46 Vt. 485 | Vt. | 1874
The opinion of the court was delivered by
When Birchard yielded to the defendant’s claim that he had an equity of redemption, and Birchard only a mortgage estate in the farm and lands, the defendants right to the equity of redemption was well established as to all parties, and he thereafter was entitled to it, the same as if his right to it had not been disputed. And when Birchard, at the request of the defendant, convoyed the farm aiid lands to the trustee in this suit, the trustee took the title to the equity, in trust for the defendant, and after that time held it to his use as his trustee. And when the trustee, by sale and conveyance of the farm and lands, converted .the equity of redemption into money in his hands, he held the
The whole proceeds of the land sold and conveyed to Stickney, wont to pay the mortgage to Birchard, which was charged on the land, and which it was the duty of the defendant to pay, and to pay $52 which the defendant owed to Stickney, so that none of the avails of that land was in the hands of the trustee for the defendant.
The lands not sold and conveyed, and which the trustee still holds, he holds in trust for the defendant, and does not owe the trustee for. These lands are not such goods, chattels, rights, credits, or effects of the defendant in the hands of the trustee, as can be held by the trustee process. They áre not goods or chattels that could be delivered over by the trustee to an officer, to be sold on execution-; nor could he be held as trustee in this action for the value of them in money, without compelling him. to purchase them at that price. Hunter v. Case et al. & Tr. 20 Vt. 195 ; Stevens v. Kirk & Tr. 37 Vt. 204.
• The rest of the farm and lands the trustee conveyed to Moore, and he received therefor from Moore $6,500. ■ He appears to have paid the Hammond mortgage, $3,799.73, and other sums stated in the disclosure and allowed by the commissioner, to the amount of $1,917.30, for the defendant, which payments left in his hands $782.97. This sum is to be varied according to the way in which questions that have been made with reference to a part of it being-due for the defendant’s homestead, to the land which came from the estate of the trustee’s mother, and to allowing the trustee for the defendant’s support, are decided.
The report of the commissioner does not expressly state that
The piece of land that came from the estate of the trustee’s mother, appears to have been conveyed to Stickney, and the consideration for it to have been paid by him to Birchard, towards the mortgage due to Birchard from the defendant. The value of it is stated in the report at $880, and it must be presumed, in the absence of any further finding, to have been sold for that amount, and, consequently, to have paid that amount on that mortgage. This piece of land appears to have been paid for to the extent of $500, from property bequeathed to the trustee’s mother, who was the defendant’s wife, by her mother, and it does not appear that this part of the bequest was ever reduced to possession by the defendant or claimed by him. Nor does it appear that he ever paid anything for this land, nor even that the price of it was more than was paid out of her bequest. The title to it appears to have been conveyed to her; and, for anything that appears, it was her land. When she died, the defendant must have become entitled to a life estate in it as tenant- by the curtesy, and the reversion have descended to her children, the trustee and his brother and sister. This land was subject to a mortgage to Race, which, when paid, amounted to $359.98, and was paid off by the trustee, and allowed and reckoned to him in the sum of $1,917.30 before mentioned. It does not appear from the report, to whom it belonged to pay off this mortgage. If it belonged to the defendant to do it, then the trustee has been allowed no more than he should be on account- of having paid it, and there still remains his share in the reversion that has gone to pay the Birchard mortgage for the defendant, that he has not been allowed for, and he is entitled to
As to the claim that the trustee should be allowed for the support of the defendant, it appears from the report that he has furnished such support since the sale to Moore, in September, 1871. The commissioner further reports, that no express contract was ever made between them about it, and that the defendant never told the trustee he should pay, nor the trustee the defendant he should charge, anything for it; and he decides that the trustee is not entitled to be allowed anything for it, and allows nothing for it accordingly. Up to the time of the sale of the farm, the trustee does not appear to have been supporting the defendant, any more than the defendant was the trustee ; therefore, thfe support furnished was not the mere continuation of support which had been furnished without charge, according to the understanding of the parties, nor under circumstances such that the law would not allow any charge to be enforced. The trustee had means in his hands belonging to the defendant, and with which, if paid over, the defendant could procure his own support. The trustee furnished the support, and these circumstances would help the implication
The judgment must therefore be reversed, and the cause recommitted to the commissioner, to report the value of the trustee’s share in the land inherited from his mother ; the facts in relation to the mortgage upon it; and the value of the support furnished. Judgment reversed, and, at request of parties, cause remanded.