37 D.C. App. 519 | D.C. Cir. | 1911
delivered the opinion of the-Court:
1. The first exception to the auditor’s report is to the allowance to the trustees of 5 per cent commissions on the principal, and 10 per cent on the income of the estate. There is no statute in the District regulating the compensation of trustees, and the matter of allowance therefor is within the sound discretion of the equity court. The rule prevailing in the United States in this respect is different from the rule governing in England. Here “it is considered just and reasonable that a trustee should receive a fair compensation for his services; and in most cases it is gauged by a certain percentage on the amount of the estate.” Barney v. Saunders, 16 How. 535-542, 14 L. ed. 1047—1050. The commissions allowed in that case-were 5 per cent on principal, and 10 per cent on income. Discussing the rate, Mr. Justice Grier said: “The allowances as made by the Auditor in this case are, we believe, such as are customary in Maryland and this District, where the trustee
It appears that it had been the practice of the testator for some years before his death,- to invest his money in loans of comparatively small amounts, secured by second mortgages on real estate in the District of Columbia. Many of the notes were payable monthly. At the time of his decease these investment notes constituted the larger part of his entire estate, and the bulk of his personalty. The first report of the former Auditor, in 1900, to which no exception seems to have been taken, allowed the trustees 10 per cent commission upon the income of the estate. The grounds upon which this allowance was made were thus stated in the report :
“These collections and their disbursement form but a part of the service imposed upon these trustees and a much smaller part of their responsibility. I have taken into consideration the magnitude of the principal, personal estate, and its shifting character as illustrated by the conversion of more than one half of the promissory notes into money during the period of this account, and the reinvestment of the funds in other safe, interest-bearing securities, as well as the discharge of nearly $30,000 of liens upon the real estate. The compensation allowed in this report is less than the value of the service, but no more is claimed by the trustees.”
Without consuming time with the review of the evidence relating to the administration of the trust, we think it suffi■cient to say that while the allowance was a liberal one, it is not obviously excessive, nor has it been shown to be founded •on a mistake that, under the rule before stated, would justify .the setting aside of the report on the exception taken.
2. The next exception relates to the item of $18,800 allowed in the settlement of the final account of the executors by the probate court of Massachusetts. This amount is scheduled in the first report of the Auditor, returned December 17 th, 1900, as deducted from the trust estate charged to the trustees. In •other words, they were in effect charged with the net balance ■shown by that account as received from the executors. In the final report, the Auditor expressed the opinion that he had no ■power under the reference to reopen the account settled by his predecessor. Another ground assigned was that the equity •court had no power to inquire into, or set aside, the settlement made by the probate court. This report was based on the consideration that the administration and the responsibility of the “trustees, under the appointment of that court, extended only to the net balance ordered to be delivered to them by the probate court.
Appellants contend that the probate court of Massachusetts Lad no jurisdiction to probate the will, because the testator was ■domiciled in the District of Columbia; that its proceedings are void, and that the trustees are chargeable with the entire estate as it existed on April 1st, 1899, when the decree appointing the trustees was entered. It appeared that the testator had some real estate in Middlesex county, Massachusetts, and this gave jurisdiction to its court to probate the will, and, at least, to .•administer such of the estate as was in that state. A prima facie ground of jurisdiction was afforded by the recital in the will that the testator was both a citizen and an inhabitant of Massachusetts, which fact the executors confirmed by offering the will for probate. Whether this is a collateral attack on the
The auditor’s report, heretofore referred to as made December 19, 1900, returned an account showing the credit made by the Massachusetts court, and'charging the trustees with the balance shown by that account. No exception was made to this-report, and it stood confirmed under the rules of the court. Four other reports were made, and no exception was taken to-the recognition of the old account as the basis of the liability of the trustees. No attack was made upon the settlement of the account in Massachusetts, and no complaint made that the trustees were responsible for the entire estate of the testator-without diminution to the extent of the allowances made to the-executors in the settlement of their account by the probate court.
