158 Misc. 404 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1935
Various questions arise upon the report of the referee and the exceptions filed thereto in this contested accounting proceeding. These questions involve generally the power and authority of the trustee, the City Bank Farmers Trust Company, to invest in certain participations in mortgages which now constitute assets of the trusts.
The committee of the incompetent, Lillian Haydock White, a daughter of the testator and a fife tenant and contingent remainder-man under the will, and the special guardian of the infant remainder-
A preliminary question of the construction of the will has also arisen upon the exceptions filed by the trust company to the report of the referee as to the limitations upon the power of the trustees to make investments. There is also involved the effect of a decree of this court made in 1921 upon a prior accounting which is claimed by the trustee to be res adjudicata and conclusive in its favor. Upon these preliminary questions, the provisions of the fifteenth clause of the will become important. That clause reads as follows:
“ Fifteenth. In making investments and reinvestments of the principal or any part of the principal of any trust fund created by this my will, I direct my executors to make such investments or reinvestments in bonds of the State of New York, or of Cities in the State of New York, or in such securities as Savings Banks in New York State are authorized by laws of that State to invest their funds in "
The trust company contends that the restricted power of investment under this clause was limited to the executors and was not intended by the testator to apply to the trustees appointed by the will.
The committee and the special guardian on the other hand urge that the limitations in clause fifteenth were intended to apply to the trustees as well as the executors. The referee has properly sustained the latter contention and has thereby held that certain investments were unauthorized and illegal.
An analysis of the general terms of the will, and the specially applicable provisions, justify this conclusion. The trusts involved in this accounting were created by the eleventh clause. In it the testator directed that his residuary estate be divided into four equal parts and he gave, devised and bequeathed each one and all of said parts “ to my executors and trustees and their successors ” to hold each one and all of said parts in trust. Thereafter, he provided for the creation of four trusts for the benefit respectively of his daughters, Lillian Haydock and Aimee Collier, and his sons, James E. Haydock and John Haydock. There were certain secondary life estates and remainder provisions which are not of great importance here. In the paragraphs dealing with these trusts the
When the testator came to provide for a limitation in paragraph fifteenth upon the power of the “ executors ” to invest in a limited class of securities, he plainly used the word “ executors ” as including his trustees. The language of paragraph fifteenth emphasizes this intent, particularly when construed with the general plan of distribution. I find no indication of a purpose to restrict the executors or to broaden the powers of the trustees only. It is urged by the corporate trustee that certain trust powers were conferred upon the executors to which paragraph fifteenth might have applied. These functions, however, are so unimportant in the general plan of the will as to compel the rejection of this contention. Under the fourth paragraph of the instrument an annuity of $180 a year to a nephew of the testator was directed to be paid by the executors and there was a further direction that for the purpose of producing the annuity the executors were to set apart and hold in trust a sum of money sufficient to produce such annuity. At the time of death the actuarial value of this annuity was only $1,500 and the fund necessary to produce it would not have exceeded $4,500. The only other possible trust which the executors might have been empowered to hold was, in effect, a deferred legacy of $1,000 to another nephew of the testator. The aggregate of the trust funds necessary to provide for the two nephews was $5,500, whereas the capital value of the four residuary trusts approximated $520,000. In view of the employment by the testator in his gift of the residuary trust of the words “ executors and trustees ” and his references to trustees alone in the residuary clause and the further reference to executors, only, in clause fifteenth, it is clear that the will did not recognize, with any technical accuracy, the distinction between these terms. Restriction on the right of the executors to invest in savings bank securities was undoubtedly intended to similarly encompass the authority of the trustees. The language of the will relating to the testator’s personal representatives should “ be considered with reference to the duties to be performed and not as if used by the testator in its technical meaning.” (Matter of Kohler, 231 N. Y. 353, at p. 365; Matter of Leonard, 218 id. 513,
It is incomprehensible that the testator by the fifteenth clause intended to create an extremely conservative class of investments for the protection of his nephews, but did not plan to afford protection to his own children and their issue, who were the principal objects of his bounty under the residuary trusts.
Under this interpretation of the will, the trustees were limited to investments which a savings bank is authorized to make under the provisions of section 239 and the other pertinent provisions of article VI of the Banking Law. The conduct of the trustees in making the investments complained of here must be tested by that statute. (Matter of Doblin, 152 Misc. 406.) The exceptions of the trust company upon this phase of the case are, therefore, overruled.
Upon the contention of the corporate trustee that the decree of December 29, 1921, was conclusive and res adjudicata, I am in accord with the opinion of the referee. He held that the decree was not conclusive. That decree was rendered in a proceeding brought for the construction of the will and the judicial settlement of the account of the executors. The sole question presented to the court was whether the will authorized and empowered the executors to constitute and establish the respective trust funds created by the residuary clause in whole or in part from any securities or investments which were originally owned by the testator and to continue to hold such securities as trustees. In a tentative set-up of the trust, set forth in the account, the trustees attempted to retain certain bonds and stocks which were clearly non-legals for the investment of trust funds. The will specifically authorized the retention of mortgages and their inclusion in the trust funds provided by the will. The surrogate who construed the will in that proceeding properly determined that the retention of non-legal bonds and stocks was unauthorized. The only question submitted to him, however, was as to retention. The powers of the executors
The alleged practical construction of the will under which it is claimed that for a period of years legal investments were made by the trustees rather than those limited to savings banks cannot be employed to defeat the rights of the incompetent nor of the infants. There is no foundation in fact for the argument that there ever was such a practical construction of the will because the question was never raised in the prior accountings. There could be no acquiescence by the infants, nor may the prior decrees in any way affect the tests of legality or authority which have arisen by reason of new investments made since the last date of the account covered by the previous accounting.
