6 N.Y.S. 276 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
Mrs. Shipman died in 1882, leaving a will which contained alternative provisions. By the fifteenth clause of this will she devised her
The cases with regard to trustees and cestuis que trustent are entirely inapplicable. They proceed upon the principle that a beneficiary should not be permitted to act as trustee for himself, where the exercise of discretion or judgment is called for; as, where the income of a trust fund is to be applied to the maintenance of a particular beneficiary, with discretion in the trustee, in case the income prove insufficient, to apply part of the principal. There, and in similar exercises of judgment, it would be manifestly improper that the trustee and beneficiary should be united in the same person. Such is the principle of Bundy v. Bundy, 38 N. Y. 410, and of Rogers v. Rogers, 111 N. Y. 228, 18 N. E. Rep. 636. In both of these cases there were trust-estates. In the former the court required the executors to give security, not, however, as executors, but as trustees. The duty there under consideration was not attached to the executorial office, and as no trustee, to perform the duty, was named in the will, the court regarded the provision for security as in effect a conditional appointment as trustee. Judge Grqvbr’s language makes this entirely clear: “The judgment provides that the executors, upon giving proper security, shall continue in charge of the fund. In this there is no error. The will not having designated a trustee for this purpose, it was competent for the court to appoint a trustee. This may be regarded as such appointment.” In Rogers v. Rogers the court held that the fact that one of several testamentary trustees is a beneficiary did not incapacitate him from acting as trustee. He was simply disqualified from sitting in judgment upon his own rights or privileges. In the latter respect her co-trustees could exercise the control and judgment improper for him, and, in case the other trustees declined to act, the court could either supply their place, or take upon itself the execution of the trust, so far as it ought not to be executed by the trustee and beneficiary. These cases are in entire harmony with the general principle that although the court, when called upon to appoint a trustee, will not ordinarily appoint as such a cestui que trust, yet the latter is not absolutely, and under all circumstances, excluded from occupying the trustee relation for his own benefit. Moke v. Norrie, 14 Hun, 128; 1 Perry, Trusts, § 59; Ex parte Conybeare's Settlement, 1 Wkly. Rep. 458; and see In re Moke, 2 Redf. Sur. 430. In the case at bar there is, as we have seen, no trust relation other than that attached to every executorial office. Hor is there any provision in the will calling for'the exercise of judgment or discretion. The executor’s duties here are such as the law ordinarily-imposes upon executors. They are indeed unusually simple. He is called upon to invest the estate in permanent securities, and to pay over to himself the income for
Van Brunt, P. J., concurs.