It is to be noted, too, that the active administration of the estate had been in the hands of the executors for more than two-years prior to the settlement of this account. Many collections of debts had been made and many reinvestments of money. The real estate was also being looked after, taxes were paid,, and litigation had been maintained with the state of Massachusetts on her claim for taxes for the years 1897 and 1898,— litigation that finally ended in favor of the executors after the settlement of this account. While it is contended that under the decree of the equity court the executors were required to turn over all of the estate of which the testator died seised and. possessed, and that the trustees became responsible therefor, all of the credits allowed in the account were accepted as-determining the amount for which the trustees should be held-to account, save and except the item of $18,800, allowed them for expenses of administration. The first objection made to this item, as we have seen, was in the exceptions to this final report and settlement.
In this connection another point suggests itself as entering-into the consideration. Under the law in force when the testator died, there was no provision for the probate of a will as-
This disposes also of the contention that this allowance for •expenses of administration should have been considered as an ■element of the amount of compensation allowed to the trustees in the final settlement, the basis of which was the net balance received by them from the executors as shown in the Mass; achusetts settlement. No credit was made them, or to Drury, for services prior to the commencement of administration under the appointment of the equity court of this District.
3. The only attack made upon the fairness of the administration of the trustees occurs under the exception to the auditor’s report, on the ground that he failed to ascertain and charge the trustees, as he should have done, with certain profits alleged to have been realized by them in the purchase of certain notes for reinvestment of the trust funds.
It is true that a trustee should not deal with himself, and in any transaction with the trust fund, in which he has made a loss by such dealings, he should be held to the strictest account. If, on the other hand, he realized profits, he should be made to account fully for them. No principle is better settled than that a trustee shall not make a personal profit from the use of trust funds. We would not be understood as qualifying this salutary rule in the slightest degree; but we cannot perceive that it applies here. Grant that it would have been better for Drury not to make purchases for reinvestment from a partnership of which he was a member, and thereby avoid opportunity for criticism, yet it is clear that the notes were bought at their face and actual value, that no profit was made by the trustees, and that not a dollar was lost to the estate. Drury knew the character of the notes, and there was less trouble and expense in the investigation of titles than there would have been in the purchase of similar securities from others; nor does it appear that like securities could have been readily obtained from others. Moreover, the other trustee Maddox, had no connection with the partnership of Arms and
Should the trustees jointly, or Drury singly, be charged in the settlement of their final account with any profit that Drury may have realized as a member of the partnership of Arms and Drury, from the original loans of the money of that firm, which formed the basis of the notes subsequently purchased in good faith by the trustees for the reinvestment of the trust funds ?
The trustees lost nothing on the notes and charged themselves with the exact amount paid for each. They paid no more than they would have done in the purchase of like notes from other persons engaged in the same business as Arms and Drury,, which persons would have realized a similar profit from their borrowers. We do not think that Drury, under any principle of equity, can be called on to surrender to his beneficiaries his profit made in previous transactions with other persons and at their expense, simply because he and his eotrustee subsequently purchased the paper in the securing of which those profits had been made, and in which purchases no profit was made, or expected to be made, at the expense of the estate. Dealings with the partnership of Arms and Drury by trustees, one of whom was a member of the partnership, call for the closest scrutiny of each and every such transaction, but when that scrutiny has disclosed no actual wrongdoing, no advantage taken of the situation, no profits made, and no possible injury to the-interests of the beneficiary, there is nothing calling for restoration by the supervising court. A pecuniary charge therefore, in the settlement of the account, would, under such circumstances, not be a restoration, but could be inflicted only by way of fine and punishment.
4. The last assignment of error relates to the decree of the-court which provides that when the trustees shall file vouchers showing the distribution and final disposition by them of the trust funds in their hands or shown by the auditor’s report, they shall be and are hereby discharged of and from their said
So far as the decree confirms the auditor’s report of the account of the trustees of the administration of the trusts created by the will, it is affirmed, with costs. So far as the Eliza C. Magruder trust is concerned, the cause will be remanded, with leave and direction to the court to amend the decree in so far as it may relate thereto, and take such final action, regarding that trust estate as may be expedient and proper.
Affirmed.
An appeal to the Supreme Court of the United States was. allowed December 21, 1911.