70 N.Y.S. 1065 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The nature of the action and the questions involved are fully presented in the opinion of the learned judge at special term, which is reported in 32 Misc. Rep. 111, 66 N. Y. Supp. 260, and from which we take the liberty to quote:
“This action is brought on the part of the plaintiff to recover of the defendant Edith M. K. Wetmore, the younger, as sole executrix under the will of Henry Keteltas, the last surviving trustee of the estate of John Gardner, deceased, an undivided one-seventh part of the sum of $230,040.36 received by said Henry Keteltas as trustee on the 4th of May, 1894. John*1066 Gardner died in December, 1817, leaving a last will and testament in which, certain trusts were created for the benefit of his children. .The trust for his daughter Malvina, who afterwards married Eugene Iveteltas, is the trust involved in this action, and terminated .upon her death, June 20, 1894. Prior to the termination of this trust, Henry Keteltas, son of Malvina Keteltas, had been substituted as trustee, and at the time of the transactions under consideration was sole trustee of the trust for his mother. Prior to 1892 the city of New York instituted proceedings to acquire, for purposes of a public park, .certain real estate which formed part of the trust estate; and', on May 5, 1894, Henry Keteltas, as trustee, received an award for property-taken amounting to the sum of 8230,040.36. It is claimed that a large portion of the award was applied by the trustee to the construction of buildings-upon vacant lots in the city of New York. These lots had been formerly improved; but the buildings were ancient, and generally of frame construction, in some instances with brick sides or fronts. Many of them were ordered down by the building department, as being unsafe and incapable of further repair; and all of them were substantially, if not entirely, in an untenantable condition. The trust term had been in existence nearly sixty years, and these buildings, some of them, were said to have been over one-hundred years old, and others fifty years old. * * * The plaintiff was examined as a witness on both trials upon the question as to his having received notice of the appropriation of a portion of the amount of the award by Henry Keteltas, surviving trustee under the will of John Gardner, to the-erection of said buildings. On that trial he admitted that, before this suit was brought, he knew that the money had been expended on these buildings. * * * On the present trial the witness says that he never knew or heard that his uncle devoted a portion of this award to payment for erection of houses until trial before Judge Werner, and then says that lie-first heard it from his father, who is attorney in this case; cannot tell whether it was a year ago or two years ago; that then his father told him only that defendants made such a claim in their answer; and when asked' the direct question by his counsel whether he was mistaken in his testimony on the first trial, to the effect that he did know this money had been-expended upon these buildings before he brought this suit, he answered, T think I was.’ It appears from the evidence that the plaintiff has, since the-death of Henry Keteltas, been in receipt of statements of the amount of' the rents, and has also received his proportionate share of the rents of the-property held in trust by the latter.”
In passing upon the claim of the plaintiff that he did not know of the appropriation of a portion of the moneys received from the award, to the erection of the buildings, and that there is no evidence that any of the moneys were thus applied, the learned judge says:
“I think thát a very strong presumption of such knowledge on the part of the plaintiff arises from the discrepancy between his testimony on the-first and second trials. But, assuming that the plaintiff had no knowledge-upon the subject, I also think that enough has been shown from the portions-of the entries contained in the cash book of Henry Keteltas which were admitted in evidence upon the trial, and by the testimony of the architect, Ivutzner, to justify the conclusion that certain expenses were made by the-trustee from moneys received upon the award for the purpose of erecting buildings in place of those which had become untenantable' by reason of decay, and which had been condemned by the board of health, as unsafe.”
The other necessary facts connected with the issue presented upon-, this appeal are to be found in Greason v. Keteltas, 17 N. Y. 491, wherein the court of appeals gave a construction to the will of John Gardner; and one of the judges, in the opinion in that case, discusses the extent of the power conferred upon the trustees by the will. Tliefundamental question which was presented upon this trial, and which is before us upon this appeal, is as to the power of the trustees to ap
The general rule, as stated in 2 Perry, Trusts (5th Ed.) § 475, with respect to a trust created by will which is imperative, is as follows:
“The duty and power given in such trusts must be strictly performed. There is no room for discretion or divergence from the particular directions contained in the instrument; as, where money was left to a trustee to be-laid out in lands, he had no discretion to purchase land with a part of the money, and to expend the remainder in repairs and improvements.”
The authorities cited in support of this rule are largely cases-arising either between co-tenants or between life tenants and remainder-men. In Re Deckelmann, 84 Hun, 476, 32 N. Y. Supp. 404, Mr. Justice Cullen, after stating the rule as between life tenants and. remainder-men, said:
“But there is now a tendency to limit the application of the rule stated. In the recently decided case of Stevens v. Melcher, 80 Hun, 514, 30 N. Y. Supp. 625, it was held that certain permanent repairs on the trust realty should be charged to the corpus of the trust, not to the equitable life tenant.”
