Boston Safe Deposit and Trust Company (Boston Safe), as trustee of its Common Trust Fund “C”, has appealed from a probate judge’s order reopening the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth accounts. 2 The twelfth account was allowed on May 2, 1973, the thirteenth on July 8, 1975, and the fourteenth on September 24, 1975, to each of which guardians ad litem assented.
The plaintiff, John Roche, appointed guardian ad litem in connection with the fifteenth account, objected to the allowance of the fifteenth account and commenced this action in equity to revoke the earlier decrees because of Boston Safe’s alleged fraud in failing to disclose material information. After an eleven-day trial, the judge ordered the reopening of the twelfth through fourteenth accounts “for all purposes.”
Boston Safe filed a notice of appeal and Mr. Roche filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the judge’s order was interlocutory in nature. This court allowed Boston Safe’s application for direct appellate review and deferred action on the motion to dismiss the appeal for consideration following oral argument.
Boston Safe makes the following claims: (1) the judge’s findings of fact, which allegedly were adopted wholesale from the guardian ad litem’s requests for findings, are clearly erroneous, and (2) the judge’s “conclusions of law” that Boston Safe committed fraud in law (a) by failing to disclose that it held an illiquid aggregate amount of stock in a publicly traded company in accounts over which it had investment discretion and (b) by failing to disclose the proper construction of an ap
The controversy results from the aggregate investment by The Boston Company, Inc. (Boston Company), and its affiliates (of which Boston Safe is one), in a real estate investment trust (REIT) entitled State Mutual Investors, Inc. (SMI). SMI, established by the State Mutual Assurance Company of Worcester, Massachusetts, became listed on the New York Stock Exchange in February, 1971. In 1971, Boston Company Investment Research and Technology, Inc. (BCIRT), a group which advises Boston Company and its affiliates on investment decisions, recommended SMI as a security worthy of investment. BCIRT rated SMI as a mid-range investment, which was the lowest quality stock in which a portfolio manager of Common Trust Fund “C” could invest. At that time, SMI had been established for one year and had been publicly traded for ten months.
In early 1972, Common Trust Fund “C” bought 70,000 shares of SMI. At that time, Boston Company and its affiliates held, in the aggregate, approximately 350,000 shares of SMI in trust accounts over which it had investment discretion. By May, 1974, Boston Company and its affiliates held, in the aggregate, 588,208 shares of SMI, which constituted 21.1% of the outstanding shares.
SMI did not prove to be a fruitful investment. In the fourth quarter of 1974, the highly leveraged
3
company, experienced an earnings “squeeze” caused by increased interest rates and defaults on large loans. As a result, SMI announced that it was required to forgo its dividend. In June, 1974, which fell
Boston Safe filed the fifteenth account in the Probate Court on November 19, 1975. The Probate Court appointed Mr. Roche guardian ad litem in February, 1976. Upon his appointment, he took notice that substantial losses were incurred during the fifteenth accounting period. He also surveyed the trust instrument thoroughly and noticed an “exculpatory clause” in the miscellaneous section of the document. Section 12.1 of the document provides that “[t]he discretion of the Trustee and of the Trust Committee, when exercised in good faith, shall be binding upon all persons.” Upon inquiry of Boston Safe’s attorney, Mr. Roche discovered that the clause only referred to discretion concerning ministerial acts, such as selection of fiscal years, valuation dates, and the like and that it did not bar a surcharge for imprudent investments. This interpretation admittedly had not been disclosed to previous guardians ad litem, but the record does not demonstrate that these guardians were in fact misled by the clause. Having received this information, Mr. Roche proceeded to investigate the twelfth through fourteenth accounts. His investigation revealed an exceedingly high percentage of shares of SMI among accounts governed by Boston Safe and its affiliates.
