Goldman v. Kaplan

170 F.2d 503, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedNovember 8, 1948
DocketNo. 5801
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 170 F.2d 503 (Goldman v. Kaplan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goldman v. Kaplan, 170 F.2d 503, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680 (4th Cir. 1948).

Opinion

SOPER, Circuit Judge.

This case concerns the administration of a testamentary trust in which, as the District Judge found; .the trustee made use of certain .property committed to his care for his own benefit and to the detriment of the beneficiaries. The suit was brought and this appeal was taken by one of the beneficiaries who complains that the period for which the trustee was held liable to account to him for the use and occupancy of the property was unduly restricted in the judgment below. The appellant is a resident of North Carolina and the other beneficiaries, who are residents of Virginia, were unable to join as party plaintiffs since their joinder in a suit against the trustee, who is also a resident of Virginia, would have ousted the jurisdiction of the court.

Prior to 1926, Sol Kaplan and his father-in-law, Jacob Goldman, were engaged as partners in the wholesale leather business at Nos. 500-502 Church Street in Norfolk, Virginia. In that year Goldman died leaving a will under which his four children, one of whom is the plaintiff herein, acquired equal interests in the business, subject to the payment of certain bequests and also equal beneficial interests in certain real estate in Norfolk which he directed to be held in trust for their benefit for twenty-five years and then to be divided among them. Kaplan was named as executor and trustee under the will.

The business had been conducted in two of the most valuable buildings left in trust by the testator, and was continued at the same location by Kaplan and the children. In 1927 a corporation was formed to which the owners of the business transferred their respective interests, and Kaplan and his wife became the controlling shareholders. By agreement of all the interested parties, and without written lease, the rent of the property occupied by the corporation was fixed at .$100 per month and it remained at this figure until December 31, 1939, although in 1937 or 1938 the corporation enlarged the space it occupied by moving into certain small adjoining properties which also belonged to the trust estate.

Louis H. Goldman, the plaintiff herein, continued as shareholder and director of the corporation, and was also an employee until 1938. In that year he moved to Durham, North Carolina, and has not since participated in the business of the corporation. In 1942 he and two of the other children sold their stock in the corporation to Mrs. Kaplan, and since that occurrence the Kaplans have been the sole stockholders.

On December 8,1939, Kaplan notified the plaintiff that the rent for the property would be reduced to $75 per month because the property had depreciated in value. No written lease was executed. In September, 1941, Kaplan restored the rent to $100 per month and it remained at this figure until 1946. On March 29, 1946, an attorney wrote to Kaplan, as trustee, on behalf of the beneficiaries other than Mrs. Kaplan, and complained of the administration of the estate and the gross inadequacy of the rent paid by the corporation. In April, 1946, Kaplan raised the rent to $125 per month at which figure it has since remained.

[505]*505The pending suit was brought on July 28, 1947. It sought the removal of the trustee, the vacation of the property by the corporation, a discovery of the books and records relating to the administration of the trust, a termination of the trust, and an •accounting by the trustee. These claims have been reduced in this court to two, to which we confine our attention as follows: (1) A claim for the plaintiff’s share of a deficiency in the rent paid for the premises occupied by the corporation from 1940 to date, to be fixed by the District Court and charged against the trustee; and (2) a claim for plaintiff’s share of $450 alleged to be an overcharge by the trustee for the ■cost of stating an account of the administration of the trust demanded by the plaintiff’s attorney.

■ The District Judge reached the conclusion, upon evidence produced by the parties, that the properties of the estate occupied by the corporation had a fair rental value of $350 per month, “certainly since March, 1946, and had such rental value at the time this action was tried;” but he also held that the plaintiff knew the rental paid by the corporation between 1940 and 1946 and accepted checks therefor, and did not .give notice of or seriously press his claim that the trustee had collected an inadequate rent from the corporation until his attorney .gave notice on March 29, 1946. There was evidence that the plaintiff wrote to the trustee on December 15, 1939, and vigorously complained of the inadequacy of the uent, but we understand the finding of the District Judge to be that no complaint was actually received by the trustee until 1946, and we accept this finding in reaching our decision.

Since the plaintiff made no complaint prior to March, 1946, the judge reached the conclusion that the increased rental should start “from a reasonable time after plaintiff’s objection in March, 1946, to the arrangement theretofore existing, to wit, May 1, 1946,” and he therefore allowed the plaintiff the sum of $1038.62 as the balance •of his share of the increased rental through the month of March, 1948. The judge’s Teasons for this decision are stated as follows in his formal conclusions of law :

“The plaintiff by his failure to take affirmative action during the period from 1940 to 1946, led the executor to believe the rent was satisfactory and it would not be equitable for the plaintiff to claim additional rent before May 1, 1946, and the plaintiff waived his right to make such a claim. The plaintiff should not be allowed to assert a claim retrospectively, merely because he can now see that economic conditions were good, but he should have asserted his claim at a time when the defendant could have charged such additional rent in his expenses and been governed in his affairs accordingly, especially in his right to move and in reporting his income for taxes etc. To permit the plaintiff to remain quiet and then recover would allow him to gamble on the economic rise or fall in business.”

The judge also found that the trustee loaned to the corporation various sums of money belonging to the estate from time to time, and the corporation advanced monies for the estate on occasion, all of which, according to a statement of account submitted by him to the plaintiff’s counsel after frequent demands, were shown to have been subsequently repaid. The preparation of the account by the trustee was at the insistence of the plaintiff for a statement of the affairs of the estate, and the expense of preparing the statement, amounting to $450, was charged against the estate. The judge found that the estate had suffered no loss through these acts and omissions of the trustee, except as to the inadequacy of the rent, and did not require the trustee to account to the plaintiff for his share of the sum of $450.

The finding of fact that the amount of rent collected by the trustee from the corporation in March, 1946, and thereafter was inadequate, was abundantly supported by the evidence; but the conclusion of the court that the trustee was not chargeable with the inadequacy of the rent prior to that date because no complaint was made by the plaintiff, was based upon too lenient a view of the trustee’s responsibilities. The fundamental duty of loyalty and good faith which a trustee owes to the beneficiaries of the trust, and the rigid stand[506]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 F.2d 503, 1948 U.S. App. LEXIS 2680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goldman-v-kaplan-ca4-1948.