64 Mich. 23 | Mich. | 1887
This case was in this Court, and decided at the October term, 1883 (52 Mich. 174), upon a bill to establish the rights of the various parties under a trust including a lumbering estate managed in the name of the Oscoda Salt & Lumber Company. The controversy brought in for decision the conduct of the trustees, and of Winchester, the secured creditor, and was also intended to get relief for the alleged misconduct of Wasey and Winchester, and their associates or subordinates. A decree was made by the court below, substantially sustained by this Court, leaving the trust in the same hands, and ordering measures to close it up.
In pursuance of our decree the parties proceeded to an accounting, and upon most of the balances there is no complaint made. But various charges for losses were allowed against Winchester, and some also against Wasey, and certain of their respective claims were rejected. The cause is now before us on appeal, to obtain the disallowance of the sums alleged to be wrongly charged, and the allowance of what is claimed to have been wrongly rejected.
A preliminary series o£ objections is made, on behalf of Winchester, that there are no specific charges in the bill, and no provisions in the decree, which opened the door to an inquiry into the losses and other items charged against Winchester,who, it is said, is entitled, on the record, to his whole debt of $275,-000, less actual payments made in reduction of it, without regard to the,cross or counter claims that are set up as arising from his legal misconduct; and it is also insisted that Winchester is not liable for conduct of others not actually engaged in or authorized by himself. Wasey’s objections are chiefly based on his discretionary powers as trustee, which he insists protect him where there was no actual fraud.
In our opinion, there is not much in this record, so far as the disputed items are concerned, which has not already been settled by our former decision. It was plainly Baid there that, in an action like this, to call persons to an account for
“It is not generally presumable that the beneficiaries have such information from independent sources. When, therefore, a bill is filed to call trustees to an account, any testimony throwing light on their management bears directly on the performance of this duty, and may be considered in taking the accounts and in determining the view to be taken of the conduct of the trustees.”
It was also our opinion that, after Winchester had attempted to repudiate complainant’s rights, he and Wasey had been so connected in their dealings that he was individually responsible for their effect on the interests of the trust. Upon both these points we see no reason to change our former views. There has been no testimony taken which Winchester has not had the means of meeting as fully as if it had been foreshadowed in the pleadings. And the approval and acquiescence of Winchester in Wasey’s view of his powers, and the almost complete actual approval of his specific acts, appear more fully now than before.
We shall not depart from our previous conclusions; and while there is, in some instances, a strong argument made to show that they do not cover some portions of the present dispute, we do not propose to change any results that depend upon them.
Before considering the separate items, some reference is proper to certain considerations" of natural equity which were urged upon our attention.
We do not doubt, and are entirely convinced, that in the outset of these transactions Mr. Winchester had gone to further lengths than wisdom would warrant in giving accommodations to complainant and his associate, who had expanded their business under this encouragement until it became unmanageable, and would have swept away all their valuable
The chief items charged to Mr. Winchester, and objected to, arose out of the transactions in Cleveland, known as the Monroe transactions.
to all lumber then held by Monroe Brothers & Co., and of all future shipments, was to be in the name of the Oscoda Company till fully paid for, and insured by the Monroes, to be invoiced to them at agreed prices, and provided for by notes or acceptances; the Monroes to bear all expenses and receive all profits, keeping their capital, estimated at $25,000,. in Cleveland, with the right in the Oscoda Company to inspect the books, and wind up the business in case of diminished capital or the death of W. R. Monroe. In March, 1882, a planing-mill was put into the same conditions of title.
This contract contemplated power in the Monroes to sell the lumber without restriction. It contained on its face no promise or purpose of doing any more for the Monroes than selling them lumber on time paper. It was, as we held before, an arrangement which, without any further privileges, had the object of putting a practically unlimited amount of the trust property in another jurisdiction and at serious risk.
