Denike v. . Harris

84 N.Y. 89, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 378
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 8, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 84 N.Y. 89 (Denike v. . Harris) 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
Denike v. . Harris, 84 N.Y. 89, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 378 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Earl, J.

For some time before his death the' testator was a spqpial partner of the defendant in the business of selling agricultural implements; and as such special partner he had contributed to the capital of the partnership the sum of $15,-000. On the 1st day of January, 1879, an account then taken of the assets and condition of the partnership showed his interest therein to be the sum of $17,908. On the 17th day of July thereafter he made and published his will, in which he nominated' his partner, Beeves, and the defendant Harris as his executors; and he died on the 6th day of September, 1879. The will was subsequently admitted to probate, ánd the executors qualified and entered upon their duties as such. The testator’s personal property amounted to over $142,000. In his will he gave various legacies, to be paid within three years after his death, and he bequeathed to his executors the sum of $11,500 in trust, to apply the income of a portion thereof during a minority and of another portion thereof during a life designated, and at the expiration of the trust he gave the *92 principal sum. to persons designated. He empowered his ex-excutors to sell all or any of his real estate, and to sell and convert into money, at pjiblic or private sale, his personal estate, for the purpose of paying debts and legacies and making distribution among the residuary legatees. He also directed and empowered his executors to sell and dispose of any and all vessels owned by him at his decease, whenever they deemed it for the best interests of his estate, and provided that they should in no manner be held accountable for the loss or depreciation in value of such vessels. The tenth clause of the will, which gave rise to the present controversy, is as follows: “ It is my will, and I do hereby order and direct my executors, hereinafter named, to allow my friend, Robert 0. Reeves, to retain, as a loan to him out of my personal estate, the sum of $15,000, being the amount now invested by me in the business carried on and conducted by him, and in which I am a special partner, to be used and employed by him in carrying on and conducting the said business, and to be continued from year to year at the option of the said Robert C. Reeves, but not to exceed the term of three years, upon his paying the interest thereon annually at the rate of five per cent per annum. Such income, when received by my said executors, to be from time to time paid over to my residuary legatees, and at the expiration of said term, or the sooner determination thereof at his option aforesaid, I direct my said executors to receive from the said Robert 0. Reeves the said sum of money and interest, and to discharge him fully from all further liability on account or by reason of such indebtedness, and upon such payment being lhade to my said executors, the said sum of $15,-000 is to become a part of my residuary estate, and to be distributed according to the provisions of this my will with respect thereto.”

In the inventory of the testator’s estate, filed by the executors after his decease, his interest in the partnership with Reeves was estimated and appraised at $14,000.

The plaintiffs, two of the three residuary legatees named in the will, for themselves and the other residuary legatee, com *93 menced this action to restrain the executors from making the loan to Reeves mentioned in the tenth clause of the will, without requiring of him security therefor. They alleged in their complaint, among other things, that the executors proposed and intended to make the loan without taking security; that the business in which Reeves was engaged was one peculiarly of great risk, and that he had but little or no property. The defendants in their answer, among other things, denied that the business of Reeves was one peculiarly of great risk, as alleged in the complaint, and they denied that he had little or no property, and alleged that he was and had at all times been solvent and able to pay all his debts.

The court, at Special Term, found, upon the allegations in the complaint and answer above specified, without any proof, that the business in which Reeves was engaged was one of risk—not that it was peculiarly risky, or more risky than other kinds of commercial or mercantile business. He also found that Reeves intended to use the money, if loaned to him, in his business, and that it would thus be at risk, peril and jeopardy, and liable to be lost; that the executors intended to loan him the money, and refused to take any security therefor, although they had been requested to do so by the plaint iffs. And the court ordered judgment for plaintiffs, among other things, that the executors should not loan the §15,000 to Reeves, or permit him to retain that sum, as provided in the tenth clause of the will, without requiring and obtaining from him sufficient and proper security for the safe payment and return of the sum thus loaned or retained at the end of the three years. The judgment thus ordered was, upon appeal by the defendants, affirmed at the General Term, and then they appealed to this court.

The claim of the plaintiffs, which has thus far been sustained by the Supreme Court, is, that in making this loan, the defendants are in the position of all trustees authorized to loan trust funds, and that they are bound by the general rules of law to take proper security. That rule is supposed to require trustees exercising a general authority to make investments to *94 take government or real estate securities. (King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76.) But the creator of a trust requiring the investment of money may designate how the investment may be made, and what security may be taken, and he may dispense with all security. The question here is, did the testator intend that Beeves should give security for the sum to be retained by or loaned to him % We think it clear that he did not. He appointed him one of his executors without requiring him to give security, investing him as such with large discretion over a large estate, to be exercised during a long period of time. He evinced entire confidence in his sound judgment, capacity, integrity and solvency. He called him his friend,” knew him well, had for a considerable time been associated with Kim in business, and was well acquainted with the business in which he was engaged and the risks incident thereto. He had invested in that business $15,000, and intrusted it to the management of Beeves without, so far as appears, any security. He evidently did not want the business broken up and Beeves and his own estate subjected to the loss which might be caused by closing it up in the ordinary way required by law. He mfeant also to favor Beeves by giving him the use, during the time mentioned, of the money which he had invested in the business, so that he could continue the business if he desired to. If Beeves were required to give the security exacted, the loan would be no favor to him. He might not be able to give such security; • and if he could, he could borrow the money without difficulty of other lenders. The language used pre-. eludes the idea of security. As executor he was required to give no security. The property was then in his hands, and as surviving partner he was required to give no security. He was to be allowed to retain ” the sum named. If the testator had intended that security should be exacted for the loan, that matter would have been in his mind and probably expressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.Y. 89, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denike-v-harris-ny-1881.