98 Cal. 591 | Cal. | 1893
This action was brought by the plaintiffs, as surviving trustees of the James Lick trust, against the various beneficiaries under the trust deed, for two purposes: 1. That the accounts of the trustees might be examined, allowed, and settled, and their administration of the trust sanctioned; 2. That they might have the permission of the court to pay over to the California Academy of Sciences and the Society of California Pioneers, residuary donees, a part of what would in the end be coming to them. This application involved a modification of a prior decree, which had declared that no money or property was to be paid or transferred to the residuary donees until the preceding trusts should have been fully executed and performed; and arose from the fact that by the sale of the Lick House property in October, 1888, the trustees had become possessed of .ample funds to complete all the prior trusts, and to pay over to the residuary donees a large part of what would be coming to them.
The various beneficiaries named in the trust deed appeared by answer and cross-complaint, and the trial resulted in a decree of the court settling the accounts of the trustees up to the sixth day of September, 1889, and granting them permission to^pay the said residuaries, the Pioneers and Academy of Sciences, $300,000 each. The decree also allowed the School of Mechanical Arts interest upon the sum of $535,000 from October, 1888, that sum being the amount due from the trustees for the purpose of founding the school. Various allowances were also made from the main trust fund for the payment of attorneys'* fees and other expenses.
From the foregoing decree of the court the Pioneers and Academy of Sciences have appealed upon the following grounds: —
*594 1* In deciding and adjudging the sum of $1,025 expenses incurred for legal services on account of the telescope, to be charged to the general fund, and in diminution of the residue.
2. In deciding and adjudging that the fees allowed to the attorneys, John H. Boalt, John B. Mhoon, and Horace W. Philbrook, aggregating $1,750, be paid out of and charged to the general fund in diminution of the residue, instead of making the fees of said attorneys payable by their respective clients.
3. In deciding and adjudging that the $661 disbursed by the president of the Lick trustees for expenses in traveling to Cleveland, Ohio, on the special business of the Lick telescope, be paid out and charged to the general fund in diminution of the residue, and not of the telescope fund.
4. In deciding and adjudging that the $849.90, expenses incurred by the trustees for models, etc., of the historical statuary, be paid out of and charged to the general fund in diminution of the residue, and not charged to the special trust providing for such statuary.
5. In deciding and adjudging that interest be allowed to said California School of Mechanical Arts, and,—
6. In deciding and adjudging that $3,500 shall be paid to Rankin and Earl, trustees of the bath house trust, out of the general fund.
The School of Mechanical Arts has also appealed from that part of the decree: 1. Permitting the Lick trustees immediately to pay over to the California Academy of Sciences and to the Society of California Pioneers the sum of $300,000 each before their execution of the other trusts precedent mentioned in the trust deed. 2. From that part of the said decree which fixes the date of October 5, 1888, as the date from which interest is to be paid on the sum of $535,000, provided in the fourteenth trust, these defendants claiming that interest should be allowed on said balance from the thirty-first day of December, 1884, to the final payment of the whole of said balance.
The trust deed of James Lick measures the powers of the trustees and is their warrant of authority. Under that deed it is made their duty to convert the trust property into money, and out of the proceeds, among other things,—“ 3. To expend the sum of $700,000 for the purpose of purchasing land and construct
It appears that since the sale of the Lick House property in October, 1888, the trustees have had ample funds to carry into execution the various trusts not fully administered. For reasons hereafter noticed they cannot be charged with laches as to the founding of the Sclfool of Mechanical Arts, and as to the causes which have prevented them since the date that funds have come into their hands from erecting the statuary at the city hall, and finally closing up the telescope, free bath, and other trusts, we have no knowledge, as this appeal is before us upon a judgment-roll which does not include the evidence. As to the conduct of these various trusts by the trustees, the court has found: “ That all the trusts provided for in said trust deed have been executed as speedily as practicable by the plaintiffs and their predecessors, who have at all times performed their duties diligently, faithfully, honestly, intelligently, and economically, and that, although there has been a great delay in executing the trust contained in the trust deed, .... said de
It was error in the trial court to allow interest to the School of Mechanical Arts, upon the money coming to that corporation, and to charge the amount of such interest to the general fund of the trustees, thereby reducing pro tanto the residue to which the Academy of Sciences and Society of Pioneers are entitled. The School of Mechanical Arts insists that interest should have been allowed it from a time long prior to 1888. A complete answer to this contention is that the Lick trustees had no funds in their hands prior to October, 1888, to which the school was entitled, and, in the absence of inexcusable delay on the part of the trustees in carrying out the various prior trusts (and we do not hold that such delay would justify it), no principle of law or justice would entitle the school to interest when no funds were on hand applicable to its objects and purposes. The doctrine of Floyd v. Forbes, 71 Cal. 588, completely destroys appellants’ contention in this regard, for in that case interest was denied the telescope trust, although the funds which were to be applied to the execution of that trust were in the hands of the trustees.