But it now appears more fully than it did then that this Cleveland business was so conducted that paper aggregating several hundred thousand dollars was discounted by or through Winchester, on the credit of the Oscoda Company, for the benefit of this business, a considerable portion of which was really accommodation paper, having the effect of loans or advances by the Oscoda Company, outside of the discounting or negotiation of paper given for invoices; and it is impossible from this record to completely disentangle the various items, or get at their origin. Out of this confusion
In February, 1883, a freshet swept away a large quantity of lumber from the yard at Cleveland, and damaged most which remained. Considerable money was spent by Wasey to gather up lumber which was swept off, and to purchase the claims of neighboring dealers in lots which had become mixed and not distinguishable.
Thereupon an arrangement was made between Monroe Brothers & Co. and Wasey, with Winchester’s approval then or subsequently, and the testimony seems to indicate that the plan has been contemplated earlier, whereby a corporation having the same name of Monroe Brothers & Co. was got up, and all the property of the same firm, which had already been conveyed, February 7, 1883, to the Oscoda Gompany) was put in this corporation, whose object was to continue the same business, as well as to dispose of the damaged lumber, and clear off the Oscoda debt. By the transfer of February 7, Wasey agreed that Monroe Brothers & Co. should be released from any personal liability on the Oscoda debt beyond what could be realized out of the assigned property.
The Oscoda Company, in its ultimate receipts applicable on its claims against Monroe Brothers & Co., failed to receive
We discover nothing in the record which supports any such idea. There is testimony tending to show, in a very general way, that complainant would have been willing to enter into liberal arrangements with Monroe Brothers & Co., but none that any such arrangements were matured, or that he would have been willing to give unlimited, time and credit to a firm who were to have all the profits and run no serious risks. The business done went far beyond anything contemplated by the agreement of October, 1880, and involved money dealings and negotiable paper transactions quite foreign to anything hinted at in that document, even if it had been approved. And, furthermore, Wasey had no authority, without, at least, the intelligent approval of his co-trustees, to close up the debt by the compromise, if it may be so called, of February 7, 1883, and still less to embark the trust interests in a partnership or corporation in which the trustees had no control. Those dealings were really Mr. Winchester’s dealings, in which no one else was recognized as actually interested, and no one else was allowed to meddle.
The point made that, by the decree, an election was made to take the Cleveland interests, and that they must be taken as found, is not, in our opinion, applicable. It is by no means clear to us that the upshot of that business was not such profits as would have made up any deficiency; but it is enough to say that pursuing a trust fund in the hands of a misconducting trustee cannot be construed as a waiver of claim for his deficiencies, unless,. possibly, when
An item of $3,474.33, due from Monroe Brothers & Co. to the Oscoda' Company, is claimed to have been assigned to Winchester .in December, 1883. This was during the new corporate arrangement, in which Winchester had a chief part. We think the testimony shows that this assignment was made as claimed, and was a proper charge.
There is also a claim arising out of a shipment of certain lumber by the Agnes, which Winchester claims was not authorized or accepted, but which Wasey swears was authorized. We do not feel disposed to disturb this allowance.
There is also a dispute about 100 shares of boom stock, which was charged to Winchester in December, 1884, and on which he is charged with a dividend of $1,725.
These shares are part of a larger amount issued partly in consideration of certain booming rights granted to the boom company by the Oscoda Company. They were sent to Winchester, as the trustees claim, to hold merely as security. He claims that, under the trust, all proceeds of real estate were to be turned out to him, and that this stock was on that footing.
But it appears that up to December, 1884, the Oscoda Company received and applied all the dividends as their own property, and that Winchester never claimed them; and even in 1884 it rather sec-ms that it was the spontaneous action of Mr. Gowanlock, the secretary of the boom company, who sent the dividend, and not any demand from Winchester that occasioned it. While the release of booming rights might possibly, under some circumstances, have been treated by the parties as a sale of real estate on which Winchester was entitled to the proceeds, the fact that it was practically treated
The overpayment to Wasey, beyond his authorized salary, is covered by our former decision, and was properly set down against Winchester.
