Barney Ex Rel. Woodhull v. Saunders

57 U.S. 535, 14 L. Ed. 1047, 16 How. 535, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1567
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 23, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 57 U.S. 535 (Barney Ex Rel. Woodhull v. Saunders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barney Ex Rel. Woodhull v. Saunders, 57 U.S. 535, 14 L. Ed. 1047, 16 How. 535, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1567 (1854).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GRIER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complainant, Mary E. Barney, is the only daughter of Edward DeKraft, who devised all his real estate and the residue of his personal estate to respondents, Saunders and Weightman, (together with Joseph Pearson, since dead,) on the following trusts: 1st. To permit the widow to enjoy during life or widowhood certain portions of the trust estate. 2. In trust to receive the rents, interest, dividends, &e., and to pay over quarterly to his widow, until his daughter Mary arrived at the age of 18, three fourths of the said rents and profits for the support and maintenance of herself and daughter, and

3dly. To lay out and invest the residue of the said rents and profits, &c., with the annual produce thereof, from time to time in bank or other stocks or on good security.

4th. At the death of the widow, the trustees to hold the os Re with its increase for the sole and separate use of the daugi. nr; and with numerous other provisions not necessary to be stated, for the purposes of this ease. .

The widow of the testator refused to take under the will, and claimed her legal rights; the executors also renounced, and letters of administration, with the will annexed, were granted to the widow.

*540 Mrs. DeKraft died in October, 1834, leaving the complainant, her only child, then about four years of age.- At her death the trustees went into possession of the trust estate. Saunders, one of the trustees, took out letters of administration de bonis non tp the estate of DeKraft; received the assets of the estate, which remained unconverted, and transferred them to himself and Weightman, as trustees.

. In 1836, Weightman was appointed guardian of the person and property of the complainant.

Besides the real estate, consisting of four houses in the city, ■the personal, property transferred to the trustees, in mortgages and stocks, amounted to about $17,000.

The complainant intermanied with Lieut. Barney, in 1847, and attained the age of 18, in August, 1848. In March, 1849, the bill in this case .was filed, charging the trustees with divers breaches of trust, demanding their removal; an account of the trust estate, and the appointment of a receiver. The respondents filed their answer, and afi account, which was referred to a master or auditor, who made report in October, 1850.

Numerous exceptions were made to this report by the complainant, which were overruled by the court below,' to whose judgment this appeal is taken.

We shall notice those only which have Been urged by the counsel in this court. The first is

“ I. That.- the trustees should have been charged with the thirty-five shares of Bank of the Metropolis stock and the dividends accruing thereupon, alleged to have been sold in 3 836 by defendant, D. Saunders, to satisfy his commission as administrator. de bonis non of Edward DeKraft, he not being entitled to such commission* and • not having the right to sell the bank stock without the order of the Orphans’ Court.”

The acts of D. Saunders as administrator de bonis non of DeKraft are not the subject of review in this suit. Hé settled his account as administrator in the Orphans’ Court, and the allowances made there cannot be reviewed .collaterally in another court, in a suit in which a different trust is involved. The appellant may possibly have good reason to complain that her estate has been almost devoured by the accumulation of per cent-ages it has been compelled to pay to the numerous hands through which it has passed, but must have her remedy, if any, by demanding a review of the accounts in the court which has, in the exercise of its jurisdiction, allowed them. We are of opinion, therefore, that this exception has not been sustained.

II. The second exception is to the allowance of a credit to the. trustees for sums paid to Weightman, as. guardian of the complainant.

*541 ' "What has been said in reference to the first exception will apply to this'. Weightman’s accounts, as guardian, were not before the auditor for settlement; and the guardian being entitled under the will to. receive a portion (not to exceed three fourths) of 'the income, and apply it, if necessary, to the maintenance and education of his ward, his receipts would be good and valid vouchers to the trustees.

The guardian’s account is open for revision in the Orphans’ Court, on the petition of the complainant.

While on this subject, we would’take the opportunity to remark, on the iihpropriety of appointing persons to trusts, however high their personal character may be, who are allowed to pay from. their right hand into their left; as where A, as administrator, has to settle an account with A as trustee; and B, as trustee, to deal with B as guardian. To instance the present case: Saunders, the trustee, whose duty it was to scrutinize the accounts of the administrator de bonis non, from whom they receive the trust estate, is himself appointed administrator, and thus left without a check, or any one to call him to strict account except his co-trustee, for many years, and until the ward comes of age. Weightman, the other trustee, is appointed guardian, being the' only person who for many years could call to account the trustees for any negligence, mismanagement, or fraud. Thus the estate of the infant is left at the mercy of chance, the solvency or insolvency, the negligence or fraud of the trustees for sixteen years or more, with no one to call them to account. That the persons appointed in this particular case were highly honorable men, is true; but the same rule should be applied in all cases. If the estate of the infant in this case has been so fortunate as to escape, it is an accident or exception, which cannot affect the propriety of a general rule. Experience has shown that' the estates of orphans are more frequently wasted and lost by the carelessness of good natured and honorable men who- undertake to act as trustees, than by the fraud and cupidity of men of a different character.

Such appointments, we are aware, are generally made- on ex parte applications, and without objection. But in all cases the court, exercising this important power, should remember that orphans are under their special protection, and should make no appointments of guardians of their estates without due inquiry and proper information.

III. The third exception is,

That the trustees should not have been allowed and credited by five per cent, on the principal of the personal estate, and ten per cent, on the income, as was done by the auditor; that they should not be' allowed any commission at all, either upon the *542 principal or income of the estate; that in any event they should not' be credited by any commission upon the amount of principal never collected, upon the amount of bank and other stocks.”

In England, courts of equity adhere to the principle which has its origin in the Roman law, “ that a trustee shall not profit by his trust,” and therefore that a trustee shall have no allowance for his care, and trouble. A different rule prevails generally, if not universally, in this country.

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Bluebook (online)
57 U.S. 535, 14 L. Ed. 1047, 16 How. 535, 1850 U.S. LEXIS 1567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barney-ex-rel-woodhull-v-saunders-scotus-1854.