Industrial Trust Co. v. Colt

128 A. 200, 46 R.I. 319, 1925 R.I. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 128 A. 200 (Industrial Trust Co. v. Colt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Industrial Trust Co. v. Colt, 128 A. 200, 46 R.I. 319, 1925 R.I. LEXIS 16 (R.I. 1925).

Opinion

*321 Sweetland, C. J.

The above entitled proceeding is a bill of interpleader brought by the complainant as trustee under a certain indenture of trust, executed by the late Samuel P. Colt, as settlor, on December 30, 1908. The respondents are, on one hand, Elizabeth M. Colt, widow of Samuel P. Colt, who by reason of unsoundness of mind is under guardianship of her person and estate, and whose interests are represented in this suit by her guardian and by a guardian ad litem, and on the other hand, the two sons of Samuel P. and Elizabeth M. Colt. The bill avers the adverse claims which have been made by these two groups of respondents to a certain portion of the income of the trust estate created by said indenture, and their respective threats of suits to enforce said claims.

By an interlocutory decree the complainant was directed to pay into the registry of the Superior Court all those portions of the income of said trust estate which had accrued or should accrue during the pendency of the cause, and as to which the adverse claims of the respondents relate. In said decree the complainant was dismissed, and the parties respondent were ordered to interplead with each other upon their adverse claims.

The cause was heard before a justice of the Superior Court upon the answers of the respondents and the proof. Thereafter the justice filed his decision in which he held that the adverse claims of the respondents did not present a situation warranting interpleader; that the claim of the respondents Russell G. and Roswell C. Colt was not one which they might urge against the complainant but was a claim against the respondent Elizabeth M. Colt. Thereafter the justice entered a final decree dismissing the bill on that ground. The final decree did not, however, order the fund which had been paid into the registry of the court in accordance with the interlocutory decree to be returned to the complainant but to be paid to the respondent Elizabeth M. Colt.

The cause is before us upon the appeal of each of the adversary parties respondent. The reasons of appeal of *322 each assign error in the decision of said justice that inter-pleader was improper.

For his conclusion the justice relied upon the decision in Stiness v. Henderson, 44 R. I. 514. In Stiness v. Henderson, supra, the complainant had paid two funds into court. By his answer it appeared that the claim of one of the respondents was solely to one of these funds, to which fund the answer of the other respondent clearly indicated that he had no right. The claim that he was making was not against either fund but against the other respondent for damages for breach of contract. Following Greene v. Mumford, 4 R. I. 313 and Boss v. Lederer Realty Corporation, 43 R. I. 549, the bill of interpleader was dismissed. The suit at bar is distinguishable from Stiness v. Henderson. The claim of each of the respondents here is for the same fund, and the claim of either, if it had been established, would have warranted a recovery against the complainant. The complaint and the answers set out a situation which permits an inter-pleading bill to be maintained. The complainant, threatened with the respective suits of the respondents, stands indifferent as a stakeholder; each group of respondents is claiming the same fund, and the claim of each is derived from Col. Colt through the same transaction. Providence Bank v. Wilkinson, 4 R. I. 507. Our conclusion on this phase of the case is that the bill should not have been dismissed. We will pass upon the matter in controversy between the respondents.

The circumstances in which the adverse claims of the parties respondent arise are as follows: Previous to December 30, 1908, Col. Samuel P. Colt and his wife, this respondent Elizabeth M. Colt, had been living apart. On that date Col. Colt as settlor and John J. Watson, Jr., as trustee executed the indenture in question by which Col. Colt transferred to Mr. Watson securities of large value to hold in trust for various purposes in the indenture set forth. The third paragraph thereof is as follows: “Third. During the joint lives of Elizabeth M. Colt, wife of the settlor, and *323 Russell G. Colt and Roswell C. Colt, sons of the settlor, the trustee shall pay from the net income, if sufficient, unto the said Elizabeth M. Colt the sum of seventeen thousand (17,000) dollars annually and as nearly as may be in equal quarterly installments.” On October 31, 1910, Mr. Watson resigned as trustee under the indenture and on the same day the complainant became trustee in succession and has so continued to the present time. The original trustee and the complainant as successor, respectively, paid from the income of the trust fund the sum of $17,000 annually to Mrs. Colt, or upon her order, down to the time of the appointment of the respondent Alfred G. Chaffee, Esq., as guardian of the person and estate of Mrs. Colt. From the sum so received by Mrs. Colt she paid to each of the sons of Col. Colt and herself, Russell G. and Roswell C. Colt, the sum of $3,500 annually from the date of the indenture down to June 18, 1913. On that day she gave the following notice and order to the complainant: “Providence, R. I. June 18, 1913. To Industrial Trust Company, Trustee. Beginning July 1, 1913, in place of previous payments to me as provided by the trust deed of December 30, 1908, please pay from the sum of seventeen thousand dollars, payable to me in quarterly installments, the following — to Russell G. Colt and Roswell C. Colt, each, the sum of $291.66 on the first business day of each and every month, making an aggregate of $3,500 to be paid to each of them annually and the balance of the said sum of $17,000 (viz. $2,500 quarterly) deposit in my general account with your company. This order to take the place of all preceding directions relative to said payment of said $17,000 which I hereby cancel. (Signed) Elizabeth M. Colt.” Thereafter, in compliance with the direction contained in said instrument, from the sum of $17,000 payable annually to Mrs. Colt under the terms of the third paragraph of the indenture the complainant paid the sum of $3,500 annually to each of said sons down to the time of the appointment of said guardian on December 30, 1922. Immediately after *324 that date said guardian notified the complainant not to make further payments to said sons in accordance with the instrument of June 18, 1913, and demanded that the full sum of $17,000 be paid to him as part of the estate of his ward and threatened to bring suit in behalf of his ward to enforce said claim.

Notwithstanding the unsoundness of mind of their mother said sons claimed that the order contained in the instrument of June 18, 1913, was still operative and demanded that payments to them under said instrument be continued; and threatened to bring action against the complainant for the recovery of the same. In these circumstances the complainant’s bill was filed and the interlocutory decree was entered directing the respondents to interplead.

The respondents, Mrs. Colt, her guardian and guardian ad litem,

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Bluebook (online)
128 A. 200, 46 R.I. 319, 1925 R.I. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/industrial-trust-co-v-colt-ri-1925.