Fellows v. Fellows

46 A. 474, 69 N.H. 339
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJune 5, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 46 A. 474 (Fellows v. Fellows) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fellows v. Fellows, 46 A. 474, 69 N.H. 339 (N.H. 1898).

Opinion

Parsons, J.

March 31, 1870, Stevens Fellows and wife conveyed to James Fellows, their son, real and personal property *343 exceeding $4,000 in value, and James executed and delivered to Stevens a bond for the support of Stevens and wife and to “ pay as soon as convenient after their decease ” to Susan Hardy and Betsey Scribner, or their heirs, the sum of $600. Susan and Betsey, the remaining children of Stevens, were informed of this provision. This bond was secured by a real estate mortgage from James and wife to Stevens. Stevens and wife are.both dead, and the material question in the case is whether a. release of the condition of James’ bond by which he covenanted to pay the $600 to Betsey and Susan, given James by Stevens in June, 1877, is valid and effectual against the claim for that sum now made by the assignee of Betsey and Susan.

The only ground urged against the validity of Stevens’ release is that by the transaction of March, 1870, a trust was created irrevocable by Stevens. If a trust is perfectly created and nothing is required of the court but to give effect to the trust as an executed trust, it will be carried into effect, though without consideration. If the settlor, by a clear and explicit declaration duly executed and intended to be final and binding upon him, makes himself a trustee, courts of equity will enforce thetiust. If the donor or settlor does not propose to make himself, a trustee, the trust is not perfectly created. So an intention merely to make a testamentary disposition cannot be carried into effect unless the instrument evidencing the same is capable-of proof as a will. 1 Per. Tr., ss. 96-98. Where the trust is. clearly proved, the results which follow therefrom are beyond, question. But whether in a particular case the intention of the settlor is established, and whether he has effectuated that intention by parting with all control and dominion over the subject of the trust,— that is, whether the trust is perfectly created,—arc often questions of great difficulty. Whether the trust is perfectly created or not is a question of fact in each case. 1 Per. Tr., s. 99. These questions have most frequently in recent times arisen in connection with deposits in banks in the-name of the depositor as trustee for another, or in the name of another directly. This case is determined by the adjudications', in this court in that class of cases. In determining the relations-between James and Stevens and Betsey and Susan, the whole;transaction must be taken together. Considering only the bond given by James with the mortgage, if the same were without consideration it might properly be said that James was the creator of a voluntary trust, perfectly created, which he could not; revoke, and which Stevens, as the holder of the legal title, a-, mere naked trustee, could not release. Jones v. Jones, 66 N. H. 198. The mortgage is the only portion of the transaction considered in McPherson v. Rollins, 107 N. Y. 316, which is cited, as a case exactly in point. But James’ mortgage and bond were? *344 «pon a valuable consideration moving from Stevens, and he was :in no sense the creator of a trust, except as every mortgagor by ■the giving of a mortgage creates a trust in the security bound for the performance of the condition. He can no more be regarded as the creator of the trust than a savings bank which receives a deposit in the name of A, in trust for C. The obligations of both rest in contract and they cannot release them■-selves.

The consideration of James’ bond and mortgage was the conveyance of real and personal property to him. Stevens’ conveyance to James was absolute and contained no declaration of "trust. If it was upon James’ agreement to pay $4,000 to Stevens, or $3,400 to Stevens, or to support him for life and pay $600 to Betsey and Susan, no trust attached to the land upon failure •of James to perform his agreement. G. S., c. 121, s. 13; Farrington v. Barr, 36 N. H. 86. Whether a portion of the property was a gift to James or not is immaterial. The agreement to : support and to pay $600 was the consideration to which both parties assented. The parties understood at the time that the agreement to support was not a sufficient consideration. Stevens required and James agreed to pay a further consideration of $600, payable at the termination of the agreement to support and after its fulfillment. If the matter rested here, Stevens could at any time, upon terms satisfactory to himself, have released James from the payment. The question is, whether by accepting from -James, as part of the consideration, his covenant to pay Betsey .and Susan $600, in place of a note or agreement payable to sMmself, Stevens deprived himself of all power and dominion «ver the $600 so that he could not afterward appropriate it to Ms own uses. What the reasons were, satisfactory to him, for which he executed the release to James are immaterial. If he '-■could release him upon payment to him of the $600 or its present worth, he could for a less sum. Having received the amount, lie could give it to James, or could make him a present of a ¿release.

If the taking of the bond to him was an appropriation of the -fund owed by James, in trust for Betsey and Susan, Stevens -was both the creator of the trust and the trustee. If James failed to perform according to his mortgage, Stevens upon fore- ■ closure would hold the land. If the acceptance of James’ agreement created a valid trust which Stevens could not revoke, then •■the foreclosure would not revoke it, and the land would stand ' in Stevens’ hands as trustee, charged with the payment of the .'$600 at-his decease; because if neither James nor Stevens could ■ cancel James’ agreement to pay that sum, the security appropriated by James for its payment would be held in trust for that •purpose, and performance could be enforced by a suit in the *345 name of Stevens’ administrator (Holmes v. Fisher, 13 N. H. 1; Northy v. Northy, 45 N. H. 141), or by the appointment of a trustee if necessary. Perkins v. Perkins, 60 N. H. 373. Did Stevens intend a present gift to Betsey and Susan, or a testament.ary disposition of such of his estate as he understood would remain at his decease ? In order that the money, whether a deposit in a savings bank or a right to money in the hands of another, should pass as a present gift or trust, it must appear that a gift or trust was intended, and parol evidence is admissible to prove such intent. Smith v. Bank, 64 N. H. 228; Marcy v. Amazeen, 61 N. H. 131; Towle v. Wood, 60 N. H. 434; Bartlett v. Remington, 59 N. H. 364; Blasdel v. Locke, 52 N. H. 238. As to what constitutes sufficient evidence of an intention to make a gift or declare a trust, the authorities are not agreed. See 64 N. H. 228, 232; 1 Per. Tr., s. 99. In Martin v. Funk, 75 N. Y. 134, relied upon in support of McPherson v. Rollins, 107 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
46 A. 474, 69 N.H. 339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fellows-v-fellows-nh-1898.