Gould v. Gould

126 Misc. 54, 213 N.Y.S. 286, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1193
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 126 Misc. 54 (Gould v. Gould) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gould v. Gould, 126 Misc. 54, 213 N.Y.S. 286, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1193 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1925).

Opinion

Jambs A. O’Gorman,

Referee. The objections filed on behalf of the beneficiaries involve charges of violations of fiduciary duty, unauthorized and improvident investments, commingling of trust funds With individual funds, charging principal with payments payable from income, the acceptance and retention by certain of the trustees of underwriting syndicate profits and other secret commissions in connection with trust transactions, and the use of trust funds in railroad enterprises, in which the trustees, or some of them, had large personal interests.

[59]*59The testator died in the city of New York on December 2, 1892, leaving him surviving six children, four of whom, George, Edwin, Helen and Howard, were over age, and two of whom, Frank and Anna, were under age. His will was admitted to probate by the surrogate of the county of New York, and letters testamentary issued on January 13,1893, to his four adult children. At this time George, the oldest child, was twenty-eight years of age. The estate was inventoried at $84,000,000, not including certain lands in Louisiana, title to which vested in the six children as heirs at law, and upon which they subsequently realized $12,000,000. After making numerous bequests, including one of $5,000,000 to his son George, and one of $500,000 to his grandson, Jay Gould, a son of George, the testator gave his residuary estate to his executors, in trust, to hold or sell the same whenever in their discretion they deemed it advisable, and to divide the same into six equal shares, one of which shares to be held, designated and invested for each of his children; to apply the income of each share to the child for whose benefit the same shall be set apart, and, upon the death of such child, to transfer the principal of such share to his or her issue in such proportions and at such times as he or she shall appoint in and by his or her last will and testament, and, in case of failure to make such testamentary appointment, then to his or her issue in the proportions provided by the laws of this State in cases of intestacy; and, in the event of any child dying without issue, the principal of such share to pass to the surviving children of the testator, and the issue of any deceased child, per stirpes and not per capita; that all securities in which said trust funds shall be invested shall be held by the trustees for the parties respectively for whose benefit the funds are severally set apart; that the shares and the accounts and the transactions pertaining thereto shall at all times be kept separate and distinct, and shall never be mixed or mingled; that in the event of differences of opinion among the executors or trustees as to the holding or making of investments, or the management of the estate, the decision of three out of four shall be conclusive, and if at any time the number of executors and trustees shall be reduced to less than four, the decision of a majority of them shall be conclusive; that none of the persons named as trustees shall be trustee of the trust fund set apart for his or her benefit; that no executor or trustee shall be held responsible or liable for or charged with any loss or depreciation that may arise by holding any of the securities left by the testator, or which may be employed in setting up the separate trust funds; that his executors and trustees shall make investments of trust funds in securities other than those in which trustees are by law authorized to invest, as [60]*60they may think proper; that the shares of any railway or other incorporated companies shall always be voted at all corporate meetings as a unit, and in case his executors and trustees do not concur as to how said stock shall be voted, then the judgment of his son George shall control, and he is authorized to vote said shares in such manner as his judgment shall dictate.

The first objection relates to the neglect of the executors and trustees to divide the estate and set up the six separate trusts as directed by the testator.

Although it was the primary duty of the executors and trustees to carry out the instructions of the trust instrument, the direction to set up the six separate trust funds was disregarded for thirty years and was not complied with until after the commencement of this action. At first the pendency of a litigation affecting the estate was given as an excuse for the delay, but when that action was finally disposed of, and it imposed no liability upon the estate, George advised his cotrustees that it was not necessary to divide the estate and establish the separate trust funds and that it would be more convenient in the management of the estate to retain the estate property in a single fund. Edwin and Helen expressed the opinion that the trustees were required to divide the estate into six separate trust funds within a reasonable time, but finally yielded their Views to the judgment of George. In thus disregarding the explicit testamentary directions the trustees substituted their own will for the will of the testator. In ordinary course, the executors should have accounted in the Surrogate’s Court one year after the grant of letters testamentary and a sufficient sum, with the court’s approval, could have been retained by the executors to meet any outstanding claims, and the residue of the estate should at once have been divided into six equal shares as required by the will.

It is claimed that this improper action on the part of the executors and trustees and the retention of the estate funds in solido facilitated the use of the property of the estate in a manner not authorized or contemplated by the testator. It is not clear, however, that the same course would not have been pursued even if the separate trust funds had been created, and while the action of the trustees was in violation of their duty it cannot be determined at this time that their conduct was more than a contributing cause to the losses complained of.

The main objections center around the use of trust funds in connection with the Missouri Pacific railroad and allied railroads, which comprised the group of railways known generally as the Gould or Southwestern System,” in the management of which the testator was actively engaged for several years previous to. [61]*61his death. When the testator died a large part of his estate consisted of investments in this railroad system. The investments now challenged by the objectants were made by the trustees in pursuance of a plan adopted by them to give financial support to the Missouri Pacific railroad, with a view of promoting its extensions and development, insuring control of the system in the Gould family and meeting competitive conditions created by rival railroad enterprises. Pursuant to this plan, the trustees loaned, without security, upwards of $50,000,000 to this railroad system. They discharged debts of the railroads to the estate by the acceptance of railway securities of-speculative value, charged out against the railways as new loans their past due coupons and - overdue interest on loans, shifted investments from prior to junior liens, from bonds to stock, in some instances making the estate a participant in stock pools and syndicate underwritings, and practically made the estate a banker for railroad corporations that undertook to build new railroads. Large sums of money were invested in the purchase of common stock of railroads that had never paid a dividend, trust funds were used in the exchange and purchase of defaulted securities and loans were made to railroads to pay underwriting commissions, in which certain of the trustees participated.

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Bluebook (online)
126 Misc. 54, 213 N.Y.S. 286, 1925 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gould-v-gould-nysupct-1925.