87 P. 720 | Kan. | 1906
The opinion of the court was delivered by
W. W. Harvey, as receiver of the Masonic Mutual Benefit Society of Kansas, a corporation, brought this suit against L. C. Wasson and others as directors of the society, and A. S. Andrews and others as individuals, upon a judgment previously obtained against the society in favor of Harry S. Moulton, to recover a personal judgment against the directors; to have certain lands purchased from the society and their grantees, and now owned by the other defendants, declared to be impressed with a trust to pay the Moulton judgment; to have such conveyances set aside and the land held to be trust property of the society for the payment of the Moulton judgment; and, also, for the possession of certain notes and mortgages which the society had sold and transferred and which are now held by some of the defendants.
It appears that at the time of his death, July 21, 1897, Horace Moulton was a stockholder in the Masonic Mutual Benefit Society and was insured therein in the sum of $2000; that Harry S. Moulton was his beneficiary; and that on January 24, 1898, the beneficiary commenced his action against the society on the beneficiary certificate, which resulted in a final judgment in his favor May, 1902, for $2560.
It is unnecessary in this case to determine whether the directors could enter into the agreement with the company. It is sufficient to determine whether they could part with the assets of the society without paying the Moulton benefit.
The assets of the society, according to article 9 of the by-laws, as amended, were divided into three separate funds — the benefit fund, the permanent.fund, and the expense fund. Under this article the expense fund could never exceed. $1000. Whenever it exceeded this amount the excess should be credited to the benefit fund. It is apparent, therefore, that the $55,000 of assets on hand when the directors transferred them to the company, with the possible exception of $1000 be
“Under the general obligation of carrying the trust into execution, trustees and all fiduciary persons are bound, in the first place, to conform strictly to the directions of the trust. This is in fact the corner-stone upon which all other duties rest, the source from which all other duties take their origin. The. trust itself, whatever it be, constitutes the charter of the trustee’s powers and duties; from it he derives the rule of his conduct; it prescribes the extent and limits of his authority; it furnishes the measure of his obligations.” (3 Pom. Eq. Juris., 3d ed., § 1062.)
The directors had no discretionary power to exercise in the payment of-benefits. So long as there were any assets in either fund it was obligatory upon them to apply such funds to the payment of benefits upon demand. Moulton’s claim had become a fixed liability against the society when the directors parted with the assets, and there were funds on hand to pay it which should have been applied thereto. The fact that the directors acted in good faith and in the manner which in their judgment was for the best interests of all the members will not relieve them from liability to Moulton, whose loss appears to have resulted from their unauthorized conduct.
Upon the proposition that the purchasers of the real and personal property formerly the assets of the Kan
The judgment of the district court is affirmed so far as it held that the real estate is not impressed with a trust and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover the notes, bonds, and mortgages, but so far as it held