Holly v. Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church

180 U.S. 284, 21 S. Ct. 395, 45 L. Ed. 531, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1304
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 25, 1901
Docket138
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 180 U.S. 284 (Holly v. Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holly v. Missionary Society of the Protestant Episcopal Church, 180 U.S. 284, 21 S. Ct. 395, 45 L. Ed. 531, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1304 (1901).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shiras,

after making the above statement, de-. livered the opinion of the court.

This is a case in which a court of equity is called upon to de *289 cide upon which, of two innocent parties is to fall a loss caused by the dishonesty of a third person. The relation that existed between Thompson and the Missionary Society was that of executor and legatee; between Thompson and Holly, that of attorney and client. As between themselves, Holly and the Missionary Society were absolute strangers.

Our examination of the pleadings and evidence fails to show any such dereliction of duty or supine negligence on the part of the Missionary Society in demanding and enforcing payment of the Saul legacy as would show, or even tend to show, that the society knew, or had reason to believe, that Thompson was insolvent, or had been guilty -of any misappropriation of the property or funds of the Saul estate. It is true that the legacy was not paid as promptly as the society had reason to expect, but there was nothing unusual about such a delay.

The very fact that Eev. Dr. Saul had selected Thompson to be one of his executors authenticated him to the society as a trustworthy person, and while it is true that Eev. Mr. Watson, who was a co-executor, in letters answering inquiries by the secretary of the society in April and May, 1890, admitted that Thompson was dilatory in settling the estate, there was nothing to justify suspicion on the part of either Mr. Watson or of the society that there was anything wrong in Thompson’s dealings with the estate. Accordingly we are fully satisfied that, when Thompson called upon the society at the New York office, on June 19, 1890, and paid the amount shown to be due the society by the account of the executors in the orphans’ court ,of Philadelphia County, approved November 23,1889, together with the additional sum of $650 received after and not included in the account, there was'nothing, either in the previous transactions, or in the form of the payment by Thompson’s check, to put the society upon notice, or to have justified the treasurer in refusing to accept the paymént. When Thompson’s check was paid the following day and the proceeds had gone into the bank account of the Missionary Society, the matter was fully closed between the executors of Saul’s estate and the society.

Beyond this, we think the evidence fairly shows that the Missionary Society had appropriated and expended the money so *290 received, to the purposes appointed by the testator, before any notice was given of the complainant’s claim. While such use and application of the money might not exonerate the society from liability, if they had received the money in circumstances that visited them with notice of Thompson’s-dishonest conduct towards Holly, yet if the money, received in good faith by the legatee, had actually and bona fide been applied and expended for the use of the ben'eficial purposes appointed in the will, without knowledge of Holly’s claim, or, indeed, that such a man existed, we think a court of equity would refuse to hold the society as a trustee ex maleficio.

The learned Judge of the Circuit Court, speaking of this aspect of the case, does indeed say:

“ Some suggestion is made that this was received as a charitable bequest, and so applied that it had gone beyond reach, and cannot be recovered. But the defendant has not shown that this particular money has been applied to any particular purpose as coming from Saul, or otherwise than as it would use its general funds in the furtherance of its objects, nor that any of this particular money was applied to any of its purposes.”

If this statement is to be understood to rnean that the money, bank notes or specie, actually received on Thompson’s check, was not immediately and in form applied to the beneficial purposes named in Saul’s will, it may be true; indeed, it appears that the proceeds of Thompson’s check were paid into the Bank of New York for general account of the Missionary Society, and that thus the identity of the bank notes or specie was lost in the credit, account of the society in that bank. But it is not perceived that such a state of facts disabled the society from having tbe advantage of showing that money to an equal amount was appropriated • and applied by them, out of their general account, to the purposes appointed by the testator. To demand that such a society should make special deposits of legacies received, so as to be able to trace the application of such deposits into the hands of beneficiaries in the same form as when received, would be, in tbe highest degree, unreasonable.

If, however, the meaning of the learned judge was that it did not distinctly appear that the Missionary Society had ap *291 propriated and applied an amount of money equal to that received from the Saul estate to the purposes appointed in the will, before any notice was received of Holly’s claim, we are constrained to decidedly dissent from such a view.

In the bill of complaint the defendants were explicitly called upon to answer under oath whether, and in what circumstances, they had received money from Thompson, and particularly whether such money had been received as coming from the estate of James Saul, deceased, and whether they had not received a letter from plaintiff’s attorney, on or about July 17,1890, notifying them that the moneys so received by the defendants through Thompson’s check came from moneys belonging to Holly. To these allegations and interrogatories the defendants answered, denying any knowledge or belief on their part of the transactions between Thompson and Holly “ until long after the receipt by defendants and expenditure of the $15,577.54 referred to; and these defendants, further answering, allege that at the time of the notification hereinbefore referred to and the receipt by the defendant society of the letter from plaintiff’s attorney, these defendants had expended, in the usual course of their business and according to the will of the said Eev. James Saul, the said sum of $15,577.54.”

To this portion of the answer the plaintiff filed exceptions for insufficiency, as follows:

“In not stating how the defendants have expended the $15,577.54, what the items of expenditure were and the respective dates of such items of expenditure, and how and in what respect the said- moneys were expended according to the will of the Eev. James Saul, deceased, and what was the usual course of business of defendant’s society in making said expenditure of said moneys, whether the same was expended by standing order or special resolution of the board of managers of the society defendant, or otherwise.”

Thereupon the defendants, responding to these exceptions, filed a supplemental answer, as follows:

“ These defendants, further answering, allege that the moneys received as aforesaid from Henry C. Thompson, executor, were expended by the defendant society for domestic missions, *292

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Bluebook (online)
180 U.S. 284, 21 S. Ct. 395, 45 L. Ed. 531, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holly-v-missionary-society-of-the-protestant-episcopal-church-scotus-1901.