In Re the Guardianship of the Estate of Smart

32 Haw. 943, 1934 Haw. LEXIS 34
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1934
DocketNo. 2087.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 32 Haw. 943 (In Re the Guardianship of the Estate of Smart) 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 Guardianship of the Estate of Smart, 32 Haw. 943, 1934 Haw. LEXIS 34 (haw 1934).

Opinions

*944 OPINION OP THE COURT BY

BANKS, J.

(Perry, C. J., dissenting in part.)

On March 7, 1932, the Trent Trust Company filed a petition in the court of domestic relations asking leave to resign the guardianship of the estate of Richard Smart, a minor. On March 12,1932, the resignation was accepted and Alfred W. Carter was appointed as guardian. On March 17, 1932, the resigning guardian filed its final account. This account was referred to two masters. On September 3, 1932, the masters filed their report in which they recommended that certain items of investment made by the retiring guardian be surcharged against it and that otherwise the account be approved. The circuit judge adopted the recommendation of the masters as to one only of these items. In all other respects the account of the retiring guardian was approved. Exceptions to the decree were taken by both the incoming and retiring guardians and both have appealed to this court.

Before considering the item that was surcharged against the retiring guardian it seems appropriate to dispose of an objection made by the Trent Trust Company *945 to the entry of any judgment against it arising out of its conduct as guardian. There was offered in support of the objection the affidavit of A. E. Steadman, executive vice-president of the Cooke Trust Company, Limited, the receiver of the Trent Trust Company. It appears from the affidavit, which was dated December 20, 1932, that the receiver was appointed on January 9, 1932, and on January 29 of the same year published notice to creditors to present their claims within six months from said date and that the period for presenting claims would expire on July 29, 1932. Said affidavit also recited that Alfred W. Carter was duly appointed guardian of Richard Smart on March 12, 1932, and that no claim on behalf of said minor was presented to the receiver. The objection was overruled by the circuit judge and his action is assigned as error.

Section 3487B, R. L. 1925 (Act 178, L. 1925), provides that “Immediately after the appointment of any. such receiver, he shall advertise in such newspaper or newspapers as the court shall direct, for as long as the court may order, at least once a week for four weeks, a notice to all creditors of and claimants against such trust company to present their claims with proper vouchers, or duly authenticated copies thereof, to him, either at his residence or place of business, within such time as said court shall direct, but within not less than six months from the first day of such publication and within seven days of the date of the first publication shall mail a like notice to every creditor whose address is known. And if such claims be not presented within such time as shall be directed by said court they shall be barred from any participation in the assets of said company, and the receiver shall not be authorized to pay them.”

It is apparent from the statute that the legislature intended that the notice provided for should be given only *946 to creditors of the trust company. As we shall presently see, so far as the item surcharged by the circuit judge against the guardian was concerned, there could be no such relation between the minor and the trust company as exists between a debtor and his creditor. The funds of the ward, which by judicial order were committed to the keeping and management of the guardian, were in no sense a loan. They remained the property of the ward. Any culpable neglect or imprudence by the guardian in the investment of the funds or the management of the estate was therefore a breach of trust and not a breach of contract.

There is another reason, appearing in the statute itself, why the power of the court to enter judgment against the Trent Trust Company was not affected by the failure to present claims to the receiver. The only embargo placed by the statute upon creditors who fail to seasonably present their claims is that they shall not participate in the assets of the trust company. Even, therefore, if the minor in the instant case had been a mere creditor the failure to present his claims against the Trent Trust Company would not have prevented the entry of a decree against it and the statute would have presented no impediment to proceeding against the latter’s bond for satisfaction of the decree. Moreover, there is nothing in the statute which would have precluded the ward from recovering from the Trent Trust Company assets which were a part of his estate and were never a part of the assets of the trust company.

The objection was properly overruled.

The item which was surcharged against the outgoing guardian was a loan of $50,000 made on J anuary 25, 1928, to Frank Santos, for a period of three years. The record discloses that the security for this loan was a first mortgage on 49,383 square feet of land on the makai side of *947 Vineyard Street between Emma and Punchbowl streets in Honolulu, known as “Santos Court,” on which were located several apartment houses. The mortgage also included some four and one-half acres of Pauoa Valley land used and occupied as a dairy. In June 1929 the mortgagor became delinquent in his payment of interest. The guardian, who by the terms of the mortgage was authorized to foreclose upon the happening of this event, never exercised its right and the debt has never been paid.

It also appears from the record that on the same day that the loan above referred to was made another loan of $25,000 was made to Santos. The money which was loaned on the second occasion was contributed by certain clients of the Trent Trust Company and by the trust company itself. This loan was secured by a second mortgage on the identical property included in the first mortgage, and in addition certain personal property which was unincumbered. The mortgage was made to “Trent Trust Company, Trustee and Mortgagee.”

It is apparent that the Trent Trust Company, by taking a second mortgage as security for a loan of its own money and that of its clients, placed itself in a position which subjected it to the temptation of protecting its own interests, and those of others whom it represented, to the detriment of its ward’s estate. That it did in fact yield to this temptation is implicit in the facts as they were found by the masters. They said in their report: “We are of the opinion that if the mortgage had been foreclosed in 1929, when it became delinquent, the property could have been sold for a sufficient sum to cover the amount due on the first mortgage. It is apparent to us from the testimony of Mr. J. D. Marques and Mr. William R. Warren that in 1929 and thereafter the Trent Trust Co., Ltd., was trying to sell the property for around $80,000, a sum sufficient to take care of the *948 first and second mortgages and that they were trying to protect the second mortgage at the expense of the first mortgage.”

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32 Haw. 943, 1934 Haw. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-the-estate-of-smart-haw-1934.