In view of my finding that the trustees were limited, under the terms of the will, to investments legal only for savings banks in this State, the investment in a participation in the so-called Smalenbach mortgage was correctly found by the referee to be illegal. The property was appraised for the trust company, prior to the placing of the mortgage, at the sum of $4,250,000. The legal limit of a mortgage for a savings bank under section 239 of the Banking Law is sixty per cent of the appraised value of improved real property. The legal limit placed by the statutes upon trustees generally is sixty-six and two-thirds per cent. (Dec. Est. Law, § 111, and Pers. Prop. Law, § 21.) Sixty per cent of the value of the property involved here was $2,550,000. It was conceded that the total amount of the mortgage was $2,800,000. It is plain, therefore, that the mortgage was actually placed in an amount exceeding the legal maximum. This investment was undoubtedly made by an officer or subordinate of the trust company in ignorance or by oversight of the restrictions contained in the will. In view of the finding that the allocation of this participation to one of the trusts constituted a violation of the terms of the will, the further determination of the referee that the investment was speculative and carelessly made was unnecessary. In addition the evidence was insufficient to justify the findings of fact and conclusion of law upon
A further question arises as to the investment by the trustee in three participations in the so-called L. M. Blumstein mortgage. These participations were part of a consolidated mortgage of $600,000 on certain property located on One Hundred and Twenty-fifth street, borough of Manhattan, city of New York. The mortgage was placed as a result of a complete transaction. The building was occupied as a unit by a department store. Originally, the property was divided into two parcels. One was designated as parcel A with a frontage of sixty-two feet. The adjoining parcel, designated as parcel B, has a frontage of twenty-five feet. The mortgage was and is a first lien on parcel A and is a second lien on parcel B, being subject to a first mortgage of $100,000 on that specific parcel. The referee has found illegality in this investment because the statute as to savings bank investments requires that the real property on which a mortgage is placed shall be “ unincumbered ” (Banking Law, § 239, subd. 6). A similar provision is contained in section 111 of the Decedent Estate Law in its application to legal investments for trustees generally. Various arguments are advanced by the corporate trustee to support the legality of these participations. It is urged that the value of parcel A was sufficient to justify the placing of the loan without regard to the lien of the second mortgage on the adjoining property. It is also urged that if the first mortgage on parcel B was foreclosed, it would be possible to build a wall dividing the building, which has been operated as a unit, into two separate structures at a cost of $9,000. These arguments are merely arguments of expediency. The statute is plain in meaning. It commands that the property upon which the mortgage shall be placed shall be free of any incumbrance. The legislative intent needs no exposition. It is grounded upon the clearest principles of experience and common sense. The beneficiaries of the trust are not required to bear the expense of a division of the unit structure in the event of a foreclosure by a first mortgagee on part of the property. The law does not authorize a spreading agreement by which the mortgage becomes a junior lien upon adjoining property. The referee, therefore, correctly found that the investment did not meet the requirements of the will and the statute.
The determination of the referee as to the illegality of certain other investments in the so-called Lerner certificate and the “ 7 East Burnside Avenue ” participation has become academic. The Lerner certificate of participation was unauthorized under the
Only one other modification of the learned referee’s report is required to be made. He has found in respect of the Smalenbach and Blumstein participations that while they were illegal, no financial loss occurred to the estate in connection with these investments. He has further found that if and when loss is established, a decree should be entered directing the City Bank Farmers Trust Company and the estate of John Haydock, the deceased trustee, who consented to these investments, to make good such loss. His findings and conclusions are inconsistent with the determination that the participations were unauthorized and illegal. The life tenant of one of the trusts is an incompetent. She is also a contingent remainderman as to three of the trusts. Although she was a former trustee, the investments which are complained of were made after the adjudication of her incompetency. The infants are contingent remaindermen of all four of the residuary trusts. The only party who expressly consented to these investments was the former trustee, John Haydock. His interest as life tenant has been extinguished by his death. His estate has a contingent interest in the remainders. The protection, however, of the rights of the incompetent and the infant remaindermen require a surcharge and a direction that the trust company and the estate of the deceased trustee now pay back into the trusts the original cash invested in the illegal participations. (King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76; Adair v. Brimmer, 74 id. 539, at pp. 554 and 568.)
The alleged acquiescence of the adult life tenants does not exonerate the trustees from restoring to the trusts the moneys invested in these participations. By consenting to and participating in these investments, John Haydock and his estate were estopped to question their propriety. If the trust company alone makes good this surcharge, the decree may reserve its right to recover any loss from the estate of John Haydock, or to set off the loss against any part of the remainders which may ultimately vest in his estate upon the termination of the trusts. (Matter of Hall, 164 N. Y. 196.) No reason has been disclosed why such a surcharge or an immediate direction to repay should be postponed to await a delay of years or
The remaining exceptions to the report and the findings and conclusions of the referee are overruled. The report of the referee, except as modified by this decision, is confirmed.
Submit decree on notice settling the account accordingly.