2 Barb. 446 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1848
The statute, (1 R. S. 730, § 70,) authorizes this court, upon the bill or petition of any person interested in a trust, to remove any trustee who shall have violated or threatened to violate his trust; or who for any other cause shall be deemed an unsuitable person to execute the trust. Two objections are made to Mr. Collins’ continuing a trustee: one, that he refuses to discharge his duty ; tbe other that he is a director in the company whose property is mortgaged. The latter might not, of itself, be a sufficient cause for his removal; for though a director, he might faithfully execute his trust. But his situation as a director, taken in connexion with his refusal to execute the trust, especially when the reasons he gives for the refusal point only to the interest of the company, together constitute an abundant reason for his removal.
This seems to me to be a very clear case, and one in which no valid excuse is given for the refusal of the trustee to execute his trust. It has been the uniform practice of courts of equity to interfere in such cases and remove the trustee. Judge Story says, (2 Story’s Eq. Jur. § 1287,) “ Indeed the appointment of new trustees is an ordinary remedy enforced by courts of equity in all cases where there is a failure of suitable trustees to perform the trust, either from accident or from the refusal of the old trustees to act, or from their original or supervenient incapacity to act, or from any other cause.” Again he says,
The power to grant the prayer of this petition is then in the court; and it is our duty to exercise it, in a proper case. If it had been suggested for the trustee in this case that he had acted under any mistaken notion of his duties and obligations, and that he was willing, under the direction of the court, to proceed in the execution of the trust, I might have deemed it advisable, under the circumstances, to content myself with giving him directions to proceed. But no such suggestion is made in his behalf. On the contrary, the whole opposition to the application is placed upon a claim of right, on his part, to delay the execution of the trust as long as he shall deem it for the interest of the parties concerned. And if he is permitted to continue in the trust, I have no assurance that he will not extend that delay, on the same pretence, for years yet to come. He must therefore be removed; but I do not see any necessity for appointing a new trustee. The mortgage is past due, and all that remains is to sell the property and divide the proceeds among the creditors. This can as well be done by the sheriff as any one, and I shall direct him to do it, under the 71st section of the act which gives this.court the power to cause the trust to be executed by one of its officers.
Order accordingly. •