Davoue v. Fanning

2 Johns. Ch. 251
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedDecember 3, 1816
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 2 Johns. Ch. 251 (Davoue v. Fanning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davoue v. Fanning, 2 Johns. Ch. 251 (N.Y. 1816).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

1. The first question arising upon this case is, whether the sole acting executor, who was the defendant Henry Fanning, was authorized under the will, without the direction of this Court, to sell any part of the real estate.

If all the executors named had the power by the will, then the sole acting executor has the power by the statute, (N. R. L. vol. 1. p. 366.) on the neglect or refusal of the rest of the executors to act.

[ * 255 ]

The will directs that the real estate be sold at public vendue, when it shall become necessary to raise money for the legacies, or when all the children are of age ; but it does not say expressly who shall sell, though I think, as Lord Hardwicke did in a case somewhat similar, (Black v. Willer, 1 Atk. 420.) that it is a very reasonable construction, that the power was given to the executors. It seems almost impossible to mistake the testator’s meaning on *this point. He directed that an inventory of the real and personal estate should be taken by the executors; that they were to give the younger children such education as they should think proper; that the legacies of 2,000?. to each of the seven children, were to be paid out of “ the bulk of the estate,” as they should respectively become of age; and that if the executors should find that “ the estate” fell short of the legacies, they were to make a deduction and apportionment, according to a rule prescribed. The testator then adds, “ I will and direct, that so much of my real estate as shall be necessary to furnish the sums which I have heretofore bequeathed to my children, shall be sold at public vendue, when they shall attain the full age to possess the same, and the remainder of my real estate to be leased or rented by my executors; and that when my youngest child shall have attained unto full age, that then all my real estate and property, not otherwise disposed of, be sold, &c., and the proceeds, with the amount of the personal property, be divided among the children,” &c.

It is to be observed, that the will directs that the personal property be immediately sold, and the proceeds put at interest, &c., but it is equally silent as to the persons who are to sell it.

[255]*255The object of the power to sell was to raise money for the legacies, which it is, of course, the duty of the executor to discharge; and the will regulates the sale, by declaring it to be at public auction, which it would not have done, if it was intended that the sale should not be made by the constituted agents of the will, but under the directions of this Court. Indeed, taking the whole will together, I think it is a very necessary conclusion, that the executors were the persons intended by the testator to execute the power to sell.

[ * 256 ]

2. The next and principal point in the case is, whether the plaintiff is not entitled to set the sale aside, because the executor, by a previous arrangement, suffered the property *to be purchased in for his wife, and executed a deed in pursuance of the sale in trust for her.

It is contended, on the part of the defendants, that this sale is not open to objection, inasmuch as it was at public auction, and bona fide, and for a fair price, and the purchase was not made for the benefit of the executor himself, but for the benefit of his wife, who was one of the cestui que trusts, having an interest in the land. But I am of opinion that these circumstances do not vary the application of the general rule.

The executor, in selling a part of the estate to raise a particular legacy, was acting as a trustee for all those who were interested in the estate under the will, and not exclusively for the benefit of his wife, whose particular legacy he was raising. The plaintiff, and all the other children, had an equal interest with the defendant’s wife that the property should be sold to the best advantage, because the greater the price, the greater would be the dividend of the residuary estate. They were all equally cestui que trusts of the ' executor; for he was charged with the duty of applying the proceeds of the estate to their use, and of eventually selling the whole real estate for distribution among them. If, in selling a part of the estate, in the mean time, for a legacy to his wife, he could become the purchaser on her account, or constitute an agent for that purpose, the temptation to abuse of trust would be great and dangerous. Whether a trustee buys in for himself or his wife, the temptation to abuse is nearly the same. Though the money he was raising was to go to the wife, it was no reason why he should be permitted to buy in for her the estate itself, when the plaintiff and others had also legacies to be raised out of the estate, and were equally entitled to their share of what should be remaining. His interest here interfered with his duty. Emptor emit quam minimo potest; venditor vendit quam máximo potest. Indeed, the very fact that the executor was, [257]*257m that instance, exercising the general *powers of his trust for the benefit of his wife, was peculiarly calculated to touch and awaken the suggestions of self-interest. The case, therefore, falls clearly within the spirit of the principle, that if a trustee, acting for others, sells an estate, and becomes himself interested in the purchase, the cestui que trust is entitled to come here, as of course, and set aside that purchase, and have the property re-exposed for sale.

Where the trustee himself becomes a purchaser of the trust estate, the cestui que trust may, of course, come in and set aside the purchase, and have the property re-exposed to sale. And it makes no difference whether the sale was at public auction, and bona jide for a fair price, or otherwise.

I consider this to be a sound and settled doctrine of the Court. But as the point is extremely important, and has been long and greatly agitated, it will be safer, and certainly more satisfactory to the parties, that I should not only lay down the rule, but look into the authorities on which it is supported.

[ * 258 ]

The earliest case I have met with, containing any full recognition of the principle, that a trustee cannot act for his own benefit on a subject connected with the trust, is that of Holt v. Holt, in the 22 Car. II., (1 Ch. Cas. 190.) where it was held, by the Lord Keeper Bridgman, assisted by the judges, that if an executor in trust renewed a lease, it should be for the benefit of the cestui que trust. The next case that occurs was that of Keech v. Sandford, before Lord Ch. King, in 1726. (3 Eq. Cas. Abr. 741.) A lease of the profits of a market was devised to a trustee, in trust for an infant; before the expiration of the term, the trustee applied to the lessor for a renewal for the infant’s benefit, which he refused, because he could not distrain, but must rest singly on covenant, which the infant could not make. The trustee then took a lease to himself, and the chancellor decreed, that the lease should be assigned to the infant, and that the trustee should be indemnified from the covenants in the lease, and the trustee account for the profits since the renewal. He said he must consider it a trust for the infant, “for if the trustee, on refusal to renew, might have a lease to himself, few trust estates would be renewed to *cestui que trusts;

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Bluebook (online)
2 Johns. Ch. 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davoue-v-fanning-nychanct-1816.