delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs, appellees here, filed a complaint in equity in the superior court of Cook County for the liquidation of a trust, accounting and other relief. The chancellor dismissed the suit for want of equity. Upon appeal to the Appellate Court, First District, the decree of the trial court was reversed and the cause remanded with directions that a decree be entered in accordance with the views expressed therein, and directing the removal of the trustees. The case comes to this court on leave to appeal.
The property forming the subject matter of the trust is a sixteen-story apartment-hotel building, containing 148 furnished apartments and 31 unfurnished apartments and is located at, and is known as, the 7000 South Shore Drive Building. On November 6, 1935, a liquidation trust agreement was executed pursuant to a plan of reorganization instituted under section 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, wherein the defendants Herbert Hillebrecht, James V. Bremner and Walter A. Wade were appointed Trust Managers, and the Trust Company of Chicago was made the liquidation trustee. The plaintiffs are owners and holders of beneficial trust certificates and instituted the suit as a representative proceeding against the trust managers,, the liquidation trustee and Herbert Hillebrecht, individually, as defendants.
The complaint, filed February 27, 1946, alleges the purpose of the plan was to liquidate the property and convert the same into cash for the benefit of holders of the participation certificates, the trust agreement providing for the sale of the property, upon notice to the then holders of the units, no such sale to be made by the liquidation trustee if, within 20 days after such notice, 33)43 per cent or more of the certificate holders filed written dissents from such
The defendants answered admitting certain plaintiffs were original investors; that defendant Hillebrecht owns only circa 1450 units of the total issued of 14,439 and that he received 35 units in the original reorganization in exchange for his bonds, remainder having been purchased through Greenebaum Investment Company, which at all times maintained an active market in the certificates, and paid prices ranging from $19 per unit to $51.50 per unit; denied the trust managers ever made available to anyone the lists of unit holders and that they mailed to the certificate holders annual statements of cash receipts and disbursements prepared by a certified public accountant which
The trial was of short duration and the only witness called was the defendant Hillebrecht, who testified for the plaintiff as an adverse witness under section 60 of the Civil Practice Act. (111. Rev. Stat. 1949, chap, no, par. 184.) The balance of the testimony was admitted by stipulation of the parties, including the purchases made by the defendants Hillebrecht and Wade together with the various members of their families, all of which purchases, totalling less than 13 per cent of the outstanding total, were made through Greenebaum Investment Company, which company had sold the original bond issue on the property which was in the sum of $1,350,000. Insurance was placed upon the building based on a value of $1,550,000.
Hillebrecht testified he was the resident manager of the building and devoted practically all of his time thereto, thereby effecting a saving to the trust of $6000 to $6700 per year; that he received as compensation for his duties as trust manager the sum of $333.33 per year and a small apartment renting for $65 per month; annual reports were sent to shareholders and several dividends were paid; that it was his honest conviction that an offer for a high enough price had not yet been received and therefore no proposition had as yet been submitted; that the property and furnishings are in excellent condition and that he had spent
The trust agreement provided for the appointment of the trust managers and contained this provision, “Trust Managers, may, but need not, be holders of participation certificates. The rights of any holder of participation certificates to deal freely with Liquidation Trustee and Trust Managers shall not be affected by his being a Trust Manager.”
Counsel admit there is no case in Illinois or elsewhere ' directly dealing with a purchase as shown by the precise facts here presented and we are called upon to decide the case upon analogous reasoning and the application of general principles governing the law of trusts and trustees and their duties to their beneficiaries.
The broad general rule that a trustee may not purchase from himself and at his own sale is universally recognized and is a stern, unbending rule which we have no desire to deprecate. That rule is conceded by the appellants here.
Nor is there any rule of law or equity which prevents a beneficiary of a trust, who is under no incapacity, from disposing of his interest in the trust estate for a consideration; (65 C.J. 546, “Trusts,” sec. 303; id. 774, sec. 645,) and a beneficiary may sell his interest in the trust to the trustee. (Masterson v. Wall,
It is not feasible within reasonable limits to discuss all of the cases cited by counsel. Many volumes and a large number of decisions have been written upon this subject. The inflexibility of the rule of disability of a trustee to purchase assets of his trust is well founded and the reasons therefor are many. Yet, there are likewise many cases, in special circumstances, where the reasons for the rule disappear and when this situation obtains it does not apply. Most of the cases reviewed and which strictly apply the rule are cases where the trustee purchases an encumbrance upon or claim against the trust property. This, however, is not synonymous with the interest of a beneficiary. Others are cases where the beneficiaries were under disability or they are cases which place the trustee in a position of holding an interest adverse to the beneficiary. The interest of a beneficiary is not an encumbrance on the trust estate, nor a claim which is adverse to the trust. A trustee is under no duty to purchase the interest of one beneficiary for the
In Froneberger v. Lewis,
In Brown v. Cooper,
It is.highly significant in the case at bar, that the plaintiffs suing are not the beneficiaries who have sold their units upon the open market. All of the plaintiffs here are
In American Bank and Trust Co. v. Lebanon Bank & Trust Co.
The complaint in the case at bar is predicated upon the theory that defendants purchased a sufficient number of units to block any sale, 33R3 per cent thereof being sufficient
The defendants were selected by the Federal court for the purpose of exercising their judgment and best opinion in the matter of the sale of this property. The trust instrument, binding on all, provides the sale shall be at the sole discretion of the trust managers. To date an adequate price, in their opinion, has not been offered nor has the value of the property recovered to an extent which would warrant a submission of the matter of sale to a vote. In this their opinion may be quite correct. We hold they were not bound to submit any bid under this showing and the court cannot compel the trustees to exercise a discretion given to them by the express terms of the agreement.
Hillebrecht and Wade had no choice or control over the offering of the shares sold. The selling securities owners, in the exercise of their judgment, wished to dispose of their units, made as easily saleable and assignable as stock certificates by the terms of the trust agreement under which their interests arose. The assignors had received statements, and annual dividends, and had the opportunity, open to all, to visualize and inspect the property itself. Any number of reasons may have motivated their placing their shares for sale in the hands of Greenebaum Investment Company, which company maintained an active market for the 14,439 units issued. The defendants could in noway control the offers of those certificates of beneficial interest on the open market. They paid the prevailing market price or more. The record shows they at no time solicited purchases. On the facts shown here we cannot say they had no right to
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the decree of the trial court dismissing the suit for want of equity is affirmed.
Appellate Court reversed; superior court affirmed.
