Albright v. Jefferson County National Bank

53 N.E.2d 753, 292 N.Y. 31, 151 A.L.R. 897, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1412
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 13, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 53 N.E.2d 753 (Albright v. Jefferson County National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albright v. Jefferson County National Bank, 53 N.E.2d 753, 292 N.Y. 31, 151 A.L.R. 897, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1412 (N.Y. 1944).

Opinion

Lehman, Ch. J.

The defendant hank was appointed trustee under a deed of trust executed by Alexander Copley in May, 1924, and a deed of trust executed by him in November, 1926. In 1938, after the death of the settlor, the beneficiary and the remainderman of the trust created by the settlor brought this action to compel the trustee to render an account of its acts, conduct and proceedings. The plaintiffs allege in their complaint, upon information and belief, the defendant herein, in violation of its duty as Trustee of the aforesaid trust, has improperly, improvidently and unlawfully administered the same by investing the said fund in a manner and in securities unauthorized by law and in violation of the terms of the aforesaid agreements.” The defendant trustee denied these allegations but did not deny its obligation to account. Accordingly the parties stipulated that an interlocutory judgment should be entered providing that the trustee should file its account; that the plaintiffs might file objections thereto; and that the issues raised by such objections should be referred to Hon. EeNest I. Edgcomb as Official Referee to hear and determine.

The plaintiffs filed no objections to the account of the trustee under the deed of trust executed in May 1924. We are concerned only with objections to the account of the trustee under the deed of trust of November 1926. The evidence conclusively establishes, and both the Official Referee and the Appellate Division have held, that the transactions complained of were *35 conducted openly and under a claim of right and without negligence or willful wrongdoing. The objections of the plaintiff are based primarily upon the fact that the trustee purchased some securities for the trust estate from Jefferson Securities Corporation, a corporation closely affiliated with itself; and in other transactions the trustee employed Jefferson Securities Corporation and paid commissions to it as broker in the purchase of securities from other owners. The plaintiffs state in their objections that: “ The Securities Corporation was, in law, the Trustee ” and they urge that the Trustee should be surcharged with the purchase price of securities purchased from Jefferson Securities Corporation on the ground that the Trustee was dealing with itself in these transactions, and should be surcharged with commissions paid to the Securities Corporation as broker in other transactions, because in effect such commissions constitute profits unlawfully taken by the trustee for itself.

The referee upon undisputed evidence found that in 1918 the Board of Directors of the defendant bank adopted a resolution “ that in the opinion of this Board, there should be organized by the stockholders of this bank a Securities Corporation to co-operate with the bank in the purchase and sale of securities and of the taking of,title to property where necessary, provided and with the understanding that in so far as it is possible with the co-operation of the stockholders of the bank, the stockholders of the Securities Corporation should be identical with the stockholders of the Bank, and that the directors of the Securities Corporation be selected from the directors of the bank.”

At a subsequent meeting the Board of Directors approved “ of a form of agreement for the organization of a securities corporation to be known as ‘ The Jefferson Securities Corporation,’ and of the certificate of incorporation ”. The purpose of the plan or agreement to organize the Security Corporation was expressed in the ” clause of the resolution of approval as follows: “ Opportunities for making desirable investments and for performing services, other than those which are possible in the ordinary course of banking business, are, from time to time, presented to the officers of the Bank, which they desire to make available to the shareholders of the Bank and to the public.”

*36 The plan was approved by the stockholders of the Bank and' Jefferson Securities Corporation was incorporated and has been doing business in accordance with the plan since 1919. On each certificate of stock which has been issued, a statement is indorsed showing that it is held by Trustees in for the benefit of the shareholders of the Jefferson County National Bank ”. During the period when the transaction now challenged took place, the seven directors of the Securities Corporation were also members of the Board of Directors of the Bank; and the beneficial owners of the stock of the Securities Corporation were the stockholders of the Bank. Though each corporation maintained a separate corporate existence, did a separate business, maintained a separate staff which was separately housed, and though the profits made by the Securities Corporation never reached the treasury of the Bank and pos: sible losses could not reduce the moneys available for payment of the creditors of the Bank, yet the'profits of the Securities Corporation enured solely to the benefit of the stockholders of the Bank in the same proportion as the profits of the Bank, and the same stockholders and the same directors controlled both corporations.

*37 Upon these undisputed facts and the findings based upon them, the learned Official Referee rejected the objections of the plaintiffs and refused to surcharge the Trustee either with the purchase price of securities which the Trustee bought from the Securities Corporation, or with profits made by the Securities Corporation. Among the “ conclusions ” embodied in his formal decision are:

“ 1. That the Jefferson Securities Corporation not an instrumentality, a department or the alter ego of the defendant in the making of the investments to which the plaintiffs have objected; neither were the two corporations identical, nor were in law or in fact to be considered herein in effect as the same legal person.
“ 2. That the defendant Bank did not purchase or acquire from itself any of the trust securities to which the plaintiffs have objected, nor was there any ‘ self-dealing ’ on its part in reference thereto.
3. That the defendant Bank did not receive, directly or indirectly, any secret profits, commissions or other unlawful advantage in the purchase or in the handling of the securities to which the plaintiffs have objected.
‘ ‘ 4. That the defendant Bank, either as Trustee or otherwise, did not act improperly, impr'ovidently or unlawfully in the investment of the trust funds herein, or in administering or managing the estate. ’ ’

Upon appeal to the Appellate Division the judgment of the Official Referee was reversed “ on the law and facts ”. The Appellate Division did not, however, change or disturb the findings of fact made by the Official Referee except that it modified two findings in manner not material to the question we are now considering, and made some new findings in accordance with requests to find of the plaintiffs which the Official Referee had rejected. The substance of these requests to find was,- for the most part, embodied in findings made by the Official Referee, and do not materially affect the conclusions of the Official Referee. These conclusions ” were not expressly reversed by the Appellate Division, nor were other formal ‘

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E.2d 753, 292 N.Y. 31, 151 A.L.R. 897, 1944 N.Y. LEXIS 1412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albright-v-jefferson-county-national-bank-ny-1944.