This information prompted Mr. Roche not only to object to the fifteenth account, but also to commence an action pursuant to G. L. c. 206, § 24, to revoke the prior decrees which had allowed the twelfth through fourteenth accounts. In the original complaint, Mr. Roche alleged that during the period from 1972
Mr. Roche later filed an amended complaint which repeated the allegations of the original complaint and also requested that the trustee’s previously allowed accounts be reopened “for all purposes. ” 4 The basis for this contention was the exculpatory clause within the trust document. The amended complaint alleged that this clause may have misled prior guardians ad litem and beneficiaries into believing that the trustee was subject to surcharge only upon proof of “bad faith.”
At trial, Mr. Roche produced expert witnesses who testified to the existence of the five percent rule of thumb. In particular, Martin Earl Lybecker, employed at the Securities and Exchange Commission, opined that the basis for the rule lay in (1) the potential marketability problems which result from the difficulty of trading a large block of securities, and (2) the potential conflicts of interest among various accounts which result when large amounts of stock are sold piecemeal at varying times. He testified that if a corporate fiduciary were to sell a large aggregate of the type held by Boston Company all at once, it would be forced to sell at a discount of the market price. Thus the trust accounts would incur a substantial loss. Conversely, he stated that, if the shares from the various accounts were sold piecemeal, inevitably the first shares traded in the market would receive a better price than the last shares traded. He noted that internal conflicts of interest among various accounts would result if the corporate fiduciary sold the shares in this
Mr. Dana Mauch, a portfolio manager of Common Trust Fund “C” during the pertinent time period, maintained that his decision not to sell the remaining 45,000 shares of SMI during the period of the fifteenth account was based on account considerations. He explained that each account manager made individual decisions and that no internal plan or policy existed with respect to aggregate holdings within the entire trust department. He also testified that during the entire time he dealt with SMI he considered it to be liquid. His definition of liquidity was the ability to sell if necessary.
Boston Safe presented numerous expert witnesses who denied the existence of the five-percent rule. Mr. George Kidder, a fiduciary, testified that he knew of no five-percent rule in Massachusetts and that marketability of stock should not be the exclusive determinant of a prudent investment. Retired Judge Cornelius J. Moynihan, a law professor who taught trust law for many years and a witness called by Boston Safe, stated that he had never encountered the rule alleged in Mr. Roche’s complaint. Five other expert witnesses testified to the same effect.
The probate judge found in favor of Mr. Roche and concluded that Boston Safe had committed “fraud in law” within the meaning of G. L. c. 206, § 24, for failure to disclose material information. The judge based her decision on two grounds: (1) the insertion of section 12.1 in the trust instrument without disclosing its meaning and (2) the failure to disclose in the previously allowed accounts the marketability problems of the SMI shares caused by large aggregate holdings. The judge found as fact that corporate trust departments follow the five-percent rule. She found that a holding in excess of five per
1. Appealability of the revocation order. The first matter we must address is whether the judge’s ruling which reopens the twelfth through fourteenth accounts “for all purposes” is properly before us on appeal. Mr. Roche contends that the judge’s order is purely interlocutory because the judgment below orders further proceedings and does not finally adjudicate the rights and liabilities of the parties. We do not agree.
Interlocutory orders, absent a report from the trial judge, G. L. c. 215, § 13, generally will not be heard by an appellate court until final judgment has been entered.
Borman
v.
Bor-man,
We conclude that a judgment ordering the reopening of trust accounts is a final judgment under our doctrine of present execution. Our reasoning in
Ferrick
v.
Barry,
2.
Findings of fact.
Boston Safe argues that certain of the judge’s findings are clearly erroneous. We shall assume without deciding that the findings were warranted by the evidence. It further suggests that we must subject the judge’s findings to a stricter scrutiny because she adopted Mr. Roche’s requested findings verbatim. After carefully comparing the judge’s findings with requests submitted by Mr. Roche, we conclude that the judge’s findings display, though dimly, a “badge of personal analysis.”
Cormier
v.
