Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Roest

166 A. 918, 113 N.J. Eq. 368
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJune 5, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 166 A. 918 (Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Roest) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity Union Trust Co. v. Roest, 166 A. 918, 113 N.J. Eq. 368 (N.J. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

Henry Vander Roest died in 1930, and by his will, made the year before, after a few pecuniary bequests, gave the residue of his estate to his executor in trust to pay the income to his son Henry Chester Vander Roest for ten years, then the principal; if he died within the period, income to support his issue until twenty-one, then the corpus; if the son died within ten years without leaving issue, corpus to the son's widow and to a niece in equal shares. *Page 369

By a codicil executed the same day as the will, and apparently at the same writing, the testator devised 10-12-14 Orchard street, Newark, to the son. The legal title to the property was in the Elite Realty Company, a corporation formed by the testator, of which he owned all the capital stock.

The complainant-trustee prays a construction of the will and a declaration of rights thereunder. The son joins in the prayer and by counter-claim sets up: That the testator caused the Elite Realty Company to be formed in 1917; at that time he owned the Orchard street property, and to defeat his wife's inchoate right of dower (sic) gave a $5,000 note, caused the holder to enter judgment on it, and the sheriff to sell the property to one Meyer, who conveyed it to the company; that the company held the property as "passive" trustee for the testator, who always dealt with it as his own, and at his death was the equitable and sole beneficial owner. He prays that it be decreed that the company holds the mere naked legal title, that he (son) is the sole equitable and beneficial owner, and that the company convey to him the legal title.

There is nothing of proof of the testator's alleged evil motive, but from the agreed state of facts it may be assumed that the testator caused the title to be put in the name of the company for his convenience; that he collected the rents and paid the charges; there is no trace of minutes of meetings of directors, or of issue of stock, or of a bank account. The property is encumbered by several building and loan mortgages given by the company upon which the testator paid the interest and the dues on the shares. The title to another property, 27 Walnut street, was also in the company.

Were this a bald question of legal title to land, equity would not presume to answer; the decision would be exclusively for the law courts. Torrey v. Torrey, 55 N.J. Eq. 410; Hoagland v.Cooper, 65 N.J. Eq. 407. Though the bare statement in the bill, the record title to the property, and the naked prayer for a construction of the will and a determination of the rights of the parties, seemingly invite *Page 370 an adjudication ordinarily for the law courts, the appeal is, in fact, to equity's jurisdiction over trusts and for its guidance of trustees in their duty, justified by the complainant's liability to account, as trustees of the capital stock of the Elite Realty Company, for its administration of the affairs of the corporation. Farmers' Loan and Trust Co. v. Pierson,222 N Y Supp. 532. The question of title is incidental to the instructions rightfully sought. The counter-claimant, too, presents a cause essentially equitable: That the Elite Realty Company holds the bare legal title to the property of which he claims to be the equitable owner, seeking to be clothed with the legal estate — a relief to be had in equity only. The inherent jurisdiction of the court in such matters finds extension in the power granted to determine and declare the equitable rights of persons claiming under wills, by the act of 1915. Cum. St. 271.

What the testator meant is unmistakable. His intention to devise this particular piece of real estate to his son is manifest, and conceded on all sides. The contention is that, as the title was not in him but in the company, the devise is inoperative and his intention cannot be effectuated.

The son took nothing by the abstract devise in the codicil. As to that Chancellor Kent said in M'Kinnon v. Thompson, 3 Johns.Ch. 307:

"The devise of the home and lot was null and void, inasmuch as the testator had no legal or equitable title to it at the date of the devise. * * * A devise is in the nature of a conveyance, or an appointment of a specific estate and nothing passes, but what the testator owned at the time of the devise. No rule is better settled than that which declares that the testator must have a legal or equitable title in the land devised at the making of the will, or nothing will pass. A title subsequently acquired is of no avail. All that courts of equity have done is to consider an equitable interest founded on articles for purchase and which equity would enforce, as real estate which will pass by a devise.Langford v. Pitt, 2 P. Wins. 629; Greenhill v. Greenhill,Pr. Ch. 320; Potter v. Potter, 1 Ves. 147, 399. Where a devise thus fails *Page 371 for want of a title at the time, the court cannot relieve the devisee out of other parts of the testator's estate. A deficiency in specific legacy (and every devise is necessarily specific) is never supplied in that way. The gift totally fails. Ashton v.Ashton, Cas. t. Talbot 152; 2 Ves. 569 S.P."

The devise cannot be given effect on the theory that the equitable title was in the testator upon a resulting trust, for even though he paid the purchase price, which may be assumed, the property was conveyed with intent to vest the title, legal and equitable, absolutely, in the company, organized by the testator for that purpose. This fact rebuts the presumed intention from which resulting trusts spring. Further, the testator having enjoyed the corporate privileges and immunities, and chargeable with the corresponding corporate duties and responsibilities, an assertion of a resulting trust, in the circumstances, is to confess a fraud upon the statute. Jackson v. Hooper, 76 N.J. Eq. 592.

Nor can the devise be given effect upon the theory advanced by the devisee that the equitable title was in the testator by virtue of possessing all the capital stock of the company. Absolute ownership is in the corporation, for the ultimate beneficial use of stockholders, in a sense as trustee for them; but stockholders have neither legal nor equitable estate in the property of the corporation. The corporation alone can convey. Neither a majority nor all the stockholders can divest it of title. They may accomplish, but themselves cannot do it. The corporation is their instrument, they the instrumentalities by which it functions extraordinarily, and through their appointees, the board of directors, ordinarily. In the terse language of Mr. Justice Holmes in Klein v. Board of Tax Supervisors,282 U.S. 19:

"The corporation is a person and the ownership is a nonconductor that makes it impossible to attribute an interest in its property to its members."

Our duty, nevertheless, is to carry out the testator's intention, if possible, consistently with the rule of law (Johnson v. Bowen, 85 N.J. Eq. 76; Den, Nelson v. Combs,18 N.J. Law 27), but the task cannot be accomplished by *Page 372 holding that the codicil conveyed title to the Orchard street property, much as we know it was intended that it should.

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Bluebook (online)
166 A. 918, 113 N.J. Eq. 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-union-trust-co-v-roest-njch-1933.