In Re the Accounting of New York Trust Co.

63 N.E.2d 589, 294 N.Y. 596, 1945 N.Y. LEXIS 756
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 63 N.E.2d 589 (In Re the Accounting of New York Trust Co.) 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
In Re the Accounting of New York Trust Co., 63 N.E.2d 589, 294 N.Y. 596, 1945 N.Y. LEXIS 756 (N.Y. 1945).

Opinion

Loughran, Ch. J.

This proceeding for final judicial settlement of the account of the New York Trust Company as committee of the person and property of Walter Lewisohn, an incompetent person, was brought shortly after Mr. Lewisohn’s death. Objections filed by his estate and by the beneficiaries thereof are aimed at a purchase by the committee of a $277,500 interest in a $375,000 real estate mortgage. The history of the case goes back to 1920.

In that year, a syndicate composed of four men of wealth and business prestige bought 282 acres of land on the north shore of Long Island as a means of enabling each of them to acquire a site for the establishment of a select and spacious country estate. The purchase price was $1,200,000. A down payment of $100,000 cash was made by the syndicate; the seller took back a purchase money mortgage for the balance of $1,100,000; and the syndicate members gave their respective personal bonds for an aggregate equal amount.

After the land had been subdivided and improved, sales of parcels thereof were made to the syndicate members and to others for a total of $623,260, leaving six parcels comprising 182 acres still on hand when, in 1923, the syndicate members decided to convert that remaining area into a golf club premises. Thereupon Kellenworth Corporation — which was organized to own and operate the property as such a club — paid $547,000 for it — $247,000 in cash and the balance of $300,000 by a purchase money mortgage. This $547,000 payment and the $623,260 of proceeds of prior sales supplied to the syndicate members a fund of $1,170,260 for the satisfaction of their several personal liabilities in respect of the $1,100,000 balance of the original purchase price. In 1925, the syndicate paid off that balance and at the same time allotted the $300,000 Kellenworth mortgage among the syndicate members in the form of undivided par *603 ticipations that were proportioned to their respective syndicate contributions.

The maturity of the $300,000 Kellenworth mortgage had been set for July 31, 1928. In January, 1928, the trust company agreed to make to Kellenworth Corporation a first mortgage loan of $375,000. On the closing of that agreement on September 28, 1928, the $300,000 Kellenworth mortgage was acquired by the trust company through the syndicate and was extended for five years after being consolidated with another mortgage which Kellenworth Corporation gave to the trust company to secure a new advance of $75,000.

The trust company did not invest in that, $375,000 consolidated mortgage for its own account. Its purchase thereof was made — as all parties agree — “ for participation among sundry trusts.” At the time of that transaction, the trust1 company was committee of the property of Mr. Lewisohn — a fiduciary engagement which it undertook on September 14,1928. On that date, the scheduled value of Mr. Lewisohn’s property was $406,878.85. On October 3, 1928, the trust company as his committee purchased a $240,000 participation in the $375,000 consolidated mortgage and, as such committee, purchased a further $37,500 participation therein on October. 17, 1928. Notice of the fact of that $277,500 investment was given by the trust company to the parties entitled thereto. Whether the trust company should now be surcharged therefor is the question in difference.

When that investment was made, Harvey D. Gibson was a member of the before-mentioned syndicate, an officer of Kellenworth Corporation and of its golf club and was president of the trust company, — facts that were known at all times to all parties to this litigation. Reference was made above to a distribution of the $300,000 Kellenworth mortgage among the syndicate members. The amount thereby assigned to Mr. Gibson was $66,600. Though Mr. Gibson was still the record holder of that interest at the time of the above-stated transaction of September 28, 1928, the beneficial ownership thereof was then in Mr. Gibson’s wife, for whom an equivalent interest in the *604 $375,000 consolidated mortgage was at once set apart. Mr. Gibson retired from the presidency of the trust company in June, 1929: he was thereafter chairman of its executive committee until January 5, 1931; and at the same time was one of the trustees of the trust company — a post he retained until December 29, 1933.

Mr. Lewisohn, the incompetent, died on July 31, 1938. In the course of the settlement of his affairs, counsel representing his executrix (his former wife) discussed with a then executive official of the trust company the different aspects of Mr. Gibson’s nearness to the transaction whereby $277,500 of the $375,000 consolidated mortgage had been allocated by the trust company to itself as committee for Mr. Lewisohn. Nothing came of that conference, however, except an announcement by •the trust company’s officer of the unreadiness of his principal to rehandle the investment. In that state of affairs, the final account of the trust company as committee of Mr. Lewisohn was judicially settled on August 23, 1939, with the consent of his executrix, whereupon she and his son — as beneficiaries of his estate — became owners in equal parts of the $277,500 participation in the $375,000 mortgage.

Nearly three years later — on April 29, 1941 — Mr. Gibson (who at that time was no longer an officer of the trust company) sought on behalf of the golf club a reduction by the mortgagees of the rate of the interest payable on the same $375,000 consolidated mortgage. The golf club, Mr. Gibson then said, was likely to fold up ” and leave the holders of that mortgage in possession of a large piece of real estate with two small buildings on it. In their turn, financial advisers óf Mr. Lewisohn’s former wife and of his son suggested that the property could be split up in building lots ”; but Mr. Gibson in reply said the property “ could not be split up into small lots ’ ’ because “ very hard restrictions were placed upon it.” The upshot of that disclosure was an order vacating the settlement of the final account of the trust company as committee of Mr. Lewisohn and permitting the filing by his former wife and by his son of the objections that are now before us.

*605 Thus there was brought to the fore a number of restrictions which had been imposed upon the mortgaged property by the syndicate members. These restraints forbade: (1) Any use of the property except as a residential estate or a golf course. (2) Sale of the property or any part of it to any person other than a syndicate member unless and until all syndicate members declined to exercise a continuing option which entitled them or any of them to the right of first purchase. (3) Any future subdivision of the property without the consent of the syndicate members. (4) The erection on the property of any building or the planting thereon of any tree within or adjacent to “ vista lines ” — i.e., lines that marked off space across which a view of Long Island Sound was to be had from the adjoining homes of the syndicate members. Bach of these prohibitions was to run with the land until 1971.

As we come now to the respective contentions of the parties, one or two simplifications are in order. Mr. Lewisohn’s former wife and his son — the objectors to the trust company’s account as committee — are the appellants. We shall speak of them as the trust beneficiaries and of the trust company as the trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
63 N.E.2d 589, 294 N.Y. 596, 1945 N.Y. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-accounting-of-new-york-trust-co-ny-1945.