Diffenderffer v. Winder

3 G. & J. 311
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 3 G. & J. 311 (Diffenderffer v. Winder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diffenderffer v. Winder, 3 G. & J. 311 (Md. 1831).

Opinions

Dorsey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In disposing of the first point on which a reversal of the decree of the Chancellor has been urged, it is unnecessary' for this court to consider, whether the credit insisted on by appellant, of $2578 77, alleged to have been paid by the former trustee, (in satisfaction of the debts due by Charles Rogers,) out of that portion of the trust fund to which Mrs. Diffenderffer was entitled, ought not to have been discharged by the proceeds of the trust estate, on which those debts were conditionally a lien, accruing before the death of Mrs. Bailey: because it does not appear by the record before us, or any of the proceedings which it refers to, and makes evidence, that the personal estate of the testator was insufficient for the payment of his debts. It has been stated in the argument, that such insufficiency is established by the auditor’s statement of the accounts, of the former trustee, made in the year 1818. But to these accounts, no such operation can he given; having never received the Chancellor’s confirmation, they are no evidence of the facts they are i elied on to prove. This credit therefore was properly rejected.

In discussing the question of interest, it has been strongly contended, that no such charge ought to be made, because Diffenderffer came into possession of the , trust property, as the allotment of his wife, under a division of Charles Rogers' estate, made in pursuance of his last will and testament, by Samuel Vincent, the former trustee, without a knowledge of any other persons being entitled or claiming title to any prut thereof, and that the first intima[341]*341tion of. the kind which he received, was the filing of the bill in Chancery, which is now before ns. What would be Mr. Diffenderffer's rights in such a state of facts, we are not required to determine. He stands not in that predica'ment before us. It is manifest that Samuel Vincent never did make any division under Charles Rogers' will, of the .real estate devised to Mrs. Lee, Mrs. Martin, and Mrs. Diffenderffer, the only property whereof a division was directed;—that every thing done by Hands, and now relied on, as proof of such division, was to point out to Diffenderjfer, at the time he took possession of the trust property, thé forty feet lot on Calvert street, devised in severalty to Mrs. Bailey. That so far froto being in fitter ignorance of the fights, of claims of the'appellees, until their hill was filed in 1825, he was fully and distinctly notified thereof, by the auditor’s statements in 1818, made finder his own eye, and as well, at his instance, as at that, of the former trustee. Had he then believed, as he now alleges, that his wife and children were entitled to the whole of the property confided to his charge, what would have been his course with regard to the auditor’s accounts ? It is só clearly pointed out both by his duty, and his interest, that what it would have been, cannot be the subject of a momentary doubt. He would have caused exceptions to be filed, and the rights of the parties interested to be definitively settled. His failure to have done this, cannot be othef wise regarded, than as a recognition of the title of the appellees. He has therefore, upofi the grounds upon which he has asked it, no claims to lenity at the hands of this court.

Where trustees act bona fide, and with due: diligence, they have always received the favor and protection of Courts of Equity; their áots have been regarded with' the most indulgent consideration. But on the other hand, where they have betrayed their trust; where they have grossly violated their duty; where they have been guilty of unreasonable negligence, they forfeit all claims to the favor and protection of the court. Their acts are inspected with [342]*342the severest scrutiny, and they are dealt with according td rules of strict, if not of rigorous justice. This course of proceeding, is productive of the most beneficial consequences, and is founded on the soundest principles of policy; It is the surest, perhaps the only means of securing the fidelity, vigilance, and integrity of those, to whose hands are committed the interests of the weakest, and most unprotected portion of the community.

It was held in England, even in the days of Lord Hard-wick, that an executor was not chargeable with interest who had used for his own benefit, money belonging to the estate of his testator. Subsequently a more just and equitable principle was adopted. It was determined, that an.executor or trustee ought not to derive any advantage to himself from the trust property; and that if he used it:as his own', or was guilty of crassa negligentia in not paying it over 'to, dr investing it for the benefit of the cestui que trusts, that he should be charged with the annual interest oí four per cént; that being the established ihterest of the Court Of Chancery; At a subsequent period, it being found that these abuses by fiduciary agents still continued, and that justice was not extended to cestuique trusts, by the rule already established, the court went a step further, and decided, that where an executor or trustee used the trust fund, and refused to render an account of the profits, that he should pay an interest of five per cent.; that being the greatest annual interest which the law allowed, and being the presumed amount of profits, to the whole of which, if ascertained, the cestui que trust was entitled. At a still later period, a decree was passed, (sanctioned by the opinion of at least three Lord Chancellors) in Raphael vs. Boehm, reported in 11 and 13 Ves., by which not only five per cent, was allowed, but compound interest also, against an executor who had. neglected, as directed by the will, to invest money with- the interest accruing thereon by way of accumulation, for thé benefit of the children of the testator. ’Tis true, that the decision in that case, was'made as depending "on .the pecu[343]*343liar provisions of the will, under which the executor acted. But it is equally true, that there was nothing in that will enjoined on the executor, which the law does not impose on him as a duty, without any testamentary injunction on the subject, where money belonging to the deceased’s estate unnecessarily, and for an unreasonable time, remains in his hands. And it requires more than an ordinary degree of astuteness, to discern the distinction in a moral point of view, or in the eyes of a court of conscience, between the acts of him, who violates the duties required of him by a testament or deed, and him who in regard to the same subject matter, violates the same duties imperatively imposed on him by the established principles of law. But the appellant here, is not even entitled to the benefit of this distinction, if any there be, because, like the executor in Raphael vs. Boehm, his duties are enjoined on him by the same authority under which he derives his powers.

In what has been said respecting the legal obligation of investment by executors or trustees, in whose hands large sums have, without any reasonable excuse therefor, been suffered to remain, we do not mean to say, that compound interest is the indemnity to be made for such negligence. The current of English decisions is against it, and the question is not now before us for adjudication. It is hardly necessary to say that Mr. Diffenderffer,

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Bluebook (online)
3 G. & J. 311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diffenderffer-v-winder-md-1831.