Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Carroll

5 Barb. 613
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 5 Barb. 613 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Carroll) 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
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Carroll, 5 Barb. 613 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1849).

Opinion

By the Court, Welles, J.

This cause has been argued with all the learning and ability demanded by the amount in controversy, and the importance of the principles involved [642]*642Many topics have been discussed in the arguments, as illustrative of the principal grounds of controversy, upon which, however, in the view I have taken of the merits of the cause, it is not necessary to express an opinion. I shall, therefore, confine myself to the exposition of those questions and principles, which, in my judgment, dispose of the whole litigation, as far as they appear proper for the final adjudication of the present suit;

The question whether the trust powers conferred upon the Farmers’ Loan and Trust Company by the act of April 17th, 1822, (Sess. Laws of 1822, ch. 240,) survive the fifteen years’ limitation of the act by which that company was chartered, (Sess. Laws of 1822, ch. 50,) was elaborately discussed upon the argument, and has received a careful examination; but upon submitting my views upon that subject to my brethren, there does not appear to be a unanimity of opinion; and as the cause may be decided without reference to that question, the consideration of it here, is waived.

I. Assuming that such trust powers do continue, were the transactions in this case within the scope and purview of those or any other powers of the company, and what was the real and true nature of the transactions ?

The parties; when they entered into them, were careful to denominate them trusts. If they have called them by right names they certainly are most unusual trusts, and it was well remarked on the argument, by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the instruments creating them were anomalous in their form, although he contended that was no objection to them; that they resembled trusts more than mortgages, and that effect should be given to them accordingly as they most assimilated to the One or th.e other.

The doctrine of uses and trusts was early introduced into the jurisprudence of England, probably as early as in the reign of Edward 3.- It was adopted by the ecclesiastics of that age to evade the statutes of Mortmain, and was borrowed from the fidei commissum of the civil law. (1 Cruise's Dig. 354 to 359. Story's Eq. Jur. §§ 965,6.) The intention of the statute (27 Hen. [643]*6438 ch. 10,) was to destroy that double property in land which had been introduced by the invention of uses. But that intention was, to a great extent, defeated by the strict construction given to the statute by the subtlety of the early English chancellors, by holding that there were some uses to which the statute did not transfer the possession, but which still continued separate and distinct from the legal estate, and were taken notice of and supported by the court of chancery, under the name of trusts. (1 Cruise’s Dig. 411.) A trust therefore is now said to be a use not executed by the statute. (Id.) The same author describes a trust estate “to be a right in equity to take the rents and profits of lands, whereof the legal estate is vested in some other person j to compel the person thus seised of the legal estate, who is called the trustee, to execute such conveyances of the land as the person entitled to the profits, who is called the cestui que trust, shall direct, and to defend the title to the land. In the mean time, the cestui que trust, when in possession, is considered, in a court of law, as tenant at will to the trustee.” Another author has the following: “A trust cannot be more exactly defined than in the terms employed by Lord Coke for the definition of a use, to wit: A confidence reposed in some other, not issuing out of the land, but as a thing collateral, annexed in privity to the estate of the land, and to the person touching the land, for which cestui que use has no remedy but by subpoena in chancery’’ (Lewin on Trusts, 15.) The author then analyzes the definition by a division of it into six parts, and giving to each a particular consideration and explanation. Upon the 3d he remarks, “It is a confidence reposed in some other; not in some other than the author of the trust, for a person may convert himself into a trustee, but in some other than the cestui que trust, for as a man cannot sue a subpoena against himself, he cannot be said to hold in trust for himself. If the legal and equitable interests happen to meet in the same person, the equitable is forever absorbed in the legal ; as if A. die seised of the legal estate ex parte paterna, and of , the equitable ex parte materna, the maternal line has no equity against the heir of the paternal.” (See also Goodright v. [644]*644Wells, Doug. 777.) Three things are said to be indispensable to constitute a valid trust; first, sufficient words to raise it; secondly, a definite subject; and thirdly, a certain or ascertained object. (Story’s Eq. § 964. Crunys v. Coleman, 9 Ves. 323.)

By the revised statutes of this state, all passive trusts are abolished, and the whole beneficial interest or equitable right jto the possession and the reception of the rents and profits of the land, is vested in the cestui que trust. Express or active trusts are allowed for the following purposes: 1st, To sell land for the benefit of creditors; 2d. To sell, mortgage or lease lands for the benefit of legatees, or for the purpose of satisfying any charge thereon; 3d. To receive the rents and profits of lands, and apply them to the education and support of any person during life, or any shorter period: subject to certain limitations and restrictions contained in §§ 37, 38, 39, (1 R. S. 727,) of the previous article; 4th. To receive the rents and profits of real estate, and to accumulate the same for the same purposes and within the same limitations and restrictions. (1 R. S. p. 727, §45; p. 728, § 55.) By section 2 of the act of April, 1822, before referred to, the trust powers of this company are restricted to such trusts, “ as are usual with other trustees,” and they are only authorized to receive and execute such trust, as are declared in the deed or devise by which the property is conveyed to them in trust.

In the first article of the agreement between the company and Carroll, the former covenant that they will, in consideration of the conveyances which are declared to be in trust, “ and with a view to enable the said Charles H. Carroll, to pay off and satisfy all the charges,.liens and incumbrances upon the said real estate,” immediately execute and deliver to Carroll the certificates, «fee. In the second article, it is declared to be understood that Carroll shall apply the certificates, or their proceeds, to the payment of the liens and incumbrances. So far, I can perceive nothing that savors of a trust. „ It is nothing more than an agreement, by the company, to loan the certificates, and by Carroll, to make a certain application of them, or a portion of them. The company have no active duty to perform. Carroll [645]*645is to pay the incumbrances by means of the certificates thus obtained. The next article authorizes the company to make sales and .conveyances of the land to purchasers, whenever duly authorized and requested” by Carroll. It give the company no authority to sell, excepting as so authorized and requested. They are not to give covenants to purchasers, but Carroll is bound to do so when required.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Barb. 613, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-carroll-nysupct-1849.