12 Ind. 266 | Ind. | 1859
Daniel B. Fatout filed his bill in chancery (under the old practice) against the heirs of Austin W. Morris, the heirs of Eben Pierce, deceased, and the appellant, Martin, to remove a cloud from the title to certain lands which Morris had, in his lifetime, sold to Fatout. The heirs of Pierce (Wyncoop et al.) filed a counterclaim or cross-bill against all the other parties, and set up a claim to a tract of land which Morris had sold to Martin. The heirs of Pierce allege that the sale of the land by Morris to Martin was in violation of the trust reposed in Morris, as administrator of the estate of Pierce. The correctness of the ruling of the Court in reference to the piece of land last mentioned is the only point before us.
The facts, so far as it is necessary to state them in order to an understanding of the question presented, are as follows, viz.:
Pierce, in his lifetime, was the owner of the land in controversy. Morris held certain judgments against Pierce,
The Court below, having found substantially the foregoing facts, ordered the conveyances from the sheriff to Morris, and from Morris to Martin, to be set aside, on the following terms and conditions, viz.: The property was ordered to be again offered for sale at a sum equal to Morris’s bid with the interest thereon, and the improvements made on the premises by Martin, amounting to 1,479 dollars, 27 cents, to which were to be added the costs of the suit, and the costs of the sale to be made under the order, the total of which was to be the least sum for which the premises were to be offered; and if the premises failed to sell for more than that sum, the sale aforesaid and conveyance were to be in all things confirmed; but if the land should sell for more, the money was to be brought into Court, to be distributed as might thereafter be ordered.
Martin appeals from the order of the Court, and assigns several errors; but as no question is alluded to in the brief of counsel, except as to whether the facts warranted such an order-, we of course shall not examine any other question.
It is claimed that this case does not fall within the prin
If the principle extended to no other sales than those made by the trustee himself, whether under an order of Court or otherwise, where his character of vendor and purchaser, at the same time, would be utterly inconsistent —his duty as vendor being to sell the property for the highest price that could be obtained, and his interest as purchaser to get it for the lowest—the case would clearly be with the appellant, as he, or rather his vendor, did not purchase at his own sale, but at a judicial sale made by the sheriff.
But the principle is broader in its application, and extends to all sales of the trust property, whether made by the trustee himself under his powers as trustee, or under ■an adverse proceeding. As a general trustee of the subject, it is his duty to make it bring as much as possible, at any sale that may take place; and, therefore, he cannot put himself in a situation where it becomes his interest that the property should bring the least sum.
Thus, in Campbell v. Johnson, 1 Sandf. 148, the testator appointed two persons his executors, and the guardians of his children, and devised all his estate to them in trust, to sell for the benefit of his heirs. The land was subject to mortgages given by the testator, and under one of them it was sold, and one of the executors purchased. The Court held that the sale must be set aside on the application of the heirs* upon the ground that in both capacities, as trustees to sell, and guardians of the children, the executors had a duty to perform in regard to the property, which rendered it inequitable for either of them to become a purchaser. See, also, Bell v. Webb, 2 Gill, 164; Evertson v. Tappen, 5 Johns. Ch. 498; Toney v. The Bank of Orleans, 9 Paige, 650; Van Epps v. Van Epps, id. 238.
The fact that the land was bid off for Mcvrtin by Morris, if such be the fact, cannot alter the case, for the principle extends to purchases by the trustee for another. Brackenridge v. Holland, 2 Blackf. 377.—Ex parle Bennett, 10 Ves. 381. See, also, Gregory v. Gregory, Coop. 204.
The case of Fox v. Mackreth, 2 Bro. Ch. 400, and Davoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Ch. 252, may be cited as leading cases on this subject.
But it is claimed that as Moms had, in the lifetime of Pierce, levied upon the land, whereby he might, without reviving his judgments, proceed to sell on a venditioni ex-ponas, and purchase in the land on such sale, his rights in that respect are not at all affected by his taking out letters of administration on the estate.
We think the foregoing authorities establish the proposition that a trustee cannot, as a general rule, purchase the trust property, either at his own, or any other sale thereof, and that the principle applies to this case, if the real estate of a decedent is to be considered trust property within the meaning of the rule, and if the rule applies to a sale on execution in favor of the trustee.
There is much plausibility in the proposition that the real estate of a decedent is not within the trust committed to an administrator, unless he proceeds, in the statutory mode, to make it assets for the payment of debts. The personal estate is the primary fund out of which debts are to be paid, and the administrator has nothing to do with the real estate, unless, for the want of sufficient personalty,
'There is an authority, however, that settles both of the points above suggested against the purchaser. Rodgers v. Rodgers, Hop. 515.
In this case, an executor had purchased the lands of the testator on a judgment of his own against the testator.
The chancellor, after stating the case, proceeds as follows :
“ When TIalsey Rodgers assumed the office of executor, he took upon himself all the duties of that trust, and he voluntarily became a trustee of all persons interested in the estate of Thomas Rodgers. * * * In this situation, Halsey Rodgers was both debtor and creditor. He was debtor, as executor, to all the creditors of Thomas Rodgers; he was himself a creditor by the judgment, and he was thus, in respect to his own demand upon the judgment, debtor as executor, and creditor in his own right. If the personal estate of Thomas Rodgers had been sufficient to pay his debts, it would have been the duty of Halsey Rodgers, as executor, to pay the debt to himself from the personal fund. He could not have been allowed, in the exercise of his right as creditor by judgment, to levy the debt to himself from the lands of the testator, while it was his duty as executor to discharge the debt from the personal estate. Such an exercise of his right as creditor would have been subversive of his duty as executor; and it is clear, that in such a case, his right as a creditor must have yielded to the duties of the trust which he had assumed. * * In this case, it is said that TIalsey Rodgers, though a trustee of the personal estate of the testa! or, is not a trustee of the lands. The personal estate being insufficient to pay the debts of the testator, it was necessary that the lands, or some of them, should be sold for the satisfaction of the creditors. All persons interested in the lands were, therefore, interested that the personal effects should be fully applied to the payment of debts. It was the duty of the executor to apply the personal estate in
The property had been sold for less than its value, but the entire reasoning of the Court shows that the same result would have followed had it been otherwise. The sale was set aside, and on appeal to the Court of errors, the decree of the chancellor was affirmed. 3 Wend. 504.
On appeal, it was said by Savage, C. J., “ There is no evidence of any actual fraud in the sale, but the propriety or impropriety of such a sale must depend upon the general question, whether a trustee can be permitted, under any circumstances, to sell the trust property, and become a purchaser at such sale.” After citing the case of Davoue v. Fanning, supra, he holds that the principle is applicable to the case then before the Court, holding the executor a trustee of the real estate, and remarking that, “had the appellant declined the character of executor, he might have pursued his remedy under his judgment and execution; but he should not be permitted, as creditor, to sacrifice, for his own benefit, that very property which his duty, as executor, required him to protect and to dispose of to the best advantage of those entitled to the estate.”
We have been thus liberal in quoting the remarks of the Court, because the case is directly in point, and the reasoning of the Court, in all essential particulars, is applicable to the case at bar. We are inclined to follow the New York doctrine, and hold that the purchase by Morris, under the circumstances, should be set aside on the terms, and in the manner, specified in the order made below. We are not clear that the costs of the suit and of making the sale ordered, should have been included in the sum at which the property was to be reoffered; but upon this
The judgment is affirmed with costs.