Carty,
3. Fraud in law. General Laws c. 206, § 24, which governs the allowance and reopening of accounts, provides, in part, that a probate account once allowed “shall not be impeached except for fraud or manifest error.” General Laws c. 203A, § 3, however, governs the allowance of common trust fund accounts. Section 3 provides that G. L. c. 206, § 24, governs the application for allowance of accounts but further provides that “[t]he allowance of such an account shall be conclusive as to all matters shown therein upon all persons then or thereafter interested in the funds invested in said common trust fund.” Boston Safe contends that the use of the word “conclusive” in G. L. c. 203A, § 3, imposes a more stringent burden of proof upon any person who seeks to upset the allowance of a common trust fund account. The Massachusetts Bankers Association in its amicus brief urges that the word “conclusive” precludes any action for reopening of an allowed account. We need not decide this issue.
a.
Disclosure of aggregate.
The judge concluded that it was “fraud in law” for Boston Safe to fail to disclose in its
As we stated earlier, we assume the evidence warranted a finding that the five percent rule existed and that the aggregate holding was illiquid, i.e., could not be sold regularly on the market without substantial loss. The account prepared and submitted to the court by Boston Safe conformed to the accepted methods and the requirements at the pertinent dates. In the twelfth account the trustee listed only the book value of the SMI shares, which was all that was required at the time. See
Taylor
v.
Worcester County Nat’l Bank,
Boston Safe argues that although aggregate holdings of a corporate fiduciary may have a bearing on the value of a security held in a particular account, the probate judge’s ruling in effect would impose an entirely new accounting practice on corporate fiduciaries retroactively. We concur and decline to impose such a rule.
Taylor
v.
Worcester County Nat’l Bank, supra,
presents an analogous situation though it involved real estate and not shares of stock. In
Taylor,
we held that the traditional method of accounting, i.e., stating assets at book value, even if doing so produced a distorted picture, was neither fraudulent nor manifest error.
Id.
at 690. See
Old Colony Trust Co.
v.
Mabbett,
Similarly, in the case at hand the shares of SMI in the trust were accounted for in the usual and accepted manner. The aggregate holding of over five percent may have had a bearing on the value of the SMI shares but we cannot conclude that the accounting method used to determine readily ascertainable market value was fraudulent or manifestly erroneous. It is the duty of the beneficiaries and guardian ad litem to examine the accounts and to make their objections.
National Academy of Sciences
v.
Cambridge Trust Co.,
The judge was primarily concerned with Boston Safe’s possible violation of the prudent man rule through its investment
b. Exculpatory clause. The judge concluded that there existed fraud in law on the separate and independent ground that Boston Safe failed to disclose to prior guardians ad litem that section 12.1 of the trust instrument (the exculpatory clause) only applied to ministerial matters. Boston Safe contends that fraud cannot be predicated on a trustee’s failure to volunteer a legal opinion eliminating the possibility of a misconstruction of a term in a governing trust instrument. We agree.
The interpretation was never in dispute in this proceeding and Mr. Roche himself, after some legal research and investigation, determined that section 12.1 could not operate to preclude a surcharge for an imprudent investment. Additionally, we note that Mr. Roche failed to produce any evidence indicating that prior guardians ad litem had misconstrued the clause. The guardians ad litem for the disputed accounts were attorneys. Furthermore, we observe that the trust instrument required compliance with the prudent man rule of investment. There is no indication that Boston Safe was ever relieved of this responsibility. These factors lead us to conclude that there was no basis for requiring Boston Safe to submit to a legal interpretation of section 12.1.
Accordingly, it was reversible error for the judge to conclude that failure of Boston Safe to disclose the correct legal interpretation of its exculpatory clause and the fact that its aggregate holdings exceeded five percent constituted fraud. The order of the probate judge reopening the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth accounts is vacated, and the case is remanded to the Probate Court for further proceedings in light of this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
We note with gratitude that the Division of Public Charities of the office of the Attorney General, the American Bankers Association, and the Massachusetts Bankers Association, have filed briefs as amici curiae.
“Leverage,” as applied to a REIT, is a term used to describe the situation when a REIT borrows money at a particular interest rate and lends the money to builders or developers at a higher rate of interest. A large percentage of the company’s capitalization is debt as opposed to equity.
General Laws c. 206, § 24, as amended through St. 1963, c. 356, provides: “After a final decree has been entered on any account hereunder it shall not be impeached except for fraud or manifest error.”
