In re Coffin

152 F. 381, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4282
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 26, 1907
DocketNos. 168, 172
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 F. 381 (In re Coffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Coffin, 152 F. 381, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4282 (2d Cir. 1907).

Opinion

LACOMBE, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts). In 1890 a Nebraska corporation, the Real Estate & Live Stock Association, of which the bankrupt and his wife were stockholders, being financially embarrassed, sought a loan from its stockholders. The. stockholders [382]*382advanced $50,000 ($18.75 per share of their respective holdings), and .took as security a mortgage upon numerous parcels of real estate in Nebraska and Wyoming. The mortgagee named in the instrument was one Alonzo Clark as trustee. The money not being paid, Clark brought suit in foreclosure, and under proper decree the real estate in Nebraska was sold and bought in by him and conveyance thereof made to him by the “master commissioner under foreclosure proceedings.” The real estate in Wyoming was bought in by Coffin. In November, 1900, Clark conveyed all the real estate to Coffin, who thereupon undertook to sell and dispose of the same and to distribute the proceeds ratably to the beneficiaries, for whom he was acting as trustee. Upon the sale of one .parcel in Nebraska, the prospective purchasers questioned Coffin’s title to the lands. Thereupon each of the parties interested and the association executed quitclaim deeds to Coffin of their respective interests in all said lands both in Nebraska and Wyoming. Moreover, a friendly suit was brought in Nebraska by Coffin against the association and all the other parties in interest to quiet the tide, and decree was entered therein June 2, 1902, declaring that the title of Coffin in and to said lands- was absolute as against any of the parties defendant. On or prior to that date the quitclaim deeds were all filed.

Subsequent to June 2, 1902, Coffin sold and conveyed from time to time portions of said real estate in both states, and received in payment therefor certain amounts of cash, which were deposited with his personal account in a bank in Middletown, and certain notes and mortgages which were taken in his-individual name for part payment of such sales. From the amounts so received he paid between July 30 and October 30, 1902, to the parties who had advanced the funds to the association 30 per cent, of the amount- so loaned or advanced' by them, together with 8 per cent, interest thereon. Part of these payments were made in cash and part by the transfer to them of notes secured by mortgages received in part payment for the lands so sold. Subsequently to these payments there had accumulated a large sum over and above disbursements from sales of the land in question, which had been deposited in his bank account. On November 14, 1903, he drew his-entire deposit ($4,800) from the bank, took $1,000 in cash which he kept in a drawer at his office, and added to it a draft of $1,915.86 which he had received from his agent in the West as proceeds of the sale of part of said lands, and bought a draft on New York to the order of himself as trustee of $7,715.86. This draft and some others sent from the West by said agent have come into the possession of the trustee in bankruptcy. On December 2, 1903, Coffin was adjudicated a bankrupt on his own petition.

Various technical matters have been, eliminated during the argument, and the single question is presented whether the several parcels of real estate yet unsold prior to December 2, 1903, were held by Coffin in trust for the beneficiaries, a.nd therefore did not pass to his trustee in bankruptcy, or whether they were a part of his individual estate to be disposed of by the trustee for the benefit of his creditors. That question may appropriately be answered by this court. The [383]*383bankrupt and the trustee (representing all the creditors) duly appeared. The record would seem to indicate that there was no appearance for the so-called “beneficiaries,” who claim interest in the western lands, but it was asserted upon the argument that the record is defective in that respect, and, with the consent and concurrence of all parties, the beneficiaries formally entered their appearance in this court. It appears from the referee’s findings of fact that credit was not given or extended by any creditors upon the strength of Coffin being the owner of the lands and property in question. This simplifies the situation, because under such circumstances the trustee in bankruptcy stands in no better position than that in which the bankrupt stood on the day the petition was filed, and it will be necessary only to determine whether, if there had been no bankruptcy, the beneficiaries could in a court of equity have established their right to have him dispose of these lands for their benefit and distribute the proceeds rat-ably among them.

The express trust created by the deeds to Clark as trustee and from Clark to Coffin, and resultant upon the furnishing of the money by the beneficiaries, was terminated by the delivery of the quitclaim deeds and by the entry of the decree of the Nebraska court on June 2, 1902. Coffin already held the legal title, and each quitclaim deed conveyed to him every right, title, and interest, legal and equitable, which the beneficiary executing it had to convey. At the close of this transaction Coffin was the absolute owner with no outstanding interest in and no resultant trust to any one. But, since the property was his absolutely, he was entirely free to do what he pleased with it. He could convey it to one, or more, or all of his fellow stockholders, or to a stranger. He could convey it to any one he chose in trust to make any disposition of it he might prescribe so long as such trust did not violate the law or the statutes of the state. He could make a declaration of trust which would constitute himself the trustee for any such purpose. What did he do after he became the absolute owner on June 2, 1902? Were his acts such that as between himself and the other stockholders —to whom undoubtedly he owed a moral obligation to distribute a proportionate part of the proceeds — a court of equity would hold that he had created a new trust in their favor? It seems to us that, upon this record, such question must be answered in the affirmative.

In the first place we have the sworn statement of Coffin himself made June 15, 1904, that although he held .the apparent legal title to the several parcels of land, the same was really in trust for the benefit of the several individuals whom he enumerated and called beneficiaries. This statement was made after bankruptcy, and no act of his-at that time, no position which he might take, could alter the status established by the bankruptcy. But it is not as an act of the bankrupt that this statement of June 15, 1904, is important. It is an historical narrative of a transaction long prior to the bankruptcy, and, with such a sworn “declaration against interest” in the case, it is difficult to see how a court of equity could refuse such relief as would give the applicants the benefit of the trust which he thus declared he had created. Nor is this declaration a mere afterthought. Coffin’s whole [384]*384course of conduct shows that he considered himself a trustee for his fellow stockholders. The referee has found that between July 30 and October 30, 1902, he collected from- the sale of these lands and distributed to them 30 per cent, of the amounts originally advanced by them. Nor were his declarations merely oral. The referee finds that:

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Bluebook (online)
152 F. 381, 1907 U.S. App. LEXIS 4282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-coffin-ca2-1907.