Bailie v. Sheldon

115 Misc. 441, 189 N.Y.S. 749
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 115 Misc. 441 (Bailie v. Sheldon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailie v. Sheldon, 115 Misc. 441, 189 N.Y.S. 749 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1921).

Opinion

Lehman, J.

Frank Howard Bailie, the' father of the plaintiff, died on or about the 15th day of December, 1915. At the time of his death he was the owner of two hundred and twenty-five shares of the capital stock of the H. K. Porter Company holding three certificates for fifteen shares, sixty shares and one hundred and fifty shares respectively. Under the terms of his will he bequeathed twenty-five shares of this stock to his father and twenty-five shares of the same stock to his mother. He devised and bequeathed one-half of the residue of his estate to his wife Edith B. Bailie and he directed that the other one-half should be held in trust until his oldest child should have attained the age of twenty-one years and that each of his children should receive a proportionate share in the said one-half of such residuary estate upon arrival at the age of twenty-one years. The testator appointed his wife Edith B. Bailie sole trustee and executrix of his estate. The plaintiff is the only child of the testator and is now over twenty-one years of age and therefore entitled to receive one-half of the residuary estate of his father.

It appears that on or about April 14,1917, Edith B. Bailie deposited the certificate for 150 shares of the H. K. Porter Company stock with the defendant, a firm of stockbrokers doing business under the name of. Sheldon, Dawson, Lyon & Co., with instructions to sell the same. At the same time she instructed them to purchase other stock for her individual account and to hold the H. K. Porter Company stock until sold, [444]*444as margin upon her purchase, and when such stock was sold, to apply the proceeds thereof upon the purchase of the stock which she directed them to 'buy for her account. The stock deposited with the brokers was never sold by them but is now held as collateral by the stockbrokers who claimed a lien thereon to secure them for the considerable loss which Edith B. Bailie sustained in the purchase of stock through them.

The plaintiff has never received his share of the residuary estate and he now asks that the defendant firm of stockbrokers should be ordered to deliver possession of the stock certificate held by them to the defendant Edith B. Bailie as executrix of his father’s estate.

At the time that the stock certificate was delivered to the brokers, they had full notice and knowledge that it was part of the estate of Frank H. Bailie, deceased. "With such knowledge they permitted the executrix to use the stock as collateral for her personal account. Edith B. Bailie in delivering the stock to the brokers for her personal use undoubtedly misappropriated such stock except in so far as she may have been entitled to receive a portion thereof as residuary legatee and when the defendant stockbrokers accepted the certificate as collateral for her.individual account, with knowledge that the stock certificate was part of the estate of her husband, they joined in such conversion and are answerable therefor as trustees ex maleficio.

The right of a trustee or substituted trustee of the estate or fund which has suffered through such misappropriation to bring an action at law or in equity against those who participated therein seems well established but the defendants urge that in the present case the plaintiff does not represent the estate and has no such cause of action; or that if the plaintiff has [445]*445a cause of action, the representatives of the specific legatees who are now deceased are necessary parties to the action and that the plaintiff is seeking a wrong remedy. The plaintiff’s cause of action herein, if any, is undoubtedly a derivative cause of action. The duty to bring an action rests in the first instance upon the executrix Edith B. Bailie who herself misappropriated the funds. The complaint herein alleges that Mrs. Bailie has refused to bring such action and it would seem that upon such refusal the plaintiff should be permitted to follow either of two courses. He might move in the courts of the state where the will was probated for the substitution of a new trustee who would properly protect the interest of the estate or by appropriate action he might compel the present trustee to proceed against those parties who are wrongfully in possession of the property of the estate. The present action is in effect an attempt to pursue the latter course. He has made the executrix a party to the action and he asks the court to direct the stockbrokers to deliver the property of the estate which they hold, to such executrix. The case of Van Camp v. Fowler, 59 Hun, 311, is authority for the right of the plaintiff to bring such an action and a court of equity has jurisdiction to give complete relief and to determine in an action to which the executrix is a party defendant, the title to the fund in dispute. That case has never been overruled and seems to me correct on principle. While the present plaintiff is not legally the owner of the fund, he has a right to compel the executrix to pay a portion thereof over to him. That right has been impaired by the wrongful action of the executrix and the other defendants and he should be permitted to appeal to a court of equity to right the wrong from which he is suffering and a court of equity should give complete relief in the one action. It is [446]*446true that in the case of Van Camp v. Fowler, supra, the action was ¡brought in behalf of all others who might be similarly interested but the only parties in the present case who might be similarly interested are the personal representatives of the testator’s father and mother who each received twenty-five shares of stock under the will. It seems to me, however, that these personal representatives are not necessary although they might be appropriate parties to the present action. While they have a .similar right to that of the plaintiff, their right is not a common or joint right. The court here is called upon to decide only whether the certificate of stock held by the defendant stockbrokers belongs to the estate of Frank H. Bailie, deceased, and except perhaps indirectly, it need not determine whether these specific legatees have been paid their share of the estate. If the court decrees the return of the certificate, then the specific legatees can enforce whatever rights they may have to share in the estate against the executrix who will then be in possession of the stock. If they have not been paid they will share in the distribution of the fund. If they have been paid then they have no interest in this litigation. In any event as against this defendant, since they would have only a derivative right, the delivery of the certificate to the executrix would be binding against them and a decision in an action in which the executrix who properly represents them is a party, that the defendant stockbrokers have no such property would be equally binding. The court therefore has before it the parties necessary, for a complete determination of the issues and the defendants cannot object to the non-joinder of the specific legatees.

The court cannot, upon the proof presented, grant the exact relief -which the plaintiff herein demands, [447]*447The executrix was undoubtedly entitled individually to one-half of the residuary estate of the testator. There were two hundred and twenty-five shares of the H. K. Porter Company stock in the estate of the testator. Fifty shares of stock were bequeathed specifically to the testator’s parents so that the executrix was entitled to receive eighty-seven and one-half shares from the estate and as executrix she had the right to transfer such shares to herself as an individual.

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Bluebook (online)
115 Misc. 441, 189 N.Y.S. 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailie-v-sheldon-nysupct-1921.