Houghton v. Tiffany

82 A. 831, 116 Md. 655, 1911 Md. LEXIS 108
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 6, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 82 A. 831 (Houghton v. Tiffany) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Houghton v. Tiffany, 82 A. 831, 116 Md. 655, 1911 Md. LEXIS 108 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from an order overruling a demurrer filed by Ira H. Houghton and Louis S. Houghton to a petition filed by Harry Tiffany et al. Henry Tiffany, the father of Harry Tiffany, conveyed to Robert i\I. McLane, by deed dated the áOth day of October, 1863, and recorded in Baltimore City, certain property in trust to collect and receive the rents, profits and income therefrom for the sole and separate nse of his wife, Sally J. Tiffany, for life, and after her death in trust for their three children, Kate Tiffany, Harry Tiffany and Louis McLane Tiffany, to be equally divided between them, share and share alike.

The Court assumed jurisdiction of the trust, but Mr. McLane was, upon his own application, released and discharged from the further performance of his duties as trustee, and by a decree passed the 10th of April, 1886, the Mercantile Trust and Deposit Company of Baltimore was appointed trustee in his place.

The provisions made in the deed of trust for Harry Tiffany, involved in this case, are as follows: “and the share or portion of the said Harry Tiffany to be held by the said Robert M. McLane in trust, that he, the said trustee, shall manage that portion of said hereby granted property and collect and receive the rents, issues and income thereof, and shall, in his discretion, either pay such rents, issues and income to the said Harry Tiffany, or apply the same for his use during his life, so that he shall have no title to or control over said last named portion of the said hereby granted *658 property; and from and after the death of the said Harry Tiffany, then in trust for his issue if he shall leave issue living at the time of his death, but if he shall die without-leaving such issue, then in trust for the said Henry Tiffany and his heirs.”

This petition was filed in the trust case by Harry Tiffany and Sally L Tiffany Stevens and Mary E. Tiffany, his two daughters, who would be entitled to the remainder if they survive their father. It alleges that the portion of the estate held in trust for Harry Tiffany for life, with remainder over, is valued at upwards of $30,000 and consists of bonds, which are described, four ground rents and $43.44 cash; that there are on record what purport to be three- mortgages of the interest of the petitioners in said trust estate, as follows: one to Henry 0. Shirley and W. W. Shirley, dated December 26th, 1905, for $9,000.00; one to Catherine S. Hill, dated September 22, 1906, for $2,000.00, and one to the Auxiliary Realty Co., dated March 5, 1907, for $5,000, and there is also what purports to be an assignment of their interest for an alleged consideration of $6,500.00 to Ira H. Houghton and Louis S. Floughton.

Two mortgages had been given to Mary L, McLaughlin before the Shirley mortgage was executed — one for $5,000 and the other for $1,700, but out of the money received from the Shirleys those two were paid off. When the first McLaughlin mortgage was given the petitioners executed an assignment to R. Bennett Darnall and John-R. N. Staum of the income payable to Harry Tiffany by the trustee, to be applied first to the interest on the $5,000 mortgage, secondly to the payment of the annual premium on an insurance policy taken out for the benefit of Mary L. McLaughlin on the life of Mrs. Stevens, and the balance to be paid to Harry Tiffany.

On the 21st of April, 1904, Messrs. Darnall and Staum filed a petition in the trust case praying for the passage of an order directing the trustee to pay over to them the income. Service of a copy of the petition was admitted by counsel *659 for the trustee, and the same day the Court passed an order directing the trustee to pay over to them the income, in accordance with the assignment, until the further order of the Court.

When the Shirley mortgage was given, the petitioners executed an assignment to R. Bennett Darnall and Henry C. Shirley, Jr., of the income to "be applied in part to the interest on the $9,000.00, and the petitioners also signed a petition, which was filed in Court on January 3rd, 3906, praying for an order directing the trustee to pay over the income to Messrs. Darnall and Shirley. Xotice of the petition was admitted by counsel of trustee and the Court passed an order directing that upon release of the two McLaughlin mortgages the order of April 21st, 1904, be revoked, and the trustee was directed to pay the income over to Messrs. Darnall and Shirley until the further order of the Court. The Shirleys also took out life insurance policies on the lives of Mrs. Stevens and Miss Tiffany. An assignment was also made of a portion of the income and a life insurance policy was taken out for the benefit of Catherine S. Hill.

Then on April 10th, 1908, for an apparent consideration' of $6,500.00 of which only $5,000.00 is alleged to have been paid Harry Tiffany, the petitioners signed an instrument purporting to convey their respective interests in said trust estate to the Houghtons, and a life insurance policy was also taken out for their benefit. R. Bennett Darnall on April 15th, 1908, assigned to W. W. Parker, agent of the Houghtons, all rights he had to collect the income which had passed to him under an assignment of December 26th, 1905.

The petition alleges that in each of the loans large sums were deducted as bonuses, etc. It charges that the assign- > inent of the Houghtons, if at all effective against them, is only a mortgage and not an absolute conveyance ; that when each and every one of the alleged mortgages and assignments purporting to affect the trust estate, and their interest therein and the income therefrom, were signed, the peti *660 tioners were impoverished and not responsible for their acts, and Harry Tiffany was crazed with drink and not responsible for1 his acts, and hence the transactions are not binding upon them or either of them; that moreover the said deed of trust created a spend-thrift trust in favor of Harry Tiffany, and by no act of his could his interest in said trust estate or the income arising therefrom be in any manner encumbered or disposed of by him or diverted from the objects and purposes intended and declared bjr the grantor.

It further alleges that the trustee made no resistance to the passage of the orders referred to, although it had such knowledge as to put it upon its guard; that Harry Tiffany had received no income from the estate since early in' 1908, and that the trustee claims to have paid it over to others until July 1st, 1910. It is also claimed that the Court had no power to pass the orders referred to above.

It is charged that if the deed did not create a spendthrift trust in the legal sense of the term, the purpose of the grantor was to protect Harry Tiffany from his own infirmities, and incidentally in doing so to protect his family against the condition of his yielding to those infirmities; that when Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 831, 116 Md. 655, 1911 Md. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/houghton-v-tiffany-md-1911.