In that case (Stevens v. Melcher) Mrs. Stevens, with the consent' of the trustees, had furnished money for the construction of a building upon the trust estate; and upon appeal to the court of appeals,, reported in 152 N. Y. 566, 46 N. E. 968, it was said:
“If we were to treat Mrs. Stevens as a life tenant, and limited in authority to the rules of the common law, there might be some difficulty in sustaining’ the conclusion reached by the general term with reference to this item of her claim, but such does not appear to be her relation to the estate. The-testator did not see fit to give her the possession and control of the million dollar trust, or of the real estate set apart for and composing that trust, but, instead thereof, gave the same to others in trust ‘to hold, invest, and' manage’ during her life, to collect the income and the receipts therefrom, and pay to her, and upon her decease to divide the trust estate or fund' among the remainder-men specified. The trustees were thereby made the-owners and given the possession of the trust estate, and as such had certain duties to perform with reference thereto. They were required to invest and manage so as to produce an income for Mrs. Stevens, and to care for and preserve the principal of the estate for the benefit of the remainder-men. The relation of Mrs. Stevens was that of life beneficiary under the trust,— the cestui que trust of her trustees.”
And in Chaplin, Exp. Trusts & Powers, § 437, in discussing the question of what may and may not be deducted from income, it is said:
“The starting point must be the general and rather strict principle that the trustee or any life tenant is not authorized to run up charges for repairs- or improvements against the remainder-man, or eat into the capital. * * * It seems, however, that this rule has become somewhat relaxed, and the-tendency of the later cases is to limit its application.”
In support of this last statement the author refers to the two decisions from which we have already quoted (Stevens v. Melcher and
“In cases where, on accounting, all parties being before the court, it appears that the net result of the trustee’s use of the corpus for outlays, even though unauthorized, has in fact resulted in n'o loss, or shows a gain, and where, accordingly, in adjusting the accounts the court may set off the depletion of corpus against its accretion according to general principles of equity, there it will be done.”
An examination of the authorities which sustain the general rule, as well as those which, from the necessities of particular cases, have ingrafted upon it numerous exceptions, will show, with respect to the action of trustees in dealing with the trust estate, that where their course is dictated by good motives, by wise judgment, and in accordance with prudent and sound business principles, the tendency of the courts is to treat the trustees fairly and justly. This we understand to be but another way of saying what has been so well expressed in the leading case in this state, of King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76, ¡relating to the duty of trustees in making investments:
“That the trustee is bound to employ such diligence and such prudence in the care and management as, in general, prudent men of discretion and intelligence employ in their own affairs.”
There was no proof given that the trustee did not perform his duty with respect to using such*part of the income as was proper in keeping the buildings in repair; and the presumption, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, being that he performed his duty in that regard, we must assume, as was in effect found by the special term, that the buildings upon the lots constituting a part of the original" estate left by John Gardner had, merely by lapse of time, become so worn out and dilapidated as, without further repair, to be ordered down by the building department. It was clearly to the advantage of both the life tenant and the remainder-man that, after these buildings were removed, they should be succeeded by other and more modern buildings; and the evidence shows that the action of the trustee in the erection of the new buildings was wise and prudent, and for the best interest of the property. As it was of advantage to the estate, therefore, that new buildings should be substituted in the place of those which had become useless or which had been taken down by order of the board of health, the only remaining question is as to whether the trustee was justified in using any portion of the award for this purpose, or was obliged to allow the property to remain in an unproductive state. This latter, certainly, would not be for the interest of any one.; and, if new buildings were to be substituted for the old, we would have (leaving out the possibility of the trustee advancing his own money for the improvement, which he might be reluctant to do) but one or the other of the following means available from which funds could be secured to rebuild, namely: Either to borrow on a mortgage, which, as we take it, would be equally objec
“It cannot be contended with any show of reason that the trustee was bound, in administering this trust through a period of eighty years, to reserve and withhold from the life tenant moneys out of the income for the purpose, not of repair, but of erecting wholly new buildings, when those already upon the premises should, by reason of lapse of time, become incapable of further repair.”
Apart, therefore, from the question as to whether the plaintiff is estopped from opposing such outlay by reason of his knowledge thereof and failure to object, or as to whether or not the act of 1839 (chapter 345, Laws 1839) conferring upon the trustees of this estate certain powers is constitutional, or gives to the trustee, if constitutional, the right to make the expenditure, it will be seen that we have reached the conclusion that, upon the facts here appearing, the principle laid down by the learned judge at special term to be applied upon the accounting in reference to such expenditure as it may be proved the trustee made is right and proper, not alone because it is supported by authority, but because it is clearly equitable and just. Had the property been left unimproved, and were the award in a trust company still intact, the plaintiff would be no better off than he is as the result of the taking of a portion of the award and improving the property; but we think it would be inequitable, to a degree, to