Constand A. Moeller died on J une 1, 1914, a resident of New Haven, and under his will, filed in the Probate Court for the district of New Haven, a trust was created which provided for the distribution of the trust estate among his grandchildren, per capita, upon the death of the last survivor of his children.
1
Pour trustees, all now
The facts found, with such corrections as are warranted, are, so far as pertinent to a consideration of the questions presented, as follows: At the time of the death of the testator, he was the distributor in Connecticut for Narragansett beer. During the settlement of his estate, the Probate Court, pursuant to what is now § 45-256 of the General Statutes, ordered the continued operation of this distributorship by the temporary administrator, the executors, and the trustees, in succession, for the purpose of the prudent winding up of the estate. This order
The trust estate owns 20 per cent of the capital stock of the Narragansett Brewing Company and also a number of parcels of real estate and mortgages on real property. Moeller is a director of the brewing company, representing the stock interest held therein by the trust estate. He owns no stock, personally, in the brewing company. Between 1950 and 1957, the brewing company paid dividends in stock instead of in cash as theretofore. Certain beneficiaries of the trust estate were opposed to the continuation of stock dividends and so informed Moeller and Kautz. Thereafter, at directors’ meetings and at stockholders’ meetings of the brewing company, these trustees opposed the continuance of the company policy of paying dividends in stock. In 1957, at the request of all the trustees, a special meeting of the directors of the brewing company was held at which the trustees
Annual accounts as required by § 45-268 of the General Statutes were filed by the trustees in the Probate Court and were accepted and allowed, after due notice and hearing, without objection by any beneficiary until Phillips filed an objection in 1957. Prom and after 1940, he had notice of the hearings in the Probate Court on the annual accounts by means of public notices published pursuant to §45-269 in the New Haven newspapers; and from 1953 to 1957 he also received personal notice of the hearings.
During the trial, Phillips attacked the retirement allowances which had been made to two employees of the trustees. One was a son of the testator who had been employed by the latter prior to 1914 and had been continued on the same job by the trustees until he became infirm and was retired on $30 a week. The duties he performed before his disability were substantially those he had performed for his father during the latter’s lifetime. The other was an employee who had worked for the estate for forty-two years, beginning in 1914, as secretary, bookkeeper and general office manager, and who was granted a retirement allowance at half salary
There are forty-one living beneficiaries or potential beneficiaries of the trust, and none besides Phillips appeared in either the Probate Court or the Superior Court in support of the application to remove the defendant trustees. On the other hand, several beneficiaries and potential distributees appeared in the Probate Court and the Superior Court, by permission of the court and with the consent of Phillips’ counsel, to oppose the application.
In the Superior Court, and in brief and argument, the specific acts charged as the basis for the grounds
The issue presented in the Superior Court was whether the Probate Court erred in denying the application for the removal of Moeller and Kautz as trustees. Whether there was adequate ground for their removal was a question addressed to the sound discretion of the Probate Court, and its conclusion could not be disturbed on appeal unless that discretion was abused.
Peck
v.
Searle,
Whether, on the facts established, the action of the Probate Court was proper may be tested in the light of the following quotation from 1 Perry, Trusts and Trustees (7th Ed.) p. 493, which presents pertinent considerations notwithstanding that the present trustees, grandsons of the testator, are successor trustees, having been appointed to succeed the original trustees named by the testator,
During the trial, Phillips, by his attorney, con
To support the charge that the defendant trustees violated the “double security” requirements of the trust, Phillips calls attention to a purchase money mortgage of $21,060 taken by the trustees as security for the balance of the purchase price of property sold by them in 1957 for $23,400. The property had been acquired by foreclosure of an earlier mortgage in which the total investment of the trust, including the expenses of the foreclosure, was less than $11,000. The court properly found that the purchase money mortgage, taken as part of the financing of the resale of the property, was not in violation of the provisions of the will.
The principal ground on which Phillips urges the
The conclusions of the court that the defendant trustees performed their duties in a manner consonant with the best interests of the trust and that they did not put themselves in a position of conflict between their own interests and their duties to the trust estate are thoroughly supported by the established facts. Phillips, as already noted, expressly disclaimed any charge of fraud or dereliction of duty on the part of these trustees. These concessions, coupled with the record of efficient and prudent administration of the trust extending over a long period of years during which the trust estate increased to several times its original value, lend no support to the charge that the proper and efficient administration of the estate in the future will be imperiled by the continuation of Moeller and Kautz as trustees. The Superior Court was fully warranted in concluding that the Probate Court did not abuse its discretion in denying the application for removal.
Error was assigned in a number of rulings on evidence. There was no harmful error in any of these rulings, and no discussion of them is required.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“(2) I give, devise and bequeath, to Ernst Frederick Moeller, Herbert L. Moeller, Moses Rogers and Richard P. Jahm all of New Haven, all the rest and residue and remainder of my property,
“(3) Upon the death of any of said children, leaving issue surviving them at the time of my decease, or at any time before the death of the last survivor of my said children the annual payments herein-before provided for such child or children shall be paid to their children during their lifetime, share and share alike, or to the issue of such children, until the death of the last survivor of my said children.
“(4) Upon the death of the last survivor of my said children I give, devise and bequeath all the rest and residue of my estate to my grandchildren, to take per capita and not per stirpes.
“(5) If any of my grandchildren shall have died previous to the time of the division above directed, I direct that the share of such grandchild shall be divided equally among the children of such grandchild, if he or she leaves any, but in default of such children the share of such deceased grandchild shall be divided equally among the surviving grandchildren taking per capita and not per stirpes.”
