Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Welsh

34 Haw. 390
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1937
DocketNo. 2246.
StatusPublished

This text of 34 Haw. 390 (Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Welsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hawaiian Trust Co. v. Welsh, 34 Haw. 390 (haw 1937).

Opinion

*391 OPINION OF THE COURT BY

CIRCUIT JUDGE METZGER.

This cause came to this court lipón the appeal of William L. Welsh, one of the respondents, from the decree of the circuit judge sitting in equity, at chambers, entered in the court below on May 29,1935. Appellant’s opening brief is entitled, “Brief for Respondents-Appellants, William L. Welsh, Ann Loraine Welsh, and Barbara Jean Welsh, Betty June Welsh and Jack Horner Welsh, minors, by William L. Welsh, their guardian ad litem” but the record discloses that notice of appeal and appeal was made by, or in behalf of, no person other than William L. Welsh in his personal and individual capacity. Whether or not the decree of May 29, 1935, is res adjudicates, as to other respondents is not considered here for this court can consider only the appeal that is before it, that of respondent William L. Welsh. Appellant’s closing brief was filed May 19,1937.

The suit was brought for the purpose of establishing in the petitioner, Hawaiian Trust Company, Limited, an equitable lien in the nature of a mortgage on property that constituted the corpus of a trust created by William L. Welsh by his deed dated November 12,1926, in which trust indenture and agreement the petitioner joined as trustee; for judgment for principal and interest found to be due to it, with costs and expenses, and for enforcement of its lien by foreclosure and sale of the trust property upon default of William L. Welsh, or any of the respondents, to pay the sum *392 found to be due the trustee within such time as the court should fix.

The indenture of agreement between the parties does not specify any particular time for repayment of any loans or advances that should be made under it. Named and unnamed contingent beneficiaries under the trust were made parties respondent. The petitioner’s original bill was filed September 25, 1934, and, during the course of trial, an amended bill was filed on May 10, 1935, bringing accounts down to May 3, 1935. The bill as amended sets forth that petitioner as trustee paid all necessary expenses of maintaining and managing the trust property and executing the trust and that it expended in so doing and in money loans and advances made to and upon the demands and with the approval of the grantor, William L. Welsh, a sum in excess of the rents and other income from the trust estate, aggregating, on May 3, 1935, a principal of $35,236.22, against Avhich it claimed interest accrued, at a rate provided in the trust instrument, the further sum of $16,105.50, making a total sum of $51,341.72 as due it on said date; that on September 24, 1934, it made demand upon William L. Welsh for payment of principal and interest claimed due it at that time, to Avit, the aggregate of $50,535.17, Avhich demand was refused and no part thereof Avas paid.

The respondent William L. Welsh filed his amended answer to the original bill on January 21, 1935, and by agreement this stood as ansAver to the amended bill. Trial-began on May 7, 1935, and continued on May 8, 10 and 23, 1935, Avith intervening postponements on May 16 and 21. In the respondent’s answer he charged that the trustee had, without his prior knowledge of the true situation, knoAvingly violated a provision of the trust agreement in making loans to him and advances in behalf of the estate far in excess of 50% of the value of the trust property and that it cannot now be permitted to enforce its demands and *393 lien in such manner as will destroy or imperil the entire trust estate. The answer cites paragraph 4 of the trust agreement as containing a limitation upon the trustee in incurring or permitting indebtedness in excess of 50% of the property value. The paragraph referred to reads as follows: “4. It is understood and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the Trustee shall from time to time and as and when requested by the Grantor, but in its own discretion, advance and loan to the Grantor such amounts as the Grantor may require, and it is hereby declared to be the understanding of the parties hereto that in case the financial and other condition of the Trustee, and the condition of the Trust Estate (all in the opinion of the Trustee) warrant it, the Trustee will presumably, if so requested by the Grantor, advance to the Grantor up to 50% of the net value of the Estate, which net value shall be fixed and determined by the Trustee.” The answer further sets forth that the trustee violated the grantor’s directions and the authority it obtained from him in relation to the purchase of 250 shares of Standard Oil Company of California stock, and thereby incurred a loss; that loss in the value of property was incurred by mismanagement and inexcusable negligence in its upkeep and in allowing part of it to become unproductive; that a loss of $1000 to $2000 was sustained by mismanagement by the trustee in the sale of certain real property, and that the trustee’s advances for the purchase of an outstanding curtesy in the property of the estate were clearly inopportune, excessive and detrimental to the estate.

The decreé of the circuit judge held that the grantor, William L. Welsh, was indebted to the petitioner, the trustee, in the full sum of $51,341.72 as of May 3, 1935, for which the property of the trust was liable under the terms of the grant and subject to foreclosure and sale; that said sum was then wholly due and unpaid, and said respondent *394 was allowed ten days within which to pay said indebtedness with interest and costs, less any intervening net income from the property, failing which the property was ordered to be sold at commissioner’s sale, at which sale the trustee could become a purchaser. Among other things, the court found that the trustee was entitled to simple interest in the sum of $16,105.50, notwithstanding it had not, prior to the date of its suit, included $4100 of this sum in its accounts; that the 250 shares of Standard Oil Company stock were purchased by the trustee subject to the conditions imposed by William L. Welsh and with his written consent; that the complained of sale of a certain lot of real property was likewise made with said respondent’s written consent and pursuant to conditions imposed by him; that the receipts from the trust estate, both as to earnings and sales, down to May 3, 1935, were $34,951.08 and were insufficient to meet the costs of maintaining the estate and executing the trust, including loans and advances of more than $30,000 made at the requests of William L. Welsh, which costs and loans, with interest thereon at the agreed rate of 6%% per annum, amounted to $86,292.80, and that the trustee had expended and lent its own money and there was due it from and on account of 'the grantor and the trust estate, the sum of $51,341.72; that the financial and other conditions of the trustee and the condition of the trust estate warranted the loans and advances made to the grantor and that the trustee did not advance grantor in excess of 50% of the net value of the estate as reasonably fixed and determined by the trustee. In the trial, the respondent produced no witnesses and made but slight effort to prove the affirmative defense allegations of the answer.

In the appellant’s opening brief, twenty-three errors are assigned, but the questions that are brought up on the appeal and were argued before this court, consist of the following: 1.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Haw. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawaiian-trust-co-v-welsh-haw-1937.