Gilmore v. Tuttle

32 N.J. Eq. 611
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1880
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 N.J. Eq. 611 (Gilmore v. Tuttle) 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
Gilmore v. Tuttle, 32 N.J. Eq. 611 (N.J. Ct. App. 1880).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The bill is filed by Amelia L. Gilmore, late wife of James R. Gilmore, and her infant son, for relief against the defendant, George E. Tuttle, as trustee under a declaration of trust dated March 2d, 1869. The other defendants, besides the trustee, are the other children of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore. By the declaration just mentioned, it was recited that a separation had taken place on the 5th of December, 1867, between Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore (they were subsequently divorced, on her application, in or about 1871; and, within a short time thereafter, Mr. Gilmore married again), and that, in pursuance of the terms and agreement for separation, Mr. Gilmore and his wife, in order to secure a fund for her and their four children, on that day (December 5th, 1867), conveyed to Mr. Tuttle, in fee-simple, three tracts of land in the town of Orange, in this state, one containing seventeen and thirty-four one-hundredths acres, another two acres and seventy one-hundredths, and the third, a lot of fifty feet front by two hundred and forty feet deep.

The trust, in respect to the property-, was declared by Mr. Tuttle substantially as follows: That he held the premises only in trust, first, to raise and pay, within six months from the date of the declaration, a specified sum for counsel fees and legal expenses theretofore incurred by [614]*614Mrs. Gilmore; secondly, to raise, by the sale of a specified portion of the tract of seventeen acres and thirty-four one-hundredths, or some part thereof (provided such sale could be advantageously made), $12,000; and if the sale of that part of the tract should not produce so much as that sum, then, as soon as an advantageous sale could be made, to make up the deficiency by a sale of the other property before mentioned, or some part thereof, and to pay to Mrs. Gilmore $2,000 of the $12,000, in cash, for her own free use and disposal, and to hold $10,000 in trust for her during her life, and to invest it, or some part of it, in a homestead for her, and, as trustee, to hold the title of the property which might be so purchased, and to invest in good securities so much of the $10,000 as might remain iu his hands after purchasing the homestead, and to pay to' her the annual interest thereof, he to have power to convey the homestead, if it should seem desirable, and, with the $10,000, or any part of it, to purchase another homestead if it could be done to advantage, and to change the investments at his discretion from one good security to another, provided that in no case the sum held in trust and invested should be reduced below $10,000; and to pay over, from time to time, to Mrs. Gilmore, for her own free use and disposal, the [615]*615iticrease, if any there should be, of the $10,000 realized from the investment or investments, and, on her death, to hold the $10,000 so invested, in trust for Amelia L. Gilmore, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore, wdth certain limitations and gifts over, set forth in the declaration; and, thirdly, if any money arising from the sale or sales of real estate before mentioned should remain in the hands of the trustee, or if any of the real estate should remain unsold after raising the $12,000 with interest, from the date of the declaration of trust, after paying all taxes, assessments and expenses, and after fulfilling the trust declared in the first and fourth sections of the instrument, then to hold the surplus money and the residue of the real estate in trust for the benefit of the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore and the issue of any deceased‘son, and to sell that real estate when the youngest of the sons should reach the age of twenty-one, or as soon thereafter as an advantageous sale could be effected, and to sell it, or any part of it, before the time when the youngest of the sons should reach majority, if it should seem best so to do, provided Mr. Gilmore should give his consent; and to divide the sum of $15,000, if so much should be realized, and, if not, then so much as the amount should be, in equal parts, among the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore, the issue [616]*616of any deceased son to take the share which, its parent would have had if living; and if more than $15,000 should be so realized, then to hold the excess in trust for and to divide it equally among the four children of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore, with substitution of the issue of any deceased child for its parent; and, fourthly, in case Mr. Gilmore should nob pay to Mrs. Gilmore a specified sum, on the first of each month, for the support of each of their children so long as the children should reside with their mother, or elsewhere away from their father with his consent, according to the provisions of the agreement of separation, the trustee was to supply the deficiencj’' out of such surplus fund belonging to the children as might be in his hands, and to mortgage or sell, at his discretion, so much of the real estate remaining unsold and held in trust to make up the arrears, provided that that should be done, if possible, in such a way as to produce no inequality between the shares of the children. The deed contained, also, the following provision:

In Pride v. Foolcs, 2 Beav. J¡S0, the trustee was, by the will, to be only-accountable for losses happening through his willful neglect and misconduct. The will directed him to invest in consols, instead of which he invested on a mortgage of real estate.—Held, that he was liable for whatever amount of consols the fund paid into his hands would have brought on that day, together with the accumulations. In Hix v. Bwrford, 19 Beav. Ifi9, a mortgage of £400 was given to two executors in trust to pay the income to A. for life, and, at A.’s death, to distribute the principal, with the clause that they should be chargeable only for their respective receipts, payments, acts and willful defaults. One executor received the £400 during the life-time of A., and misapplied it, continuing the payment of the interest, however, to A.—Held, that the other executor was not exonerated by the indemnity clause, which covered only any depreciation in the mortgaged premises, or inability in the mortgagor to pay, and not neglect to take steps necessary to secure the fund. In Stiles v. Guy, It You. é Coll. 571,1 Mac. & G. under a will containing a similar clause, and appointing three executors, A., B. and O., to hold the estate as trustees, with directions to get in testator’s book debts and securities not approved by them, they all proved, but B. and C. left the. management of the trust to A., who was an attorney in great credit, and had been entrusted by the testator with large sums of money, amounting, at testator’s death, to £10,000,- secured by A.’s notes and receipts; B. and 0. never took any steps to enforce payment of this sum from A., who, six years after testator’s death, became bankrupt.—Held, that by proving the will, both B. and 0. became liable to make good the loss occasioned by A.’s bankruptcy. In 'Wilkins v. Hogg, S Qiff-116.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Buckelew
13 A.2d 855 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1940)
Norris v. Beyer
1 A.2d 460 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1938)
Conover v. Guarantee Trust Co.
102 A. 844 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 N.J. Eq. 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-v-tuttle-njch-1880.