In re the Estate of Cummins

16 Haw. 185, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 20
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 16 Haw. 185 (In re the Estate of Cummins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Cummins, 16 Haw. 185, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 20 (haw 1904).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT BY

HARTWELL, J.

The question presented by the appellants is concerning the-liability of the trustee for failing to buy for the estate forty shares of stock of the Wailuku Sugar Company, or to sell for the benefit of the trust estate the right to purchase those shares-at par, the facts being as follows:

August 10, 1903, the administrator and trustee with the will annexed of Thomas Cummins, deceased, filed his accounts to June 30, 1903, before De Bolt, J., of the First Circuit, at chambers. Thomas Cummins at his death left a will which was admitted to probate, of which will, omitting the formal parts, the following is a copy:

“I give, bequeath and devise to the said Alexander J. Cartwright Senior, my said executor and trustee, the following real and personal property, that is to say all my lands and premises on Kaahumanu street, and King street and twenty (20) shares in the capital stock of the Wailuku Sugar Company, and also all the rest, remainder and residue of my real and personal property or' estate of which I shall die seized or possessed or the owner.
“Subject however to the execution of the following trust,, that is to say
“My said trustee shall control and manage all of the said trust property, according to his best judgment, for the interest and advantage of the cesiuis que trust, hereinafter named
“And shall invest and keep invested all money and stock and use or dispose of the same and all other personal property and invest the proceeds as he shall deem best to carry out the trust herein declared; and keep in good order and repair the buildings on said real estate, as he may deem best and rent or use [187]*187the same as he may deem best for the purpose of properly performing said trust, and
“Eirst; shall deliver over to my son Thomas Jefferson Cummins, for his sole use and benefit during the term of his natural life, the net income, rents and profits of all my said real estate on Kaahumanu and King streets and of the twenty shares of Wailuku stock aforesaid, as well as the net income of all other property real or personal of which I may die possessed, and
“Second; after the death of my said son, the said Thomas Jefferson Cummins, shall pay and deliver over the said net income, rents and profits to his daughters Lydia, Beatrice and Elizabeth, in equal parts if living, and if either of said daughters shall then be dead, the principal and property, the interest and income of which would otherwise be going to her, shall be paid directly to her lineal heirs, if any, and if none, the said interest and income shall be paid to the survivors equally, and upon the death thereafter of either of the survivors, my said trustee shall pay and deliver over the principal and property, the interest and income of which has theretofore been paid to her, to her lineal heirs, if any and if none such then exist, shall then pay and deliver the same to the collateral heirs of’ such one dead.”

The par value of the shares having been changed after the-death of the testator from $500 to $100, the trustee received instead of the 20 shares of the par value of $500 left by the testator, 100 shares of the par value of $100. In 1897 the Wailuku Sugar Company issued 2,000 shares of new stock for-payment of its bonded indebtedness to that extent, giving to stockholders the right to buy at par their pro rata number of the new shares. The trustee thereby became entitled to purchase at par forty new shares, and in fact a certificate in his name for those shares was made out on the books of the corporation, but was not delivered to him. The trustee being absent from the Territory at that time, his agent, acting under a general power of attorney not specifically authorizing transaction of trust business, being led to believe that the life beneficiary, the son, was entitled to the benefit of buying the new shares at par, assigned them to the son, who paid $1,000 for them and soon after sold them for $6,000. At the time of the issue of [188]*188these new shares the stock was selling at $150 a share; consequently the rights to purchase the 10 shares were worth $2,000.

The trustee’s accounts were referred to a master. At some time which does not appear in the papers before us, between the purchase and sale by the son, Thomas, of the 10 new shares and the filing of the trustee’s accounts, the son died, leaving ■J. O. Carter, formerly his agent, as executor under his will. At the hearing before the master Cecil Brown appeared for the petitioner, the trustee, Holmes & Stanley for J. O. Carter, the •executor, and M. F. Prosser for Maria (Beatrice) King and Elizabeth Fairchild, two of the daughters of the son Thomas named in the will of the first testator. At a later time Mr. Breckons also appeared for the daughters above mentioned, and Mr. Ballou appeared with Mr. Brown for the trustee.

In the master’s first report, after mentioning that “on December 1, 1897, the petitioner appears to have purchased 10 •shares in this company at par, being $1,000,” and that “on December 28, 1897, within one month from the time of their purchase these identical shares were sold by the beneficiary at •an advance of $50 a share, showing a clear gain of $2,000,” adds “although the money in this transaction was not the estate’s principal, I merely refer to it to see if there is anything in it to mitigate to any extent the surcharg’es herein made.” To this report the Maria King and Elizabeth Fairchild, benefi-ciaries under the will of the elder Cummins, by their attorney, filed their “objections” for the following reasons:

“That the said trustee has not fully accounted for property ■of the estate of decedent in that he should now have in his pos•session as part of said estate, the 10 shares of stock in the Wailuku Sugar Company, referred to on the sixth page of said Teport. That said 10 shares of stock in said Wailuku Sugar Company were issued to the estate of decedent and were •awarded to said Cartwright as trustee of said estate.”

At the hearing on this report '“the matter of the 10 shares •of the stock of the Wailuku Sugar Company” was at Mr. Hrown’s request referred back to the master, who thereafter Teported as follows:

[189]*189“That on December 1, 1897, a certificate of stock No. 283-for said forty (40) shares, par value of each $100, in the stock of said company, was issued to ‘Bruce Cartwright, trustee for T. Cummins.’ That immediately thereafter Thomas J. Cummins, cestui que trust in this estate, claimed the right to take up those shares as his own property as he had the money and. the estate was without funds. That the petitioner, Bruce Cartwright, by W. M. Graham, took legal advice on the point and he was advised that the claim of the cestui que trust was good-Thereupon said 40 shares were delivered not by Bruce Cartwright but by the agents C. Brewer & Company, to the said Thomas J. Cummins, through his agent, J. O. Carter who, on December 28, 1897, or within a month from the time said shares were issued, sold them at an advance of $50 a share, thus realizing a clear gain of $2,000. That the amount paid for said 40 shares was $4,000 whereas at this time the principal of this estate was only $3,000 and that ainount is now the only principal and no more as reported in the master’s main report.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Haw. 185, 1904 Haw. LEXIS 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-cummins-haw-1904.