Baxter v. Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank

263 N.W. 762, 273 Mich. 642, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 638
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 10, 1935
DocketDocket No. 83, Calendar No. 38,516.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 263 N.W. 762 (Baxter v. Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxter v. Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank, 263 N.W. 762, 273 Mich. 642, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 638 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Butzel, J.

On September 1, 1925, the Bankers Trust Company of Flint, Michigan, upon being appointed guardian of Albert Baxter, a mentally incompetent person, took charge of the administration of his property. Baxter was committed to the State Psychopathic Hospital at Pontiac, transferred on June 3, 1926, to the Veterans’ Bureau at Battle Creek, and released on March 2, 1930.

Baxter, claiming that certain investments made by the Bankers Trust Company, as his guardian, were improper, brought suit against the Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank and its receiver and also its predecessors, the Union Industrial Trust Company, the Bankers Trust Company, the Industrial Savings Bank and the Union Industrial Bank. We need not discuss the details of the evolution of some of the defendants from the Bankers Trust Company since no objection is raised by the defendants as to the propriety of joining all of them. The Bankers Trust Company after changing its name to the Union Industrial Trust Company, merged with the Union Industrial Bank, the .merged institution taking the name of the Union Industrial Trust & Savings Bank. Baxter charged that he was defrauded by his guardian both in the sale of his real estate, as well as the purchase of certain bonds from the proceeds of the *645 sale. The lower court found that there was no fraud in the sale of the real estate but allowed the amount paid for the purchase of various bonds, without interest, as a preferred claim against defendants who have appealed. Plaintiff limits his cross-appeal to the question of “interest.”

The Bankers Trust Company and subsequently its successor, the Union Industrial Trust Company, as guardian of Baxter had hied annual reports in the probate court for the county of Genesee, showing receipts and disbursements, including in the latter amounts paid for certain bonds in question. However, as no hearings were ever held or order of approval made on these accounts, the claim of res judicata cannot be raised. On June 24, 1930, after Baxter’s discharge from the Veterans’ Hospital at Battle Creek, but prior to the adjudication of his restoration to sanity, he signed a receipt acknowledging payment of all moneys and effects that had come into the custody and control of his guardian, and in consideration thereof he released and discharged the guardian from all liability absolutely and forever. Baxter then executed an instrument appointing the trust company, his former guardian, as his agent to manage his affairs and turned back to the trust company all of the property set forth in the receipt. The question is raised whether Baxter could give a valid receipt and release prior to the adjudication, shortly thereafter made, declaring his restoration to sanity. This, however, becomes unimportant, for the investments were either proper, or if improper, there was not full disclosure of pertinent facts, and the receipt and discharge may be set aside on the ground of fraud. Powell v. Powell, 52 Mich. 432; Sheldon v. Rice, 30 Mich. 296 (18 Am. *646 Rep. 136). We, therefore, shall consider the investments which the trial judge found improper.

The Bankers Trust Company originally was an affiliate of the Industrial Savings Bank. The relationship was very similar to that existing between the Pontiac Commercial & Savings Bank and the Pontiac Trust Company as set forth in Re Culhane’s Estate, 269 Mich. 68. In the instant case, the stockholders of the bank and the trust company were identical, the latter having been organized by the bank for the purpose of handling trust business that the-bank itself could not transact under the laws then existing. For a period the trust company did not pay rent to the bank. It is obvious that profit to either the bank or the trust company through one turning over business to the other would redound to the same stockholders. The bank had at one time purchased $2,700' of Kenwood Park bonds, secured by a mortgage on a subdivision of vacant lots in the suburbs of Detroit. The cost to the bank of these particular bonds was $2,592. The guardian, in 1926, “purchased” these bonds from the bank and charged plaintiff’s account with $2,700.49. This included some accrued interest. The bank retained $94.50 and the trust company in its individual capacity, not as guardian, $13.50 of the profit, whiph was neither passed on to the estate, nor shown in the reports of the guardian. Plaintiff was not apprized of any of these facts.

When a trust company buys for its ward’s estate securities from its banking adjunct or affiliate, with the same identity of interest between the two shown to exist in the instant case, it comes within the following well-established rule of law: Where a trustee buys with trust funds property which the trustee owns or is materially interested in, or sells trust *647 property to himself, or to one whom the trustee is materially interested in, such a transaction is voidable at the option of the cestui. Clute v. Barron, 2 Mich. 192; Dwight & Pierce v. Blackmar, 2 Mich. 330 (57 Am. Dec. 130); Campau v. Van Dyke, 15 Mich. 371; Sheldon v. Rice, supra; Johnston v. Loose, 201 Mich. 259; Broughton v. Detroit Trust Co., 271 Mich. 701; Michoud v. Girod, 4 How. (45 U. S.) 503; Hammond v. Hopkins, 143 U. S. 224 (12 Sup. Ct. 418); Campbell v. Campbell, 8 Fed. 460; First National Bank of St. Petersburg v. Solomon (C. C. A.), 63 Fed. (2d) 900; Hindman v. O’Connor, 54 Ark. 627 (16 S. W. 1052, 13 L. R. A. 490); Eagle v. Terrell, 95 Ark. 434 (130 S. W. 550); Bermingham v. Wilcox, 120 Cal. 467 (52 Pac. 822); In re Wheeler’s Estate, 11 Del. Ch. 469 (101 Atl. 865); Morse v. Hill, 136 Mass. 60; St. Paul Trust Co. v. Strong, 85 Minn. 1 (88 N. W. 256); Smith v. Tolversen, 190 Minn. 410 (252 N. W. 423); Matter of Long Island Loan & Trust Co., 92 App. Div. 1 (87 N. Y. Supp. 65); Wright v. Morgan (1926), 95 L. J. P. C. 171 (135 L. T. 713), 1 Perry, Trusts and Trustees (7th Ed.), § 195; Restatement of the Law of Trusts, § 170(h) and (i); 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence (4th Ed.), §§ 957, 958; 3 Bogert, Trusts and Trustees, § 489; 1 A. L. R. 747; 14 A. L. R. 466.

Although the cases do not clearly define the degree of self-interest the trustee must have where he is not, himself, selling to or buying from the trust estate, a consideration of the following cases forces us to the conclusion that the conflict of interests in the instant case was sufficiently strong to make the transaction voidable. In re McClung’s Estate, 267 Mich. 309; Ottawa Banking & Trust Co. v. Crookston State Bank, 185 Minn. 22 (239 N. W.

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Bluebook (online)
263 N.W. 762, 273 Mich. 642, 1935 Mich. LEXIS 638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baxter-v-union-industrial-trust-savings-bank-mich-1935.