Garneau v. Garneau

9 A.2d 15, 63 R.I. 416
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 9, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 9 A.2d 15 (Garneau v. Garneau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garneau v. Garneau, 9 A.2d 15, 63 R.I. 416 (R.I. 1939).

Opinion

*417 Moss, J.

The complainants, Edward, Marcel, Ernest and Robert Garneau, who are the four children of Edward Garneau, deceased, and all minors, brought this suit in equity, by their mother, Camilia Garneau, as next friend, against Azarie Garneau, their uncle, and Rosealma Pelo *418 quin, their father’s sister. They seek to enforce their rights and interests under the second of two trust instruments which were executed by their paternal grandmother,. Amanda Garneau, widow, and under which, they assert, the first respondent is trustee for the benefit of the complainants of certain property, consisting of a note and a. r.eal estate mortgage securing it, belonging to her at the-time of the execution of the first instrument, and a certain savings bank account created by her and described in the-second instrument.

In their prayer -for relief the complainants seek an accounting from the first respondent as such trustee and his removal for the alleged violation by him of his duties, as such; and from the second respondent they seek restitution. to the .trust estate of a sum of money which constituted nearly all of the above-mentioned savings bank account, and which came into her possession by reason of an alleged violation by Amanda and Azarie' Garneau of the trust set forth in the second trust instrument.

At the hearing in the superior court on bill, answer,, replication and evidence there was no question as to the-execution and validity of the two trust instruments, which were introduced as exhibits. Nor did the respondents seriously deny that after the second was executed there was. thereunder a trust, for the benefit of the complainants,, of the bank account, as well as of the note and mortgage. But the vital contentions seriously made by them were two..

The first of these was that under the second of these-instruments, as actually drawn and executed, Amanda Garneau had the power to revoke the trust as to the bank-account, which stood on the books of the bank as belonging to “Azarie Garneau or'Amanda Garneau trustee for Marcel, Ernest, Robert and Edouard Garneau”, the complainants, and nearly all of which was on March 28, 1938,. *419 paid out by the bank to the respondent' Rosealma Peloquin on an order directing payment to her or her order and signed as follows:

“Azarie Garneau
Amanda Garneau
Trustee for
Marcel, Ernest, Robert & Edouard, Garneau”

The second of these vital contentions was whether, although no such power of revocation was reserved, expressly or by implication, to Amanda Garneau by that instrument as drawn and executed, she was equitably entitled to exercise such power, because it was omitted from that instrument by mistake of the parties thereto. No such defense was set forth in the respondents’ answer, and they introduced no evidence in support of it.

However, in order to sustain this vital contention, their counsel made a very long offer of testimony, the statement of which in the transcript of testimony covered ten pages. The justice before whom the cause was being heard rejected this offer on the grounds that the two instruments clearly created a trust in the mortgage and bank account, for 'the benefit of the complainants; that these two instruments were not “explained or illuminated or made more clear in any way by the testimony sought to be introduced”; and that it was “in direct contradiction of the ordinary legal sense of these two documents.”

He then decided that the complainants are' entitled to the fund that had been on deposit in the savings bank. A final decree was entered that by the two instruments the entire beneficial interest'in the nóte and mortgage and the bank accbunt was vested irrevocably in the complainants; that the respondent Azarie Garneau be removed as trustee and Camilla Garneau be appointed trustee in his place;' that he transfer to her the mortgage' and the *420 note secured! thereby; that he be required to account as trustee; and that the respondent Rosealma Peloquin restore to the trust fund the sum of $3837 received by her from the trust fund, with all accumulations and benefits therefrom.

The cause is now before us on the respondents’ appeal from this decree, their reasons of appeal being, in substance, that it is contrary to the law; that it is against the evidence and the weight thereof; and that evidence offered by them iii defense was erroneously rejected by the justice before whom the cause was heard.

The first of the two instruments was executed and acknowledged by Amanda Garneau on January 15, 1935, but was not filed for record until May 5, 1938, the day of her death, and meantime apparently remained in her possession, though the transferee, Azarie Garneau, knew about it. In it the mortgage and note were assigned and transferred to him as “trustee nevertheless for Edward, Ernest, Robert, and Marcel Garneau, minors, and sons of my deceased son, Edward Garneau. . .”; and by the habendum clause he was to have and to hold the mortgage and note “to them, the said Azarie Garneau, trustee” for these same minors, “their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, to their own use, benefit and behoof forever. . . .” (italics ■ours)

The second of the two instruments, which was entitled “Trust Agreement”, was executed in duplicate on July 23, 1937 by both Amanda Garneau and Azarie Garneau, who were described as the parties of the first and second parts respectively. In it they recited the above transfer by her to him, by the former instrument, of the mortgage and note as being in trust for the above-named minors; that that deed of transfer contained “no provisions defining the purposes of the trust and the powers and duties of the *421 trustee thereunder”; that it appeared to.the parties both desirable and necessary that there should be “a definite and clear expression of said purposes, powers and duties”; and that there was then on deposit in a .certain bank, in the names of both parties “as trustees for the above named minor children, certain funds, which, together with all additions thereto and accretions thereof, the party of the first part desires to add to the trust intended to be created by the transfer deed above mentioned .¡and to be more clearly defined in and by the present instrument.” (Italics ours)

After these recitals, the main body of the .agreement followed with eleven numbered paragraphs. By the first the above transfer of the mortgage and note was reaffirmed, “subject however,- to the powers, duties and purposes herein expressed.” The next five were as follows:

“2.

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Bluebook (online)
9 A.2d 15, 63 R.I. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garneau-v-garneau-ri-1939.