Bishop v. Kemp

35 Haw. 1, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 4
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1939
DocketNo. 2365.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 35 Haw. 1 (Bishop v. Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bishop v. Kemp, 35 Haw. 1, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 4 (haw 1939).

Opinion

*2 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

The petitioners-appellants, who are the trustees under a certain deed of trust, as thereafter amended, executed by Charles R. Bishop, late of Honolulu, Hawaii, and San Francisco, California, filed a bill in equity in the circuit court of the first judicial circuit praying that they might be advised in reference to their authority to invest trust funds in improved and income-producing real estate. They allege in their petition that due to the low rate of interest on investments in securities, such as bonds or other evidence of debt, and the difficulty of making loans on satisfactory real estate mortgages, the appellants have accurnu- ■ lated a large sum of trust money which at present is earning only negligible bank interest and that better usé can be obtained through investment in improved and income-producing real estate and that they have an opportunity to purchase certain desirable real estate in Honolulu and would purchase the same if they had power to do so. Being in doubt, however, of such power, they have petitioned the circuit court for instructions.

The trust being a public one, the attorney general of the Territory was named as respondent. The latter interposed an answer in which he asked that the petitioners be advised and instructed that they are not authorized or empowered to and may not use any moneys that have or *3 may hereafter come into their hands under or by virtue of the provisions of said deed of trust and amendments thereto for the purchase of real estate.

Upon this issue the cause was tried by the judge of the circuit court presiding in equity who, upon the conclusion of the hearing, rendered a decree instructing the trustees that they were not authorized under the trust instruments to invest money of the estate in real property. The trustees have appealed.

Paragraph eleven of the original trust deed executed by Mr. Bishop provides that: “The said Trustees and their successors shall, at all times during the existence of this Trust, have the right to invest surplus income, and any principal sum paid in, to sell the whole or any part of the property that may come into their hands hereunder, Avithout any order of Court first had or obtained and Avithout subsequent confirmation by any Court; to reinvest the proceeds as to them shall seem Avise, having more regard to perfect security than high rate of interest; to change investments, and in every Avay deal Avith said property free from any restraint or limitation; nor shall any purchaser at any time be charged Avith any duty as to the disposition of any sum that may be realized from any sale of any property of or that may become a part of this Trust.” The same provision appears in the first amendatory deed, dated July 24, 1897. In the fourth and last amendatory deed, dated April 8, 1910, this paragraph Avas amended to read as folloAVs: “The Trustees hereunder shall at all times during the existence of this trust have the right to sell the Avhole or any part of the property that may come into their hands hereunder or be subject to the trusts hereby created Avithout any order of Court first had or obtained or Avithout any subsequent confirmation by any Court to invest all moneys that shall from time to time come to their hands under or by virtue of the pro *4 visions of this deed of trust requiring investment including the proceeds of sale of any part of the real and personal property subject to the trusts hereby created in such securities as to the said Trustees shall seem Avise having regard more to good security than to high rates of interest. Investments may be made in the purchase of the bonds of any state, territory, county or municipality of the United States or of any public service corporation organized under the laAvs of any state or territory of the United States and operating in the United States. The said Trustees shall also have the right to change investments from time to time and in every Avay deal Avith the property subject to the trusts free from any restraint or limitation; nor shall any purchaser at any time be charged Avith any duty as to the disposition or application of any. sum that may be realized from any sale of any property of, or that may become a part of, this trust.”

Mr. Bishop, the creator of the trust in question, Avas a Avell-knoAvn banker and businessman of the HaAvaiian Islands and San Francisco, California. He died about a quarter of a century ago and left a large and valuable estate Avithin the Territory of HaAvaii. The corpus of the trust created by his deed executed in 1895 Avas composed solely'of promissory notes of Samuel M. Damon payable to him and aggregating the sum of $800,000.

Counsel for appellee has called to our attention the recognized rule that provisions in a trust deed conferring investment poAvers should be strictly construed (1 Perry, Trusts [7th ed.], § 460) and that the provisions of a trust instrument are strictly construed against an enlargement of the scope of permissible investments, etc. (1 Restatement, Trusts, § 227), that Avhere there is an inconsistency between a general and a specific provision in a trust deed the latter should prevail (69 C. J., §§ 1157, *5 13.58) and other recognized orthodox rales of construction applicable alike to both trust deeds and wills.

These canons of construction must, however, always give way to the cardinal and paramount rule which requires that the intention of the settlor expressed in his trust documents shall prevail, provided it be consistent with the rules of law. (See Smith v. Bell, 6 Pet. [U. S.] 68; Rooke v. Queen’s 'Hospital, 12 Haw. 375; Fitchie v. Brown, 18 Haw. 52; Wodehouse v. Robinson, 27 Haw. 462; Kinney v. Robinson, 30 Haw. 246; Estate of Mary E. Foster, 33 Haw. 666; Estate of Campbell, 33 Haw. 799; O’Neil v. Dreier, 61 F. [2d] 598.) Where a trust is created by a transaction inter vivos and is evidenced by a written instrument, the terms of the trust are determined by the provisions of the trust instrument in the light of the surrounding facts and circumstances existing at the period of execution and other admissible evidence of the intention of the settlor with respect to the trust. (1 Bestatement, Trusts, p. 18.)

In the present case we think that by having recourse to Mr. Bishop’s original trust deed and the amendments thereto, including of course the amendment of April 8, 1910, together with the testimony introduced at the trial, and such surrounding facts and circumstances of which the lower court and this court should take judicial notice, little difficulty will be encountered in the determination of the question at issue.

Fifteen years intervened between the execution of the original trust deed and the final amendment. During this entire period Mr. Bishop acted as one of the trustees of the trust estate of his deceased Avife, Bernice Pauahi Bishop, avIio died in the year 1884. The estate of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Haw. 1, 1939 Haw. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bishop-v-kemp-haw-1939.