Husted v. . Thomson

53 N.E. 20, 158 N.Y. 328, 12 E.H. Smith 328, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 678
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 28, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 53 N.E. 20 (Husted v. . Thomson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Husted v. . Thomson, 53 N.E. 20, 158 N.Y. 328, 12 E.H. Smith 328, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 678 (N.Y. 1899).

Opinion

Vann, J.

This is an action at law brought against a trustee to recover the part of a trust estate to which the plaintiff deems himself entitled.

In 1851 Benjamin Lord died, leaving a last will and testament by which he gave all his real and personal property to his executors .in trust for his brothers and sisters and one Lavinia Knapp, who afterwards died, and by her will left her interest to the plaintiff. Only one of the executors named in Mr. Lord’s will, Caleb Barstow, qualified, and subsequently he z’esigned and was succeeded by Gilbert FT". Marshall, who in turn z-esigned and was succeeded by Augustus Cruikshank, who by an order, made February 20th, 1883, was appointed in the place of his predecessors and of the executors named in *332 the will. This action was commenced in April, 1890, against said Oruikshank, as trustee, but he died in 1894, and David Thomson, the present defendant, was appointed in his place, and in June, 1895, upon motion of the plaintiff, he, as such trustee, was substituted as sole defendant in the action in the place of the original defendant.

In an action commenced by Mr. Oruikshank in his lifetime against the plaintiff and others for the construction of the will of Mr. Lord, a decree was entered on the 28th of December, 1887, adjudging that it was the intention of the testator that Lavinia Knapp should take a one eleventh part of his estate, and that such share passed under her will and became vested in Gilbert M. Husted, the present plaintiff. After the commencement of this action, and on the 21st of April, 1893, said judgment was vacated on a motion made upon technical grounds, but before the trial hereof it had again been tried and the same judgment rendered. The last judgment, which was entered on the 11th of September, 1894, settled the aliquot part or proportion of the estate that the plaintiff herein was entitled to receive, but it did not fix the amount of that part in any way, although it directed the trustee to convert the trust estate into money and to distribute the same, and authorized any party to apply for further directions.

On the 7th of March, 1890, a judgment was rendered at the suit of one Burrowes and two or three hundred other plaintiffs against said Oruikshank as trustee under the will of Benjamin Lord, but Husted, the plaintiff in this action, was not a party thereto. That judgment decreed that Oruikshank, as trustee, had a balance of $87,653.33, and directed him to divide the same among the several cestuis que ii'ustent according to their several interests after deducting about $10,000 allowed for costs and expenses. It further provided that upwards of 150 plaintiffs should be paid a certain sum each, and finally adjudged that any person or persons having or claiming to have any interest in the estate of the defendant’s testator, either as devisee, assignee or otherwise, of the whole or any fractional share of any interest in said *333 estate, and not provided for in this judgment, may come in or be made a party to this action and have his interest in said estate adjudicated and determined, and that all persons now parties to this action having an interest in said estate, which has not been determined by this judgment, may hereafter have such interest adjudicated and determined.”

The plaintiff did not avail himself of the privilege afforded by cither of said judgments, but commenced this action at law to recover his share of the Lord estate, including certain dividends alleged to have been declared by Mr. Cruikshank, as trustee, prior to May 23rd, 1888. He demanded judgment for $11,402.89, with interest on different portions thereof from different dates.

After the death of Mr. Cruikshank and the substitution of the present defendant, Thomson, as trustee in his place, the plaintiff filed a supplemental complaint, alleging that the present defendant had been appointed and had qualified as trustee and had received into his hands a large amount of money belonging to said estate,” and in addition thereto had “ brought an action against the executrix of said deceased trustee, Augustus Cruikshank, for an accounting” in order to recover other funds or moneys belonging to said estate; that said suit was pending “ and thereby a large amount of money will or should come into the hands of this defendant as trustee of the estate of Benjamin Lord from the estate of ” his deceased predecessor.

The original defendant, Mr. Cruikshank, alleged in his answer, among other things, that the plaintiff, on June 16tli, 1887, assigned one-half of his interest in the estate to one George W. Savage, Jr., through a power of attorney to collect the whole and retain fifty per cent for his compensation; that after the execution of said instrument said defendant paid Savage upon account of said eleventh interest the sum of $2,500, and that subsequently he paid the plaintiff all that he was entitled to receive from the estate; that said Savage had executed and delivered by separate and independent instruments an assignment of either the whole or one-half of said eleventh to each of the following persons : Edward Tan Hess, *334 A. Edward Woodruff, Charlotte E. Savage, Everett M. Marshall, Edwin N. Doll and William M. Johnson, and that each of said persons claimed the whole or a part of said share by virtue of the assignment to him or her respectively.

The original defendant also alleged that he had brought an action making the plaintiff and the various claimants defendants, so as to have it judicially determined who were entitled to said shares, and that the action was still pending.

In answer to the. supplemental complaint the present defendant denied that he had received a large amount of money belonging to the estate of Mr. Lord, but admitted that he had received from a former trustee of said estate $3,318.49, and from the Union Trust Company $61.09.

He further alleged that he also had commenced an action against the plaintiff and all persons having or claiming an interest in said shares to determine who were entitled to the same, and that the plaintiff appeared and answered, but the action was still undetermined.

Upon the trial, which was before a jury, the foregoing facts, aside from those alleged in the answers, appeared in substance. It also appeared that the present defendant had received as trustee of the estate of Benjamin Lord less than $4,000 in money, and that he had received no securities or other property belonging to the estate; that he had commenced an action against the executrix of Augustus Cruikshank, the former trustee, for an accounting, and that the proceeding was still pending, nothing having yet been realized therefrom; that Mr. Husted, the plaintiff herein, had been paid for and had released to the estate one-half of the one-eleventh that he was originally entitled to; that the former trustee, Mr. Cruikshank, and the present trustee, Mr. Thomson, had commenced suits in equity for the purpose of determining the validity of the various claims made on the trust estate by virtue of the different assignments set forth in the answer; that the suit brought by Mr. Cruikshank was revived after his death, and that both suits were pending and undetermined at the time of the.trial of this action.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.E. 20, 158 N.Y. 328, 12 E.H. Smith 328, 1899 N.Y. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/husted-v-thomson-ny-1899.