Bingen v. First Trust Co. of St. Paul

103 F.2d 260, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3548
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 18, 1939
Docket11260
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 103 F.2d 260 (Bingen v. First Trust Co. of St. Paul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bingen v. First Trust Co. of St. Paul, 103 F.2d 260, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3548 (8th Cir. 1939).

Opinion

THOMAS, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity. The appellants, plaintiffs below, are citizens and residents of Norway. The appellees, defendants below, are executors in the state of Minnesota of the estate of Christian A. Westerbaum, deceased. The plaintiffs seek to be adjudged the owners of certain mortgage securities in the possession of the defendants. The claim arises by virtue of a purported declaration of trust executed by Christian A. Westerbaum prior to his death. Plaintiff Birger Bingen is a nephew of the deceased; plaintiff Elise Bingen is his wife. More than $3,000 is in controversy.

The plaintiffs allege in their complaint that on the 29th day of December, 1932, the said Westerbaum made a declaratory trust in writing whereby he gave to the plaintiffs certain mortgages, 17 in number, which secured a total aggregate indebtedness of $39,250; that in and by this declaration of trust Westerbaum declared that these mortgages belonged to the plaintiffs but were in his name; that he would continue to hold the legal title thereto for convenience in expediting their liquidation for the benefit of plaintiffs; and that he would liquidate the same without costs or expense. It is further alleged that Westerbaum caused this declaration of trust to be delivered to the plaintiffs through the mails shortly after January 1, 1933; and that he died in September, 1936, without making any accounting of the trust property except to remit to them the sum of $5,000 on or about February 28, 1936. The plaintiffs pray for a decree adjudging them to be the owners of the securities described in the trust instrument; that the court declare these securities to have been held in trust for them by the said Westerbaum in his lifetime; that the defendants be required to account for and deliver to the plaintiffs any of these securities now in their possession; and that plaintiffs have judgment against the defendants, as executors of the estate of said Westerbaum, for the value of the securities disposed of less a credit of $5,000 paid February 28, 1936.

The trial court made detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law. In a carefully written opinion the court held that the writing relied upon by plaintiffs was *262 ambiguous; and that viewing it in the light of Westerbaumis subsequent handling of the mortgage securities and of the letters written by him to the plaintiffs it was not a declaration of trust but merely the expression of an intention to make a gift in the future which had never been acted upon. Bingen v. First Trust Co. of St. Paul, D.C. 23 F.Supp. 958. A decree was entered in favor of the defendants and the plaintiffs appeal.

The'declaration which is the subject of controversy, was written with pen and ink and is in the Norwegian language. It is undisputed that it is in Westerbaum’s handwriting. The translation adopted by the trial court in its findings is as follows :

“St. Paul, Minn Dec. 29 — 1930
“Dear Birger
“Wew York City
“We have now decided to give you and wife 17 mortgages to an amount of about $39,250.00, all mortgages read in my name — but they are transferred over to you. I shall do my best to have mortgages , cashed bút that will probably take a longer time on account of poor times and no money amongst people. I shall hold all the papers here until later- — -in case something should happen that I can look after it — then I will do it without legal costs and probably without loss.
Emry Heggia $1200.00 Book 634 Page 114
E. Strandlof 2400.00 634 47
_
H. Sehattgen 2500.00 145 127
N. Hagen 900.00 157 84
Elvera Yocum 6500.00 732 463
Emry Heggie 2000.00 634 112
Elvira Yocum 800.00 761 253
J. Garrick 2300.00 737 660
Geo. Mertens 2200.00 795 127
Geo. Swandollar 2200.00 18 393
P. Kannar 1900.00 634 156
J. Berkwitz 2200.00 719 67
W. Munger 2700.00 742 * 429
Ern Johnson 3000.00 .743 504
A. Ostrum 2000.00 119 571
Geo. Dorfner 1450.00 727 485
Art E. Slater 3000.00 775 195
“[Signed.] C. A. Westerbaum”

This letter was received by plaintiff Bingen in January 1933. Since the Mertens mortgage was not executed until 1932 it appears that the letter was mis-dated and was probably written December 29, 1932. This fact, if true, is unimportant. The authenticity of the letter is unchallenged.

Christian A. Westerbaum, the donor, was born in Norway in 1857 and came to the United States in 1880. He was a jeweler by trade and was employed by Tiffany & Company in New York City for a time. He later migrated to St. Paul, Minnesota, where he became a jéwelry merchant. In 1908 he retired from that business and thereafter devoted himself to handling his investments, dealing principally in real estate mortgages. Hé accumulated considerable property in this form and in a letter to the plaintiff Birger Bingen in 1933 Westerbaum estimated that he owned first mortgages aggregating at least $100,000 in value and that he possessed diamonds and certain other articles of jewelry.

The deceased Westerbaum had no relatives in this country. His wife died in 1933. He had no children and his two sisters and a brother remaining in Norway had predeceased him. The plaintiff Birger Bingen was a son of one of these sisters and appears to be the only relative with whom Westerbaum kept in close contact in the later years of his life. In 1909, he encouraged Bingen to come to the United States and procured work for him as a diamond cutter with Tiffany & Company in New York City. Except for an interval of a few years, Bingen remained in the United States until December, 1932, when he returned to Norway. He and his wife have since resided in that country. During all these years Westerbaum kept in close touch with his nephew, Bingen, exchanging a few letters each year and indicating a continuing deep and affectionate interest in his welfare and that of his wife.

• At the time the disputed instrument was written Westerbaum was a man well over seventy years of age. He was apparently conscious of the imminence of death and of the necessity of closing up his business affairs. He appears to have been an upright and kindly person but an extremely cautious and secretive business man. It is clear that plaintiff Bingen 'and -his wife were the natural objects of his bounty.

Westerbaum’s subsequent correspondence with the plaintiff indicates that he was an aged and lonesome man somewhat disheartened by the economic trend of the times and struggling to convert his property into cash in anticipation of approaching death. He did not again refer to the above letter directly but he frequently discussed his difficulties in liquidating *263

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Bluebook (online)
103 F.2d 260, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 3548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bingen-v-first-trust-co-of-st-paul-ca8-1939.