Delafield v. Barret

200 N.E. 67, 270 N.Y. 43, 103 A.L.R. 941, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1508
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 200 N.E. 67 (Delafield v. Barret) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delafield v. Barret, 200 N.E. 67, 270 N.Y. 43, 103 A.L.R. 941, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1508 (N.Y. 1936).

Opinions

Hubbs, J.

The respondent Marie S. Livingston was general guardian of her two minor daughters, the plaintiffs in this action. The appellants constituted the firm of Spencer Trask & Company, investment brokers. The respondent Marie S. Livingston called and requested the appellant Barret, a personal friend, to advise her with respect to investments for herself and her children. Barret informed her that his duties constituted investigating new business enterprises in need of financing; that this was the type of securities with which he was most familiar and qualified to advise her. She thereupon informed Barret that such investments would be satisfactory to her for the investment of her own funds and the funds of her children. Her own attorney advised her that the investment of the funds of’her children in securities other than those specified by the laws of the State for investment by guardians would involve an assumption of risk on her part and on the part of appellants. Her attorney suggested to Barret and to the respondent Marie S. Livingston that it would be proper for her to indemnify appellants against any liability which appellants might incur as a result of making such investments. Barret informed her that appellants would not be willing to assist her in the investment of her children’s funds in the manner requested unless she would agree to indemnify the firm against such liability. Pursuant to her instructions, her attorney prepared an indemnity agreement and she executed it and delivered it to appellants. The agreement was in the following form:

“It is my intention to place in your hands certain funds to invest for me as General Guardian of my chil *46 dren, and in making these investments, I wish to give you the widest possible scope. Whatever investments you may make in future will be satisfactory to me as General Guardian, and I hereby agree that I will hold you harmless and will indemnify you for any claims which may be made against you or your firm for investing the funds of my children in securities other than those which a guardian is permitted to invest in under the laws of this State.

Very truly yours,
“ MARIE S. LIVINGSTON.”

Thereafter, the appellants received various sums of money from the respondent Marie S. Livingston which moneys belonged to the plaintiffs herein and whose moneys it used in part in the purchase of securities not of the nature of those specified in section 111 of the Decedent Estate Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 13), made applicable to guardians by section 85 of the Domestic Relations Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 14), and in part in payment for securities of like nature not purchased by appellants, but issued by them in the course of the financing of business ventures. These transactions continued from on or about October 5, 1925, when letters of guardianship were issued to the respondent Marie S. Livingston, until in or about the month of June, 1929. During all this time the respondent Marie S. Livingston expressed no dissatisfaction with the manner in which her funds or the funds of her children had been handled and in fact no complaint was made until about June 5, 1932, when securities of all kinds had seriously declined in value and the investment business was in a chaotic condition.

There is no indication in the record in this case that the appellants made any misrepresentations to the plaintiffs or to the respondent Marie S. Livingston. It appears that the appellants acted in good faith toward the plaintiffs and the respondent Marie S. Livingston. The appel *47 lants bought and sold securities for several years, rendering in the meantime statements which clearly indicated the nature of the securities sold to and bought for_ the accounts of these infants.

This action was instituted to recover the moneys of the infant plaintiffs paid to appellants and by them used in the pinchase for or sale to the plaintiffs of securities not of the nature of those specified in the statutes referred to. On motion the respondent Marie S. Livingston was made a party to this action and judgment sought against her on the indemnity agreement. The Special Term decided in favor of the plaintiffs against appellants .and in favor of the appellants as against Marie S. Livingston on the indemnity agreement. The Appellate Division affirmed the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and reversed it in so far as it adjudged Marie S. Livingston hable on the indemnity agreement, on the ground that the agreement in question is void as against public policy.

The sole question involved on this appeal is whether the facts proven sustain the defense that the indemnity agreement is void and unenforceable. A decision by this court in her favor would result in permitting her to repudiate a contract entered into by her with full knowledge that it was being relied upon by the appellants, a contract prepared by her own attorney, the purpose and effect of which were clearly understood by her.

While the public policy of the State requires that persons who deal with the funds of infants and other funds held in a fiduciary capacity shall be held strictly accountable for the manner in which they deal with those funds to the extent that if they convert the same they shall be deemed guilty of larceny, Penal Law, sections 1290 and 1302, and if they invest those funds otherwise than in securities of the kind and nature specified in the Decedent Estate Law, section 111, and Personal Property Law, section 21, they shall be held responsible for any resultant loss, it does not necessarily *48 follow that such public policy requires the imposition of a penalty not within the contemplation of legislative enactments and entirely beyond the previous judicial decisions on the subject.

It must be borne in mind that although the Legislature has specified certain types of securities as proper for the investment of trust funds, and by so doing has afforded a measure of protection to fiduciaries, in that by investment in the permitted securities they presumptively, at least, are entitled to be relieved of that liability which the courts have sometimes imposed upon them where loss resulted from their management of the trust estate, it has not imposed or attempted to impose any liability, penal or civil, for the investment of such funds in securities not of the kind specified in the statutes. The liability which rests upon a fiduciary to reimburse the estate of a ward is one imposed by the courts and not by the Legislature. The statutes in question are not mandatory in form. Their purpose would seem to be to specify those types of investments which to the Legislature seem to afford a maximum of safety. The fiduciary who invests in securities within the specified classes is not by the statutes freed from liability for resultant losses if he fails to exercise reasonable judgment and discretion in making the investment. (See Matter of Jacobs, 152 Misc. Rep. 139.)

The effect of the statutes is not to excuse the fiduciary in case of loss where he invests in securities of the permitted classes without proper investigation and the exercise of reasonable care or to create a liability where liability would not exist in the absence of the statutes. The result of the investment of trust funds in securities not within the classes specified in the statutes is suggested in Steele v.

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Bluebook (online)
200 N.E. 67, 270 N.Y. 43, 103 A.L.R. 941, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delafield-v-barret-ny-1936.