65 Iowa 687 | Iowa | 1885
The defendant, Wyngaarden, executed tbe following promissory note:
“$1,400. Pella, Iowa, November 11, 1878.
“ Six years after date, for value received, I promise to pay
The mortgages were given to Jantie Yan Wyngaarden in trust for the beneficiaries named in the note, and it is-provided in the mortgages that the mortgagor “shall pay or cause to be paid to the said Jantie Yan Wyngaarden, in trust for the above-named parties, her executors and administrators, or assigns, the sum of $1,400, with interest thereon from date, according to the tenor and effect of the promissory note above stated; ” then the motgage was to be void'.
In March, 1881, Jantie Van Wyngaarden died, and in June following a portion of the land described in the mortgage was conveyed to J. S. Polk, one of the defendants, and who bound himself to pay the amount of the mortgage, with interest from January 1, 1882. It was pleaded as a defense that the interest up to that time had been paid. The mortgages provided that, in the event the interest was not paid as therein provided, then the whole debt became due. The beneficiaries are grandchildren of Jantie Van Wyngaarden, and are minors, and the plaintiff is their guardian. This suit was commenced in March, 1882, and the court found that there was nothing due at that time, but, as certain interest became due pending the litigation, which the defendant Polk had offered to pay, the court in the decree made suitable provisions in relation thereto, and retained the case on the docket, to the end, if said Polk should fail to pay the interest or principal as it should become due, that the mortgages could be foreclosed.
The defendants introduced in evidence a receipt in the following words, and proved that it was executed by the trustee:
“Received of Jan Van Wyngaarden the sum of one hundred and forty-seven dollars, as interest on a certain note, secured by mortgage, to me given by the said Jan Van Wyngaarden in trust, (for the beneficiaries above named;) this being in full up to January 1, 1882.
“Jantie Yan Wyngaarden.”
Counsel for the plaintiff insist that the receipt is signed by the trustee as an individual, and therefore the beneficiaries-are not bound thereby. But we think it fairly appears from
Counsel further insist that the amount received, $147, was less than the amount of interest due up to January, 1882, and therefore the court erred in finding that the interest up to that time had been pafil. It however is expressly stated in the receipt that the amount then paid was in full of such interest, and it is immaterial whether such amount was then paid or had been received at some prior time. In the absence of fraud or collusion, for the reasons hereafter stated, we think the trustee, as the legal owner of the note, could receive the interest due or to become due at such times and in such amounts as she saw proper; subject, however, to be held accountable at the instance of the beneficiaries for the faithful performance of the trust.
The trust under consideration is materially different; for it is so far declared as to cast on the trustee a duty for the performance of which she will be held accountable. It is made the duty of the trustee to receive and collect the interest and the principal when it becomes due. The legal title to the note and mortgages is vested in the trustee. It is her duty to preserve and protect the interest of the beneficiaries. But, in the absence of fraud or collusion, the trustee could satisfy the mortgages and acknowledge satisfaction of the debt, which would be binding on the beneficiaries. It is said that any one dealing with the trustee must see that money paid in the discharge of the trust was properly appropriated; but we do not think this is so, for the simple reason that the trustee was the legal owner of the note, and authorized to receive payment of both the principal and interest. An administrator in one sense is a trustee for the estate he represents; and yet he is the legal owner of the notes and mortgages belonging thereto. A person making him a, payment is not bound to see that the money is properly accounted for.
The rule, it seems to us, should be the same in the case under consideration. The decree of the circuit court must be
Affirmed.