144 Mo. App. 701 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
Action for damages for breach of contract, trial by jury and verdict for plaintiff. Motion for a new trial filed by defendants and sustained, and plaintiff has appealed from the order granting a new trial.
The facts out of which this controversy grew are as follows: Charles H. Peck died intestate in the city of St. Louis in 1899, and by his will, bequeathed
The court, in sustaining the motion for a new trial in this case, recited that it was by reason of the error of the court in giving instruction number one bn.behalf of plaintiff. This instruction told the jury that if they should believe from the evidence that on or about said 6th day of March, 1903, said trustees, defendants herein, or a majority of them, authorized Stephen Peck & Bro. to execute the contract for lease, read in evidence, and that said Stephen Peck and Bro. did execute such contract, and that plaintiff had fully performed, or offered to perform, its conditions upon his part, and that the defendants, or a majority of them, had refused to perform the same in accordance with the terms thereof, then the verdict should be for the plaintiff, and unless they should so find the facts, the verdict should be for defendants. Appellant insists that this instruction was correct under the evidence, and that the verdict was for the right party, while respondents insist that the instruction was wrong for the reason that the defendants as trustees had no power to delegate their authority, and, for that reason, could not appoint an agent to execute a contract, and further that the authority of the agent, if permissible at all, must be in writing, and that a trustee, either by himself or an agent, could not execute a lease to begin in futuro.
The first proposition that confronts us in this investigation is as to whether or not those defendants, trustees under the will of Charles H. Peck, invested with the power to manage and control the estate committed to their charge, and to execute leases
The general rule is that a trustee of an express trust, invested with powers, the execution of which calls for the exercise of discretion and judgment on the part of the trustee, cannot delegate such powers to any one,- and, hence, the performance of any act, requiring the exercise of discretion, must be done by the trustee himself and cannot be delegated to an agent. [1 Perry on Trusts, 402; Graham v. King, 50 Mo. 22; Bales v. Berry, 51 Mo. 449; Polliham v. Revely, 181 Mo. 622, 81 S. W. 182.]
The office of trustee is one of personal confidence and cannot be delegated. The reason of the rule lies in the fact that the grantor who creates a trust and invests the trustee with powers, calling for the exercise of discretion on the part of the trustee in their execution, selects the trustee by reason of his confidence in the integrity and good judgment of the trustee, and when the trustee accepts the trust, he does so with the implied understanding that he will discharge .the duties incumbent upon him, by reason of the trust, according to his own best judgment, and, hence, unless the grantor expressly provides that the trustee may delegate the powers conferred, he cannot do so. He may delegate authority to perform a purely ministerial act; that is, an act not requiring the exercise of discretion, for this is not a delegation of the trust. “The trustee must, at times, act through attorneys or agents, and, if he determines in his own mind how to exercise the discretion and appoints agents or instruments to carry out his determination, he cannot be said to delegate the trust, even though deeds or other instruments are signed by attorneys in his name.” [Perry on Trusts, sec. 409.]
It has been uniformly held in this State that trustees, appointed in a deed of trust, to make sale of land
“The office and duties of a trustee are matters of personal confidence, and he must exercise a just and fair discretion in doing whatever is right for the best interest of the debtor. He must in person supervise and watch over the sale, and adjourn it if necessary, to prevent a sacrifice of the property, and no one can do it in his stead unless empowered thereto in the instrument conferring the trust. A trustee cannot delegate the trust or power of sale to a third person, and a sale executed by such delegated agent is void.”
If this rule should prevail in the matter of a sale of land for the purpose of collecting a debt, under a power granted in a deed of trust, in which the duty of the trustee, in executing the trust, is specifically provided, it should, for a much stronger reason, apply to a trustee charged with the management of a large estate for a long term of years which necessarily requires the constant exercise of vigilance and discretion!
In this case, the will under which these trustees were acting, made no provision whatever for a delegation, by them, of any of the powers conferred upon them under the will, and our conclusion is that they possessed no power to appoint an agent, either verbally or by writing, and shift to the agent the performance of any duty requiring the exercise of any discretion upon their part; and as the execution of a contract, such as the one sued upon in this case, necessarily called for the exercise of some discretion and judgment, it could not be executed in a way to bind the estate or these defendants in their capacity as trustees, by any agent which they might appoint. True, they might, if they had agreed upon the contract themselves, settled its terms and agreed upon every question requiring the exercise of discretion or judgment, delegate to an agent
The conclusion we have reached upon this question make it unnecessary to pass upon the other questions raised by counsel in their briefs for the reason that having determined that these defendants had no power to appoint an agent to control this property by lease or otherwise, it follows that, under the pleadings and the evidence in this case, the plaintiff can have no standing in court, and the trial court was right in setting aside the verdict.
The judgment, therefore, will be affirmed.