We also think that the charges for overpayment of E. F. Wasey, M. E. Gay, and E. K. Gowanlock are properly made. In the cases of Gay and Gowanlock, they had regular salaries which were understood and approved. The overpayments •were not made by any concurrence of the trustees as properly due them for wages, and Mr. Wasey had no right to benefit them in an indirect and practically concealed way. They acted — Gowanlock especially — in disregard of Henry N. Loud’s rights as trustee, and in the interest of Winchester, under Wasey’s approval. Eben F. Wasey’s allowance appears to be as large as would have been agreed upon; and in his case, as in the other cases, George Wasey could not determine on these outlays without some reference to his colleagues. Winchester’s approval was not enough, unless he was the only beneficiary, which he was assumed to be.
The deduction of two per cent, on lumber shipments claimed by Winchester is not, we think, sustainable. That was understood to be the rebate for cash sales. The sales on which it is claimed were time sales,' on which he got the benefit of four months’ interest, which would be a little more or a little less than two per cent., according to the rate of interest.
We think Winchester should not have been charged with about §10,000 resulting from a loss on notes held by the Oscoda Company against Davison & House. These had been received with Monroe Brothers & Company’s indorsement, and were renewed without it. The makers failed, and paid, but 40 cents on the dollar. This paper had gone into the hands of the trustees, and they held it. Winchester had. nothing to do with the extensions and consequent losses.
Winchester’s claim for interest on interest was properly disallowed, as it came within no statutory authority.
He also claimed $70,000, or $10,000 a year, for financial assistance rendered the trustees. That assistance consisted chiefly in discounting paper, for which he received the proper discount rates. He receives the stipulated interest on all of his secured debt. Alargo amount of these discounts.were* such as ought not to have been obtained at all, and that whole mode of doing business was foreign to the proper business of the trust, unless confined to business paper. No good reason has been alleged why any compensation should be given him. Except as to the Davison & House matter, we think the decree correct in its items as to Winchester.
It is suggested, however, that by this decree Gay’s estate should not have been benefited, even if Loud’s is, because it is claimed Gay acquiesced in most of the irregular doings. But the question here is, how much was due on the trust mortgage, and that is not divisible. We do not think Gay is shown to have been at fault personally in all these matters, and we do not think the division is practicable.
Wasey also appeals from so much of the decree as affects him adversely, which is done—
1. By compelling him to refund certain disbursements, and replace certain losses.
2. By refusing him larger compensation.
The disbursements of Mr. Wasey in this suit, of b.etween $200 aud $300, were apparently necessary, and, under ail the circumstances, aS he was retained in the trust, we think he was entitled to them.
We have had more doubt about the disbursements connected with a suit by Monroe Brothers & Co. against the trustees of the Oscoda Salt & Lumber Co. This suit, how-
The sum of $350 paid to Perry Prentiss to settle an adverse claim against the property, as well as a deduction of $95 from an account against Oahoon & Hutchinson, whether wise or unwise, were not beyond the fair judgment of a business man.
He is also charged with $3,018.53, as a loss on a sale made to F. Hempy & Co., on the ground that it ought not to have been made. Monroe Brothers & Co. made the sale subject to Wasey’s willingness to make it on Hempy’s paper alone, without their indorsement, as they did not wish to increase their own credit to that firm. Hempy & Co. appear to have been in good credit, and there was no special reason to doubt their soundness. We cannot see why Wasey should be held responsible for what was not apparently an unwise sale.
The commissioner undertook to decide that Mr. Wasey’s salary, as fixed and approved by this Court, should only run ■until September, 1885. That was a matter beyond his jurisdiction, and the salary should run until the date of the decree below, when it should cease. It was directed to continue until the further order of the court.
As to Mr. Wasey, then, the charges against him should be ■disallowed, and his salary stand as above mentioned.
We are not inclined to increase it. While Mr. Wasey has not perverted the trust to his own advantage, and has no doubt acted on an idea that he was doing what was competent, he has, however, honestly departed very widely from his duty to complainant, and from the safe and legal methods of
We see no reason to differ from the court below in the matter of costs and expenses allowed, or in the saving of questions which may arise out of the Cleveland suit, which we-have no means of fully determining now.
As the majority of Winchester’s exceptions are disallowed, and but one of them sustained, we think that, as between him and complainant, each should pay his own costs in this-Court. Wasey will be entitled to a solicitor’s fee here and in the circuit, but no other taxable costs.
The decree will be affirmed, except in the particulars-specified.