Guaranty Trust Co. v. Fisk

244 A.D. 200, 278 N.Y.S. 809, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5790

This text of 244 A.D. 200 (Guaranty Trust Co. v. Fisk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guaranty Trust Co. v. Fisk, 244 A.D. 200, 278 N.Y.S. 809, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5790 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

O’Malley, J.

This is an action by the plaintiffs, the corporate and individual trustees, for the settlement of their accounts. The judgment appealed from surcharges the individual trustee, Lewis L. Clarke, with the purchase price of stock of the General Baking Corporation (hereinafter called the Corporation). This surcharge is predicated upon a finding of negligence in the purchase and not because of an error of judgment, from which the trustees were expressly relieved from liability under the terms of the trust agreement. With respect to all other investments to which objections were made by the defendants, appellants, and respondents, Mary L. C. Fisk, Edith Fisk Adames and Dorothy Fisk Paine, appellant trustee was relieved from liability upon the ground that if mistake was made, there was but error of judgment. The corporate trustee was entirely relieved from any liability.

The evidence fully justified the overruling of the objections last mentioned. The judgment, in so far as appealed from by the defendant objectants, therefore, must be affirmed. We concern ourselves with the question of whether the evidence justifies the conclusion that the appellant trustee is chargeable with negligence or mere error of judgment with respect to the particular investment under consideration.

[202]*202The trust agreement was made February 10, 1903, by Pliny Fisk as a property settlement in a divorce action brought against him by his wife, the defendant objectant, Mary L. C. Fisk. Under its terms the settlor transferred securities to the trustees originally named to be held in two separate and equal trusts for the benefit of his wife and their two daughters, Edith Fisk (now Edith Fisk Adames) and Dorothy Fisk (now Dorothy Fisk Paine), with remainders over. The wife accepted the agreement as provision for her support in lieu of every other provision that might be required by the court in lieu of dower and other rights in the settlor’s estate. If the income did not amount to $30,000 a year the deficiency was to be made up by the settlor.

The original trustees were the Standard Trust Company of New York and Harvey E. Fisk. The corporate trustee was merged with the Guaranty Trust Company of New York on October 16, 1912, and the latter has since been acting as trustee. Harvey E. Fisk resigned May 4, 1918, and the appellant, Lewis L. Clarke, was appointed his successor January 18, 1921, and has ever since acted as successor trustee. At the time of his appointment he had been an acquaintance of the settlor for some thirty years and he was selected by him with the consent of all three objectants.

The provisions of the agreement, in so far as material to the authority of the trustees in making investments, are: Said Trustees are hereby authorized to invest any of the funds at any time subject to this agreement in such stocks and bonds of municipal and other corporations and other securities as shall in their discretion, or in the discretion of the individual Trustee, seem advisable, without being restricted to the securities in which trustees may, from time to time, be authorized by law to invest trust funds,” and the following pertinent words: Said Trustees shall be charged only with the exercise of reasonable care and diligence, and neither of them shall be liable for any mistake of judgment.”

It is to be observed that the trustees were vested with the widest discretion in respect to investments. They had specific authority to purchase the stocks of any corporation. Legal trust invesbments were not required, but specifically waived. The measure of their liability is specifically stated. They were chargeable only with the exercise of reasonable care and diligence and “ neither of them shall be liable for any mistake of judgment.”

Neither dishonesty nor bad faith is charged and in fact both were disclaimed by the objectants on the trial. The question for consideration, therefore, is whether the appellant trustee was shown to have violated the obligation imposed upon him by failure to exercise reasonable care and diligence in the particular investment for which he has been held personally liable.

[203]*203The investments in the two trusts at the date of the resignation of Harvey E. Fisk and the appointment of the appellant as his successor, included $53,000 General Baking Company first 6s June 1, 1936. These bonds in the face amount of $53,000 were called December 1, 1925, and the plaintiffs received therefor the sum of $55,650. On December eighteenth following they purchased 693 shares of General Baking Corporation class A stock at the price of $80.84 a share and for a total of $56,022.48. Further small additional purchases of the same stock, the exchange of the original 693 shares for cumulative preferred stock later issued, and still another exchange of the cumulative preferred for common stock of the General Baking Company (hereinafter called the Company), were later made. These purchases and exchanges will be considered as included in the main investment.

The Corporation was formed under the laws of the State of Maryland on October 3, 1925, as a holding company and was formed “ to carry on on a large sphere the work of the General Baking Company.” The decision at Special Term seems largely to have been influenced by the fact that the Corporation was a holding company, had only recently been organized, and its earning power not established at the date of the purchase of the securities in question. The conclusion was reached, therefore, that the investment was speculative and hazardous. With this conclusion we do not agree. While the Corporation was a new entity, it did not initiate a new business, but took over a going business. It owned ninety-nine per cent of the common stock of the Company and also controlled the Smith Great Western Baking Corporation and its subsidiary, Consumers Baking Company, both of which were going concerns. The evidence shows that the common stock of the Company had averaged earnings of nineteen dollars and sixty-nine cents a share during the years 1920 to 1924, inclusive; that between the date of the purchase and March 18, 1928, the class A stock that was then exchanged for the cumulative preferred stock of the Corporation earned five dollars and sixty cents a share in 1925; five dollars and fifty-four cents in 1926, and seven dollars and five cents in 1927. After the exchange for the new preferred of the Corporation, the latter stock earned six dollars and eighty-seven cents for 1928, and six dollars and forty-nine cents for 1929. Until March 18, 1928, the date of the exchange referred to, the class A stock paid dividends at the rate of five dollars a share and the cumulative preferred thereafter paid dividends at the rate of six dollars a share until January 21, 1931. In brief, it appears that from the date of the purchase of the class A stock in 1925, the investment paid a return of at least six per cent.

[204]*204Of course, this investment, like all others, was adversely affected by the break in the security market and the depression which was well under way by 1931.

As already noted, under the terms of the trust agreement, the trustees were vested with the widest discretion and were to be held responsible only for failure to exercise reasonable care. They were to be entirely relieved from any error of judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
244 A.D. 200, 278 N.Y.S. 809, 1935 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 5790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-trust-co-v-fisk-nyappdiv-1935.