Brahmey v. Rollins

179 A. 186, 87 N.H. 290, 119 A.L.R. 8, 1935 N.H. LEXIS 20
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMay 7, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 179 A. 186 (Brahmey v. Rollins) 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
Brahmey v. Rollins, 179 A. 186, 87 N.H. 290, 119 A.L.R. 8, 1935 N.H. LEXIS 20 (N.H. 1935).

Opinion

Allen, C. J.

As stated in the defendant’s brief, the issue presented is whether the provisions of the trust instrument against alienation and seizure by creditors are valid when the trustee’s duty to pay to the beneficiary is absolute. It is conceded that in the cases of spendthrift trusts hitherto decided here the trustee’s obligation to pay is only discretionary. But it is contended that their thought and reasoning in sustaining a spendthrift character of the trusts therein considered show no difference in principle when the trustee’s duty to pay is fixed and when it is dependent.

Whether the creditor has sought to have the trustee charged by trustee-process or by a creditor’s bill, the court has in no case committed itself to a recognition of the validity of a spendthrift trust to the extent now claimed.

The cases where trustee-process has been held unavailable are readily explainable upon the rule that the trustee is not chargeable while the claim against him is unliquidated or undetermined in amount (Gove v. Varrell, 58 N. H. 78; Bucklin v. Powell, 60 N. H. 119; Eastman v. Thayer, 60 N. H. 575). When the trustee is to pay the beneficiary in discretion, he is not required to use his discretion either before or at the time of giving his disclosure in the creditor’s behalf. The duty to act is owed only to those equitably interested in the trust. The disclosure may show some part of the income undoubtedly due the beneficiary but it cannot be told definitely how much. The trustee may not even disclose an amount which must at least be owing. When “the exercise of judgment, discretion, and opinion, and not mere calculation or computation” is required to determine the amount of a claim, it is unliquidated. Eastman v. Thayer, supra, 606. Moreover, the staking of reasonable limits is a matter of judicial inquiry. Eaton v. Eaton, 82 N. H. 216, 219, and cases cited. Thus clearly the trustee owes nothing until he performs his duty of fixing the amount or he owes an undetermined amount. In either alternative creditors hold nothing by the trustee-process.

The trustee-process cases are also sustainable on the view that the beneficiary’s rights are not “credits,” as the word is used in the trustee-process statute (P. L., c. 356, s. 19), in the trustee’s possession. The entire trust estate, both principal and income, belongs to the trustee. Abbott v. Abbott, 76 N. H. 225. The beneficiary’s right is that the trustee shall perform a duty to decide how much he is entitled to and then pay it. “. . . what he gave his son was the right to require the *292 trustee to use this fund for his benefit. . . ” Eaton v. Eaton, 81 N. H. 275, 276. The right is not a credit making the trustee a debtor.

In none of these cases was there a provision of the trust instrument placing the equitable life interest beyond the reach of creditors, to be considered. There was simply the holding that the beneficiary’s rights were not to be reached by trustee-process. Either it was because the beneficiary had no credits in the trustee’s possession or it was because if credits they were undetermined in amount.

The case of Chase v. Currier, 63 N. H. 90, it is asserted, adopts the spendthrift trust idea “to the fullest extent.” This view of it is not thought to be correct. A left money to B “to be prudently used if needed by him for his support,” any of the fund remaining at his death to go to others. The court held that a trust was created, with no trustee named, and that one should be appointed to hold the fund with discretion to determine B’s needs. The fund belonged to the remaindermen named by A, subject to B’s right of support from it. It is a typical discretionary case in which trustee-process does not lie. Beyond this it does not go.

The case of Wolfman v. Webster, 77 N. H. 24, is no different in principle. The trustee had discretionary authority to pay income for the needs and comfort of the beneficiary. Regarding it as broad enough to include discretionary payment of some of the latter’s debts, the court held that a proper exercise of the discretion in refusing to pay a debt due the plaintiff placed him beyond reach of the income by trustee-process. The creditor thus stood no better than creditors in cases where the income may be used only for the beneficiary’s support.

In both of these cases Banfield v. Wiggin, 58 N. H. 155 is cited as supporting authority. There it was ruled that a trustee vested with discretion “as to the time, amount, or manner of the payment to be made” cannot be charged in trustee-process. Also, in that case in turn, a dictum in Palmer v. Noyes, 45 N. H. 174, was relied upon to the effect that trustees with discretionary powers in acting for the beneficiary’s interest are not chargeable.

In Watson v. Kennard, 77 N. H. 23, decided at the same time as Wolfman v. Webster, supra, the test of discretion was distinctly applied. The life beneficiary had interests in both the income and the principal. Those in the principal were to be supported from it if the trustee deemed it necessary. The case turned on the question whether his right to the income was absolute or whether it was, like the principal, to be paid in the trustee’s discretion.

The trustee-process cases are therefore of no forceful pertinence in *293 application to cases where the right to the income is uncontrolled by the trustee’s discretion.

In Abbott v. Abbott, 76 N. H. 225, and Parker v. Carpenter, 77 N. H. 453, the beneficiary’s rights were held not subject to seizure for the reason that they were of personal enjoyment within the trustee’s discretion.

Eaton v. Eaton, 81 N. H. 275 (Ib., 82 N. H. 216), is a case similar to Chase v. Currier,*supra. Property was bequeathed to certain persons subject to be used for the benefit of the testator’s son as his needs required. The son’s right of support gave neither him nor his creditors any rights or interests of title, either legal or equitable. The purpose of the testator to place the property “beyond the reach not only of his son but also of his son’s creditors” was thereby achieved. But it was because no absolute rights were given the son. The case makes no advance beyond others in the extension of spendthrift trusts.

By way of dictum, in Flanders v. Parker, 80 N. H. 566, 569, the proposition that any restraint of voluntary or involuntary alienation of a legal or equitable estate of an absolute nature is void, was given approval. It at least indicates that none of the decisions in discretionary cases has a background of dissent from the proposition. That there has been any adjudicated consideration of the rule, may not fairly be maintained.

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Bluebook (online)
179 A. 186, 87 N.H. 290, 119 A.L.R. 8, 1935 N.H. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brahmey-v-rollins-nh-1935.