, entered into two “Home Site Purchase Agreements” with one trustee. Each agreement contained an addendum providing that the Roys had the unconditional right to sell the property back to the trust at cost. Shortly thereafter, the Roys executed two promissory notes to the trust, secured by a mortgage on each lot. The trust immediately assigned the notes and underlying mortgages to the bank. Sometime about July 6, 1990, Roy asserted that the above mentioned addenda had been altered unilaterally after he had forwarded the agreements to the trust. As allegedly altered, the addenda provided that the Roys had the right to sell the property to the trust at cost at the trust’s sole discretion.
Roy demanded that the trust rescind the purchase agreements. When the trustees refused, Roy informed the bank that, due to the alleged fraud, payments on the promissory notes would cease. On August 9, 1991, the bank sought to foreclose on the Roys’ mortgages securing the notes. Roy commenced a diversity action against the bank in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts seeking to enjoin the foreclosure. The bank thereafter filed a third-party complaint alleging that, should Roy prevail against it, Jones and the other trustees of the trust should be liable to the bank in tort, contract,
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and under certain provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code. Jones moved to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. There is nothing to show that Jones person
1. With respect to the certified question, our attention is directed to the second paragraph of G. L. c. 203, § 14A, see note 2 supra, which provides as follows: “A trustee shall be personally liable for obligations arising from ownership or control of property of the trust estate or for torts committed in the course of the administration of the trust estate only if he was personally at fault.” Jones maintains that this provision applies to a Massachusetts business trust and operates to protect him from liability on the bank’s tort claims because there is no indication that he was personally responsible for any tortiously caused injury to Roy. 4
In view of two Massachusetts decisions, the certifying judge concluded that it was unresolved whether G. L. c. 203, § 14A, applied to the trustees of a Massachusetts business trust.
5
The judge referred to
Apahouser Lock & Sec. Corp.
v.
Carvelli,
In this framework, Jones urges us to make explicit the point that he perceives was addressed by implication in von Henneberg, and conclude that, in appropriate circumstances, G. L. c. 203, § 14A, shields from personal liability the trustees of a Massachusetts business trust as well as the trustees of a donative trust associated with probate practice. As matter of statutory interpretation, Jones maintains that the Legislature’s" unqualified use of the word “trustee” in § 14A must mean trustees of all types of trusts. He further suggests that it would be unwise and confusing to fragment the law of trustee liability depending on the type of trust involved, and that trustees of business trusts, as well as trustees acting under a donative trust of the probate type, should be shielded from personal liability for torts in the absence of personal fault.
We first point out that the issue was not settled by the
von Henneberg
decision because the parties in that appeal neither raised nor briefed the issue now under consideration. See
McEvoy Travel Bureau, Inc.
v.
Norton Co.,
General Laws c. 203, § 14A, was enacted as part of an omnibus probate bill. See St. 1976, § 515. The latter legislation had its genesis in studies of the Uniform Probate Code, conducted by the probate committees of the Massachusetts and Boston Bar Associations, which were undertaken with a view to considering the advisability of adopting the code in whole or in part in Massachusetts. See Young, Probate Change, 20 Boston B.J. 6, 7 (Dec. 1976). Concluding that acceptance of the entire uniform code was not warranted, the study committees, and ultimately the Legislature in St. 1976, § 515, adopted those provisions of the code which appeared to constitute improvements upon existing Massachusetts law, adapting existing statutory provisions where appropriate.
During this process, attention was given to the question of personal liability of various fiduciaries and trustees. At Massachusetts common law, a trustee was personally liable for torts committed in the administration of a trust, even though the trustee might not have been personally at fault. See
Larson
v.
Sylvester,
2. The certifying judge dismissed the bank’s claim against Jones personally to the extent that the claim was premised on a contract theory. The judge found that the bank had constructive notice of the provisions of the trust, one of which limits persons extending credit to, or entering a contract with, the trust to the assets of the trust for satisfaction of their claims. Based on that finding, the judge applied the holding of
James Stewart & Co.
v.
National Shawmut Bank
At our common law, a trustee is personally liable on a contract the trustee signs on behalf of a trust unless it is agreed that the party entering the contract with the trustee shall look only to the trust’s assets for payment or damages. See
Larson
v.
Sylvester, supra
at 359;
Hull
v.
Tong, supra
at 712. The question whether such an agreement has been reached (the question posed in the
James Stewart
case and apparently in this case) is a classic question of the parties’ intention. If the contract is unambiguous on the point, it will, absent fraud, govern.
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On the other hand, if the contract is not explicit, resort will be necessary to the attendant facts and circumstances. See Restatement (Second) of Trusts,
The question certified is answered in the negative.
Notes
“This statute reads in full as follows:
“Unless otherwise provided in the contract, a trustee shall not be personally liable on contracts properly entered into in his fiduciarycapacity in the course of administration of the trust estate unless he failed to reveal his representative capacity and identify the trust estate in the contract.
“A trustee shall be personally liable for obligations arising from ownership or control of property of the trust estate or for torts committed in the course of administration of the trust estate only if he was personally at fault.
