Bank of New York & Trust Co. v. Tilton

129 A. 492, 82 N.H. 81, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 3
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 5, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 129 A. 492 (Bank of New York & Trust Co. v. Tilton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of New York & Trust Co. v. Tilton, 129 A. 492, 82 N.H. 81, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 3 (N.H. 1925).

Opinion

Peaslee, C. J.

The main question in the case relates to the right of a foreign corporation to be appointed trustee under the provisions of a will naming it for that office. The statute provides as follows:

“Hereafter any trust company, loan and trust company, loan and banking company, and all other corporations of a similar character, incorporated under the laws of this state, and any national bank being duly authorized and located within the state, may be appointed trustee, in any case where an individual can be appointed, upon the same conditions and subject to the same control, requirements and penalties; but no corporation shall be appointed in any other fiduciary capacity. Every corporation when appointed by any court in such capacity shall give bond of an indemnity company licensed by the insurance commissioner to do business in this state. The exercise of the powers granted herein is limited to the specified corporations located in this state.” Laws 1919, c. 121, s. 1.

Taking this enactment as it reads, it is a plain exclusion of foreign corporations from any appointment by a court to any trusteeship. The arguments against this interpretation are largely based upon the law existing when the statute was enacted, and upon the history of its progress through the legislature. In 1917, provision was made regulating the appointment of a foreign corporation as a trustee. Laws 1917, c. 193, s. 1. It is argued that before that time such corporation could be so appointed. This position may be conceded to be correct, for the purposes of the argument. It was under these circumstances that the act of 1919, above quoted from, was passed.

It is urged that since it is entitled as a grant of powers, and this power already existed, therefore the limitation upon “the powers granted herein” has no application to the present situation. The defect in the argument is that it ignores the fact that the act in *83 question purports to be a grant of power to be a trustee “in any case when an individual can be appointed.” The legislature evidently understood that it was dealing with the general subject of power to act in such capacity. It is apparent that the legislative understanding was that such power was then granted, and that the limitation above quoted applied to that office generally.

Nor does the fact that the original bill included a grant of power to act as executor, etc., affect the situation, for the office of trustee was included in the proposed list of granted powers. If, as the plaintiff argues, the original purpose had been to deal with executors, etc., and leave the law as to trustees as it stood before, there would have been no inclusion of trustees in the bill. The legislative purpose to exclude foreign corporations from judicial appointment to any position of trust was expressed in the original bill, and was not changed by the amendment which limited the power to appoint local corporations.

This conclusion as to the legislative intent is strengthened by a consideration of other provisions of the act. Section 2 provides that any institution “exercising any of the powers enumerated herein” shall segregate the trust funds, and conduct that business as a separate department and with a separate set of books. Section 3 forbids loans of trust funds to officers, etc., of the corporation; and section 4 provides a penalty for any violation of the act. These provisions could be applied only to local corporations. They were manifestly intended to provide general regulations for the government of corporate trustees, and thus confirm the position that there was an intent to deal with the subject generally, rather than in some special way, or as to a part only of qualified corporations.

The suggestion is made that if a general revision of the law upon this subject had been intended, there would have been a retention of the provision of Laws 1917, c. 193, s. 4, that national banks should consent to an examination of their trust departments by the state bank commissioners and acknowledge themselves subject to the jurisdiction of the probate court. But as the act of 1919 provides that the trustee shall keep its books and records in such form as the bank commissioners approve, and as the appointment of national banks is limited to those located in the state, the subject seems to be fairly covered by the later act.

Argument is advanced that upon this construction of the statute a foreign corporation cannot be a trustee under a mortgage. In such a case there is no appointment of the trustee by any court. The *84 arrangement is a contract between the grantor, the trustee and the bond holders.

The claim that in a case like the one under consideration the trustee is appointed by the testator, and derives authority from the will rather than from the decision and order of a court, has been decided adversely to the plaintiff. “It must always appear that the person named in the will is a fit person to execute the trust, for otherwise it would be the duty of the court to refuse to appoint him. In other words, it is the duty of the probate court to appoint trustees whenever they are needed to administer trusts created by wills; but its authority in that respect is limited to persons who are suitable to execute the trust, both when the trustees are named in the will which creates the trust and when the will contains no provision for the appointment of trustees.” Carr v. Corning, 73 N. H. 362, 366. In view of this judicial declaration of the source from which a testamentary trustee derives his authority, there is no ground upon which to contend that in a later enactment as to such trustees the legislature used the word appoint in any different sense.

Merely naming a trustee in a will does not confer upon him title to the trust property. Unless he giyes the required bond, he is deemed to have declined the trust. P. S., c. 198, s. 4. He must qualify in the probate court. If he is incompetent or otherwise disqualified, it is the duty of the probate court to refuse the appointment. The law of the state in these respects was not dubious in 1919. It had been plainly declared. If the law elsewhere is otherwise, it does not affect the present situation. The statute is a New Hampshire act and is to be construed in the light of the announced local view of the law, as it stood at the time of the enactment.

Argument is also advanced that the act of 1919 can be construed as merely a grant of power to certain local corporations, that the power granted in 1917 did not in terms apply to existing corporations, and that the act of 1919 was designed to remedy this defect, and not to deal with the subject generally. If this somewhat obscure intent were to be imputed to the legislature, it would not dispose of the plaintiff’s fundamental difficulty. It would still be excluded in terms from the exercise of the described powers.

To meet this situation it is urged that as corporate power could be conferred upon local corporations only, therefore the last sentence is to be treated merely as a legislative declaration that there was no intent to attempt to enlarge the functions of foreign corporations. It is highly improbable that there was any such legislative purpose *85

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 A. 492, 82 N.H. 81, 1925 N.H. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-new-york-trust-co-v-tilton-nh-1925.