145 Misc. 884 | N.Y. Sur. Ct. | 1932
In a proceeding brought on by the petition of William Proctor Van Heusen, to compel the National Commercial Bank and Trust Company of Albany, as trustee of the estate of Charles Manning Van Heusen, to render an account of its proceedings, the. question presented to the court is whether or not a payment, made by the trustee of certain moneys derived from
Shortly after the receipt of said instrument by the trustee, the Van Heusen Charles Company declared a dividend, payable December 1, 1931, which made available for disposition for petitioner, the sum of $2,900, which sum was paid to the Van Heusen Charles Company on December 1, 1931, of which payment petitioner was on that date notified. Petitioner immediately telephoned the trustee requesting revocation of this instrument, but was advised that the money had already been paid to the Van Heusen Charles
Section 15 of the Personal Property Law provides that the right of the beneficiary to enforce the performance of a trust, to receive the income of personal property, and to apply it to the use of any person, cannot be transferred by assignment or otherwise.. A similar provision may be found in section 103 of the Real Property Law.
Does the instrument of November 25, 1931, constitute an assignment? To answer that question, certain elements must first be • considered. True, it contains the words “ hereby sell, assign, transfer and set over ” all income of every nature due and to become due, but the instrument itself runs, not to the creditor, the Van Heusen Charles Company, but to the trustee. Obviously, the Van Heusen Charles Company could not compel the trustee to make payment to it as a creditor of the life beneficiary, and, in the event that the trustee refused to pay such income in accordance with the provisions of the instrument, the creditor of the fife beneficiary certainly could not successfully maintain an action against the trustee therefor.
No consideration is stated in the instrument itself and in so far as the relationship between the trustee and the beneficiary under the trust is concerned, no consideration can be found.
This instrument is not an assignment of moneys due to a creditor for the simple reason that the creditor is not the assignee therein named. In my judgment, however, it is a direction or order to a trustee to pay the income belonging to a beneficiary to a creditor and was revocable by the beneficiary at any time. It may well be that the attorney who drafted the instrument referred to it as an assignment and used such words as are usually found in assignments, in an endeavor to lend greater strength to the instrument. It is in fact, however, a mere authorization or order of the life beneficiary to his trustee to pay income as it is received, to a third party to whom the life beneficiary is indebted, and to continue to make such payments until a revocation of the order or direction or until the indebtedness is paid. It assigned nothing whatsoever to the Van Heusen Charles Company, nor did the Van Heusen Charles Company acquire any rights under the instrument in the trust estate. As an order or direction to the trustee to pay income due or to become due, the trustee was justified in making such payment
I cannot find in the evidence that there is anything to indicate such an element of bad faith in this transaction as would void the payment made under the clear directions given in the instrument.
The payment of $2,900 made by the National Commercial Bank and Trust Company of Albany to the Van Heusen Charles Company was lawfully made and will be allowed.
Submit decree accordingly.