Chase National Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.

155 Misc. 61, 279 N.Y.S. 327, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1139
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 155 Misc. 61 (Chase National Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase National Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 155 Misc. 61, 279 N.Y.S. 327, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1139 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1935).

Opinion

Robert McC. Marsh,

Referee. This is an action by the trustee under a deed of trust for the settlement of its accounts and for directions with respect to the further holding of the trust fund, the life beneficiary having died. It involves questions concerning the existence and exercise of a testamentary power of-appointment, and others relating to the allocation of a stock dividend.

The trust deed was executed in New York by John D. Rockefeller, a citizen and resident of New York, to the Equitable Trust Company, a New York corporation having its place of business within the State of New York, on July 3, 1917, and by its terms transferred and conveyed to the latter, as trustee, 12,000 shares' of the capital stock of Standard Oil Company of Indiana, the income from which (less a certain annuity later canceled) was to be paid to the grantor’s daughter, Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick, for fife. It was further provided that the principal of the trust fund should, upon Mrs. McCormick’s death, be paid over either to such of her issue or to such charitable corporations as she might select, in such manner , and proportions, and with full power of exclusion, as she should [64]*64appoint by last will and testament; and in default of the exercise of such power of appointment a division was directed into a series of equal trust funds for the benefit of her children and their issue, per stirpes.

About six months after the execution of this trust deed and on January 19, 1918, another document was executed by the trustee, Mr. Rockefeller and Mrs. McCormick, wherein was recited the desire of the parties that Mrs. McCormick’s testamentary power of appointment contained in the trust deed should be surrendered and annulled, and whereby Mrs. McCormick in form surrendered and released all such power of appointment and covenanted not to exercise or attempt to exercise the same. The document expressed an acceptance by Mr. Rockefeller and the trustee of such surrender and release, and also the consent and declaration of the respective parties that the trust deed be and thereby was amended by ehminating therefrom any and all grant of any power of appointment to Mrs. McCormick, and all reference thereto. Mrs. McCormick’s three children, the defendants Fowler McCormick, Muriel McCormick Hubbard and Mathilde McCormick Oser, were then infants and did not join in this instrument.

Mrs. McCormick died in 1932, a resident of Chicago, 111., leaving a will dated August fourth of that year, which was thereafter duly admitted to probate by the Probate Court of Cook county, 111., and under which letters testamentary were issued to the defendant Chicago Title and Trust Company as executor. This will contains no specific reference to the deed of trust of 1917, or the power of appointment, but by its terms one-third of the entire estate of the testatrix was bequeathed and devised to her daughter Mrs. Hubbard, one-sixth to her daughter Mrs. Oser, one-twelfth to her son, Fowler McCormick, and the residue to one Edwin D. Krenn, who was not related to her by blood.

The Equitable Trust Company of New York, the trustee, was consolidated on May 31, 1930, with the Chase National Bank of the City of New York, the plaintiff herein, which thereupon succeeded to all its rights, duties and powers. The account of the prior trustee from the creation of the trust to December 7, 1926, was settled in a former action by a judgment of the Supreme Court dated January 3, 1927, at which time the principal of the trust fund consisted of 237,070 shares of stock of the Standard Oil Company of Indiana. In its present account the plaintiff charges itself as of March 13, 1933, with 355,671 shares of such stock, all of which have been treated as principal, including 118,557 shares received as a stock dividend early in 1929. At the time of the creation of the trust the market value of the trust fund was about $9,000,000 [65]*65and the annual income $288,000; at the present time the shares held have a market value of about $9,500,000 and yield an annual income of over $350,000.

The answers of the defendants present two separate and distinct controversies. The first arises from the claim of Muriel McCormick Hubbard, daughter and legatee of the life beneficiary, that the outright ownership of not less than one-third of the trust fund has passed to her by virtue of her mother’s will, despite the fact that it is not mentioned therein and despite the attempted termination of her mother’s power of appointment by the instrument of January 19, 1918. In this claim Mrs. Hubbard is not supported by her brother and sister, whose shares under the will would be less than the principal of the respective funds for their benefit in the hands of the trustee, or by her colegatee Krenn or his assignees, who in no event could take anything under the limited terms of the power.

Mrs. Hubbard’s counsel contend vigorously that there was no legal way in which the power of appointment could be terminated or destroyed, at least without the consent of all the persons in whose favor it might have been exercised. The testamentary power, being limited in the benefit of its exercise to Mrs. McCormick’s issue and to charitable corporations, falls within the class described in the New York statutes as a special power in trust. (Real Prop. Law, §§ 135, 138.) The latter section reads as follows: A special power is in trust, where either, (1) The disposition or charge which it authorizes is limited to be made to a person or class of persons, other than the grantee of the power; or, (2) A person or class of persons, other than the grantee, is designated as entitled to any benefit, from the disposition or charge authorized by the power.” These statutes apply to both real and personal property. (Cutting v. Cutting, 86 N. Y. 522; Hutton v. Benkard, 92 id. 295.) The exercise of Mrs. McCormick’s power was not imperative, however, but purely discretionary, as she was entitled by its terms to appoint or not to appoint, as she saw fit. (Real Prop. Law, § 157.)

In the 175 printed pages of briefs devoted on both sides to this point alone, only one case is cited in which the question of termination of such a power through surrender or release by the grantee with the grantor’s consent has been considered, and it was there left unanswered. (Newton v. Hunt, 59 Misc. 633; affd., sub nom. Newton v. Jay, 107 App. Div. 457; modfd. and affd., on separate appeal, 134 id. 325.) In that case where there was a remainder interest vested equally in the grantee’s children subject to the reserved power of the grantee, who was also the grantor, to vary the disposition and distribution among the children unequally, [66]*66Bischoff, J., at Special Term held that this power of unequal distribution was a special power in trust which could not be completely released by the grantee to her children while one of them was a minor, and that a mortgage by the adult children on their respective interests was subject to a divesting of such interests through subsequent appointment in favor of the minor child (59 Mise, at p. 640). The Appellate Division held the consideration of these questions to have been premature, and modified the judgment accordingly, stating in the opinion that the four justices taking part in the decision were equally divided with respect to the survival of the power (134 App. Div. at pp. 331, 337). Two other justices not participating in that decision had on a prior appeal concurred in a dictum implying that the power had been effectively released (134 App. Div. at p. 331; 107 id. at p. 468).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Intermediate Accounting of Hanover Bank
151 N.E.2d 184 (New York Court of Appeals, 1958)
In re the Accounting of Thorne
9 Misc. 2d 126 (New York Supreme Court, 1957)
In re the Estate of Berwind
181 Misc. 559 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1943)
American Security & Trust Co. v. Frost
117 F.2d 283 (D.C. Circuit, 1940)
In re the Estate of Trotter
175 Misc. 356 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1940)
Merrill v. Lynch
173 Misc. 39 (New York Supreme Court, 1939)
Colt v. Duggan
25 F. Supp. 268 (S.D. New York, 1938)
In re the Estate of Montgomery
166 Misc. 347 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1938)
Chase National Bank v. Chicago Title & Trust Co.
246 A.D. 201 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 Misc. 61, 279 N.Y.S. 327, 1935 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-national-bank-v-chicago-title-trust-co-nysupct-1935.