In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Rowe

4 Mills Surr. 131, 42 Misc. 172, 86 N.Y.S. 253
CourtNew York Surrogate's Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 4 Mills Surr. 131 (In re the Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Rowe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Surrogate's 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 Judicial Settlement of the Accounts of Rowe, 4 Mills Surr. 131, 42 Misc. 172, 86 N.Y.S. 253 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Heaton, S.

Accounting by W. H. Rowe, Jr., as executor of W. H. Rowe, deceased, who was trustee under the will of [132]*132A. D. Rowe, deceased. Objections to the account have been tried. W. H. Rowe, the trustee named in the will of A. D. Rowe, died April 21, 1898, his accounts as such trustee had been settled in appropriate proceedings in May, 1892, .and the account now filed covers the period between those dates.

The decree of May, 1892, showed a balance of cash in hands of the trustee of $19,446.57, to be held as a trust fund under the fourth subdivision of the will during the life of Camilla R. Strickland (now Lewis) and directed a final distribution of a like sum held under the second subdivision in trust during the life of the widow who had just previously died.

It appears now that prior to that time and on March 19, 1889-, said W. H. Rowe had assigned to himself as trustee for Mrs. Strickland the O’Brien mortgage of $4,000, being a first lien on a farm in Washington county, the purchase price of which appears- from the deeds thereof to have been $6,270, in 1869. The said mortgage was foreclosed by the trustee in April, 1898, and the property brought on such sale $2,000, leaving a loss of upwards of $2,000. The account as filed shows that this loss with interest thereon has been made good and the whole amount of the O’Brien mortgage with- interest has been accounted' for, thus eliminating one of the objections to the acts of the trustee which Mrs. Lewis- made when informed by the successor to the trustee that the fund amounted to $17,446.39 only.

Three questions have been submitted: Should the trustee be charged with the income and, profit on certain funds of the trust estate loaned to a manufacturing corporation of whose stock the trustee was one of three owners such income and profit to be ascertained by adding the dividend paid upon the capital stock of such corporation and the surplus accumulated; should the trustee be allowed expenses and commissions in face of a legacy in the will of deceased purporting to- be compensation for such services and expenses; and should a charge of [133]*133$500 made by the attorney for the trustee in connection with the O’Brien mortgage matter be allowed ?

First: The trustee W. H. Rowe, his son W. H. Rowe, Jr., and his wife Frances J. W. Rowe were the directors and held, all the stock of the Wayside Knitting Company, a domestic corporation with a capital stock of $60,000, and a surplus of over $137,000, in 1893, and of over $243,000 in 1898. W. H. Rowe & Son, after 1894, was a corporation, but no evidence has been given showing its stockholders or the amount of its capital stock and assets. Hay 28, 1892, the trustee loaned the Wayside Company, $1,446.57 of the trust moneys taking a note bearing six per cent, interest. February 25, 1893, he loaned the same company $1,000 at the same rate of interest. July 22, 1896, he loaned the same company $13,000, at five per cent, interest. November 20, 1897, he loaned the same company $300, at five per cent, interest. April 4, 1898, he loaned W. H. Rowe & Son, $1,700, at six per cent, interest. This interest money has been collected by the trustee from time to time and paid over to the beneficiary.

From 1892 to 1898, the Wayside Company borrowed each year large sums of money ranging from $193,000 down to $88,000 at rates of interest ranging from six per cent, to four per cent. The dividends paid on the capital stock of $60,000 were thirty per cent, in 1893 and ten per cent, in each subsequent year to and including 1898. Based upon the capital stock and surplus for these years a computation has been given showing that the dividends showed a profit upon the money invested of between nine per cent, and ten per cent, in 1893, and between two per cent, and three per cent, each year thereafter. The accounting party seeks by this evidence to show that the trustee made no personal profit by loaning the trust funds to his corporation, even if such money should not be treated as a debt, and, therefore, excluded in arriving at a surplus, but considering it as an investment and as part of the surplus.

[134]*134The theory of the contestants is that the $17,000- trust moneys should be considered with the $,60,000' capital stock and the amount borrowed during the year, and that the amount appropriated to dividend and carried to surplus represents the earnings of the money in use, and, therefore, the $17,000 trust moneys should be credited with a proportionate share. Resort is had to this method of computation to show that the trust funds made a profit to the trustee of more than five per cent, annually, which additional profit -should inure to the benefit of the trust estate.

To adopt and carry out the view of the contestants it would be necessary to find several propositions, viz.: That the trustee had used the trust fund in his own business when he loaned it to a corporation in which he was a stockholder and officer; that he as such stockholder had made a personal profit from the use by the corporation of such trust funds in its business; the exact amount of profit which he as such stockholder had made by the corporation’s use of such trust money.

The books of the deceased trustee put in evidence designate all these transactions as loans to the corporation and show payments of interest upon such loans at the rate at which they bore interest. There is no* evidence that the trustee was guilty of any fraud or subterfuge in holding out an investment as a loan. The corporation was apparently not hard pressed for money so- that the borrowing of this money was particularly advantageous to the corporation. In 1895, the year before the $13,000 was loaned, the corporation borrowed $50',000 at five per cent, and $15,000' at four per cent. In 1896, it borrowed] $70,000 at five per cent., and in 1897, it borrowed $85,000* at five per cent, and $85,000* at four and one-half per cent. It would seem then that when the corporation 'borrowed the trust fund at five per cent, it was more of an advantage to the trust estate than to the corporation.

Taking, into consideration all the facts of this case there is [135]*135no reason in law or equity why these transactions should he held to be a use by the trustee of the trust funds in his own business, or why he should be held liable to the trust estate for any part of the profits, if any, made by the corporation during the years when it was a borrower from the trust estate.

The facts of this case are clearly different from the facts in such cases as Hannah v. Hannah, 68 N. Y. 610, relied on by the contestants. Here the trustee loaned the funds to a solvent corporation at an agreed rate of interest. In no case did he mingle the estate funds with the corporate funds as the trust money was always a debt due from the corporation, and was not liable to diminuition in case of shrinkage of assets or to increase in ease of addition to- the surplus.

It has not been claimed that the- trustee is chargeable with more money as interest than he has collected and accounted- for. There is no doubt but that the investment was not of the character authorized by law, but the trustee is responsible to the beneficiaries only for the loss which they may sustain by such unauthorized investments. Matter of Barnes, 140 N. Y. 471. Some of this fund was loaned at six per cent, -and when a large sum was paid in at one time it was loaned -at five per cent.

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Related

In re Van Buren
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Bluebook (online)
4 Mills Surr. 131, 42 Misc. 172, 86 N.Y.S. 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-judicial-settlement-of-the-accounts-of-rowe-nysurct-1903.