Johnson v. . Lawrence

95 N.Y. 154, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 635
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 26, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 95 N.Y. 154 (Johnson v. . Lawrence) 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
Johnson v. . Lawrence, 95 N.Y. 154, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 635 (N.Y. 1884).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Double commissions have been awarded in this case for services purely constructive, and having no real existence. That the same person may be entitled to compensation as executor, and also as trustee, in respect to the same estate, *160 or some part thereof, is undoubtedly true, but does not follow in every instance where trust duties are imposed upon an executor. Where, by the terms or true construction of the will, the two functions with their corresponding duties co-exist, and run from the death of the testator to the final discharge ; interwoven, inseparable and blended together, so that no point of time is fixed or contemplated in the testamentary intention at which one function should end and the other begin, double commissions or compensation in both capacities cannot be properly allowed. Substantially this was said in Hurlburt v. Durant (88 N. Y. 121) although it was not then attempted to decide the precise question, and the doctrine asserted is fairly deducible from the adjudged cases. In Valentine v. Valentine (2 Barb. Ch. 430) the estate consisted both of real and personal property, the former of which the executors were authorized to sell. After some general legacies, the testator directed the residue to be divided between his three sons, but one of them being a lunatic, his share was ordered to be invested, the income being made applicable to his support during life, and at his death the principal being made payable to his children in equal shares. The learned chancellor decided that the funds in the hands of the executors for the benefit of the lunatic and his children were held by them in their character of executors, and the trust and the executor-ship were inseparable. And the court added, that the case would have been different if the executors had been directed by the will to pay over this part of the fund to one of their number as a trustee, upon a separate and distinct trust.” Double commissions were, therefore, denied. The decision was founded upon the doctrine that the trust and the executor-ship were inseparable under the terms of the will, and the double functions and double duties were blended and coexisted to the end. The case establishes the rule, although it may not be beyond criticism as applied to the facts before the court. Drake v. Price (5 N. Y. 430) was a similar case of a trust to secure income to a daughter for life, with remainder payable to her lawful heirs; and the precedent set by the *161 Chancellor was followed and double commissions denied. Paige, J., however dissented, and sought to distinguish the case from Valentine v. Valentine by the observation that in that case the trust had not been assumed by the executors “ by an investment of the trust moneys, and the consequent separation ” of the trust fund from the general funds of the estate: The ground of dissent conceded the doctrine of the principal case, but went upon the theory that the trust and executor-ship were separable by the terms of the will, and that such separation had actually, and in truth, been made. And it is this view of the dissenting opinion which won our concurrence in Hurlburt v. Durant. The two earlier cases referred to were cited with apparent approval, in Hall v. Hall (78 N. Y. 539) and the difference between them drawn by the dissenting opinion of Paige, J., noted. That case further cited Lansing v. Lansing (45 Barb. 182) and Mann v. Lawrence (3 Bradf. 424), in both of which there were special trusts, but not separated from the bulk of the estate by an actual investment of specific trust funds for the sole use of the beneficiaries. The facts in Hall v. Hall showed that the testator denominated his executors, in different parts of the will trustees, and that circumstance was relied upon; but this court said that the words were used interchangeably and as synonymous, and that the bequest of the fund to the executors, and their survivors and successors, indicated rather a trust attached to the office, than imposed upon the individuals. The executors had an accounting in 1874, on which they were allowed full commissions as executors. ■ Four years later, one of the legatees, to whom income had been paid during her minority, having come of age, a final accounting was had. The executors claimed commissions as trustees on her share, although that"had never been in fact separated from the general fund in their hands, but the claim was disallowed; the chief judge saying, There seems to be neither authority nor reason for holding that there has been any such separation of the fund, or paying over to the appellants as trustees, or any holding by them as such, as to entitle them to the extra com *162 pensation denied by the surrogate.” In the course of the opinion other cases cited by the appellant were referred to. In one of them (Matter of Carman, 3 Redf. 47) there had been an accounting, and the surrogate had ordered a specific sum to be set apart and held for a beneficiary under the will, which the trustees did, opening a separate account, and taking out that specific fund from the general assets held by them as executors; and in another case it was said a final decree had discharged the executors as such and they had retained the fund as trustees as directed. Ward v. Ford (4 Redf. 45) is an example of such a case, and the surrogate there held that the will clearly created a trust in the hands of the executors, distinct and separate from their duties as such.

Taking the adjudged cases together, they appear to establish that, to entitle the same persons to commissions as executors and as trustees, the will must provide, either by express terms or by fair intendment, for the separation of the two functions and duties, one duty to precede the other and to be performed before the latter is begun, or substantially so performed ; and must not provide for the co-existence, continuously and from the beginning, of the two functions and duties; and that where the will does so provide for the separate and successive duties, that of trustee must be actually entered upon and its performance begun, either by a real severance of the trust fund from the general assets, or a judicial decree which wholly discharges the executor and leaves him acting and liable only as trustee.

An examination of the will in the present case satisfies us that the trust duties, and those of the executors, co-existed from the issue of letters testamentary down to the present action, and that no separation of such duties at any point of time was contemplated by the testator, except in one emergency, which has not yet arisen. The first clause of the will, in a very short sentence, directs the payment of debts. The second clause then proceeds to require the executors, or such of them as should qualify, their survivors or successors,” to *163 carry on witli testator’s “ estate and property ” his present business, under the firm name of Garner &

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Bluebook (online)
95 N.Y. 154, 1884 N.Y. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-lawrence-ny-1884.