“Claims based on contracts entered into by a trustee in his individual capacity, on obligations arising from ownership or control of the trust estate, or on torts committed in the course of trust administration may be asserted against the trust estate by proceeding against the trustee in his fiduciary capacity, whether or not the trustee was personally liable therefor.
“The question of liability as between the trust estate and the trustee individually may be determined in an accounting, surcharge, indemnification or other appropriate proceeding.”
Count I of the bank’s third-party complaint seeks indemnity from Jones and the other trustees. The certifying judge interpreted this count as asserting, in part, a claim for contractual indemnity based on the commercial loan agreement. We read the record in light of the decision of the certifying judge. See
Canal Elec. Co.
v.
Westinghouse Elec. Corp.,
The bank also argues in a footnote in its brief that, because of an overlap in the legal and beneficial interests of the trust, the commercial entity actually formed by the trust instrument is a partnership and not a business trust. The argument is meant to suggest that Jones could be personally liable in tort as a partner. This issue was not raised before the certifying judge and no facts appear in the judge’s memorandum with regard to it. We decline to consider the contention.
“ ‘Business organizations formed by declarations of trust’ are ‘a common . . . method ... of conducting a commercial enterprise.’ ”
Hull
v.
Tong,
We note that had we relied on the common law to resolve
von Henneberg,
the outcome would have been the same. At common law, a trustee is personally liable for torts committed in the administration of a trust. See
Larson
v.
Sylvester,
The comment to the Uniform Probate Code provision limiting the liability of trustees provides:
“The purpose of this section is to make the liability of the trust and trustee the same as that of the decedent’s estate and personal representative.”
Unif. Probate Code, § 7-306 comment, 8 U.L.A. 560 (Master ed. 1983). The Uniform Probate Code expressly excludes business trusts from its scope. Id. at § 1-201 (53) (Supp. 1992).
An explanation by the commentator for the Boston Bar Association probate committee with respect to the limitation of trustee liability in St. 1976, c. 515, § 28, states:
“This section is a counterpart of §§ 13 and 24 [of c. 515] limiting individual liability of executors and administrators and guardians, respectively. The reasons for the change are stated in the discussion under § 13.”
Young, 20 Boston B.J., supra at 18.
Mr. Young’s comment on § 13, reads in pertinent part, as follows:
“An executor or administrator is personally liable in tort not only for his own negligent acts, but also, under the doctrine of respondeat superior, for imputed negligence of his servants. For example, if the estate is conducting a business, or operating real estate, the possibility exists of a tort claim against the executor or administrator personally for something done by a workman. The amount could exceed the value of the estate and be collected from the executor personally without his having any hope of reimbursement. The present section would modify this doctrine in the interests of fairness and uniformity. . . . It . . . specifies that the executor or administrator will be liable only for his own personal negligence in tort actions. There are counterpart provisions in the omnibus bill applying the same doctrines to conservators and guardians, Section 24, and to trustees, Section 28." Young, 20 Boston B.J., supra at 12-13.
Taylor v. Richmond’s New Approach Ass’n, 351 So. 2d 1094 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1977), the only case on point from another State that has been brought to our attention, reaches the same result. In Taylor, the District Court of Appeal of Florida held that a statutory provision limiting the personal liability of “trustees,” also adapted by the Florida Legislature from the Uniform Probate Code provision limiting trustee liability, did not apply to the trustees of a business or realty trust. Id. at 1095-1096.
Finally, we note one other confirmatory point. Statute 1976, c. 515, was entitled “An Act making certain changes in the probate laws of the commonwealth.” In
Apahouser,
the Appeals Court relied in part on this title for its determination that G. L. c. 203, § 14A, applied exclusively to trustees acting under trusts of the donative type normally associated with probate practice.
Apahouser,
This court has cited the
James Stewart
case only once, in
Ballentine
v.
Eaton,
See also illustration 4 to comment b to subsection (1) of § 263 of Restatement (Second) of Trusts, indicating that a signature by a trustee on a contract as “trustee under a[n identified] declaration of trust..., and not otherwise” is sufficiently explicit to avoid personal liability. This type of restrictive execution is similar to the limiting execution described in Ballentine v. Eaton, supra.
Comment b reads as follows:
“6. Terms of the trust. A provision in the trust instrument that the trustee shall not be personally liable upon contracts made by him in the administration of the trust does not of itself prevent the trustee from being personally liable. Such a provision does not preclude the other party to a contract from holding the trustee personally liable on the contract, if the other party did not have knowledge or reason to know of the provision. Even though the provision was known to the other party to the contract, it does not necessarily follow that the trustee has contracted that he shall not be personally liable on the contract. Therefore, it does not necessarily preclude the other party to the contract from holding the trustee personally liable. Such a provision, however, may be considered with other facts in determining whether it was the understanding of the parties to the contract that the trustee should not be personally liable.”
Scott provides as follows:
“The question in each case, it is submitted, should be whether the parties as reasonable persons, in the light of the language used and all the circumstances, intended that the trustee should be personally liable or intended that the trust estate alone should be reached.”