Floyd v. Forbes is also squarely opposed to the decree of the trial court in allowing interest to the School of Mechanical Arts upon the amount of its trust fund from October, 1888. It was held in that case “ that the proceeds of the trust property constitute one fund out of which the trustees are to execute the several trusts specified in said deed, and that the profits arising from investments of money in their hands are to be treated as a part of such fund, and not as accruing for the benefit of any of the said trusts in the execution of which a definite sum is required to be paid or expended, so as to increase the amount of such payment or expenditure.”
The foregoing language of the court has no uncertain meaning, and we can only account for the claims of the School of Mechanical Arts for interest upon the amount to be applied to
Floyd v. Forbes closes every avenue through which interest might be claimed by the School of Mechanical Arts, save the single one of delay resulting from neglect upon the part of the Lick trustees to perform their duties under the trust. Inasmuch as the “School” had the right to call to its aid the power of the court to compel a prompt administration of its trust by the Lick trustees, and, inasmuch as the trustees had no direct interest in the residue of the trust estaie, but that all of said residue passed to the Academy oí Sciences and Society of California Pioneers, it is not plain that “unnecessary delay” upon the part of the trustees would give the school a right to interest upon the amount coming to it under the trust deed. Certainly, under no aspect of the case could funds be taken from the money received from the Lick House sale to satisfy such claim for interest, for beyond any doubt that would be reducing the residue which Lick intended should be applied in other channels, and the Academy of Sciences and Pioneers have the same rights to the “residue” that the School has to the sum of §540,000. Yet the claims of the School for interest as indicated by the complaint are made in no way dependent upon the fact as to whether profits had accumulated upon the main trust fund, but its pleading outlines a right to interest by reason of “great delay” upon the part of the trustees, even though the successful assertion of such rights should deplete the residue of all the original fund derived from the Lick House sale. Such a course can neither be law nor equity.
The School has an advantage over the Academy and Pioneers in being entitled to priority of payment. In all other respects
A second conclusive reason why the school’s claims in this regard should be denied is apparent from the record. No funds came to the hands of the trustees which could be applied to the execution of such trust until October, 1888. The school never having become entitled to the principal fund, could not have been entitled to interest upon that fund. If authority were necessary to justify a denial of its claims for interest prior to that date, Floyd v. Forbes is that authority. From October, 1888, until October, 1890, the amount to which the school was entitled was in the hands of the Lick trustees, but the school declined to touch the money unless the entire amount was paid to it in a lump sum, and appealed to the court to support its contention to that effect. This position of the school was held untenable by the court October 7, 1890, in the case of Floyd v. Rankin, 86 Cal. 159. Consequently, the two years of delay
It is insisted that an item of $849.90 for models, diagrams, etc., furnished under an advertisement by the trustees, to be used in the erection of the statuary at the city hall, should be charged to the statuary trust, and not to the general trust fund. These articles proved unsatisfactory and were rejected, and thus were of no assistance in carrying out this trust. The trust deed provided that the group of statuary was to be “well worth $100,000.” The meaning of this provision of the deed is that $100,000 should be honestly and intelligently expended in the erection of the statuary. This contested item did not enter into the cost of construction, and in no way added anything to its value. After this money had been expended, the balance, to wit: $99,150, was not sufficient to erect a group of statuary “well worth $100,000.” The-item should be charged to the main trust fund.
The item of $3,500 for services rendered by Bankin and Earl, as trustees in the erection of the free baths, should be charged to the bath trust. The trust deed provides that $150,000 is to be expended in the erection and maintaining, of free baths. These parties are entitled to compensation as trustees of the free bath trust, but that compensation should
The items of $1,025 for legal services for the express benefit of the telescope trust, and of $661, traveling expenses of the president of the board of trustees to Cleveland on telescope business, should be charged to the telescope trust. By the trust deed, $700,000 was to be devoted to purchasing a site and constructing the greatest telescope ever made. That was the limit of the appropriation, and the foregoing items were expended in the execution of that trust. Those expenditures were as necessary, and as much a part of the cost of the site and construction, as freight upon material, or labor upon the grounds.
The items of attorneys’ fees, allowed to attorneys appearing in this action for the various beneficiaries under the trust deed, should not be charged to the main trust fund, but are matters standing between those trusts and the attorneys. Plaintiffs brought this action to have their accounts settled, and to have a partial distribution to the residuary donees, the partial distribution being a matter in which the residuary donees were directly interested, and in which the plaintiffs had no special concern. The accounts were found correct and are approved by the court, but the School of Mechanical Arts filed a cross-complaint, asking for affirmative relief. This complaint was controverted by many of the beneficiaries, and others also appeared by answer, asking affirmative relief in the nature oí allowances for expenses, attorneys’1 fees, etc. From that time to the present the action has been transformed into a contest between the various trusts created by the trust deed as against the academy and pioneers representing the residue, each trust zealously guarding its own interests, possibly some attempting to protect their respective trust funds at the expense of the “ residue”; while it has been of equal importance to the “residue” that the various expense accounts should be paid by the secondary trusts. For these reasons each particular trust should be charged with its own attorney’s fee.
The court had no authority to order paid to the Academy of Sciences and the Society of California Pioneers $300,000 each
For the foregoing reasons, let the judgment and decree be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to the trial court to enter judgment in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Harrison, J., deeming himself disqualified, did not participate in the foregoing decision.
Rehearing denied.