Kennedy v. Winn

1 Ga. L. Rep. 657
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 1, 1886
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ga. L. Rep. 657 (Kennedy v. Winn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Winn, 1 Ga. L. Rep. 657 (Ga. 1886).

Opinion

The opinion states the facts.

Clopton, J.

A person, nominated trustee by will, deed or other instrument, may, at his election, accept or disclaim. Though acceptance is necessary to constitute a trustee, when the trust is not raised by implication or construction of law, or is not coerced for the purpose of complete justice, as the result of the party’s own conduct or acts, its acceptance is not compulsory. No one, without his assent, will be constrained to undertake the duties and incur the responsibilities of a trust. Acceptance in writing or by express words is not essential. Ordinarily it is presumed. There may be such interference, or acts done in the execution of the duties, as amount to constructive acceptance. Neither, when the trust property is a chattel interest, is it requisite that the disclaimer, to be effectual, should be in any formal mode. Absolute refusal to act, or parol disavowals, may be sufficient evidence. Each case must depend on the special facts, construed under the application ■of a few general rules. The complainants, not claiming an express acceptance, insist that the nominated trustee performed acts which were in execution of the trust, and which bind him to an acceptance. And •the defendants contend that his parol declaration, contemporaneous with the performance of the acts, are tantamount to a disclaimer, and defeat their operation as a constructive acceptance.

The following facts may be regarded as established by the evidence : JLueinda Perteet, by her will, bequeathed to Bichard McLester, the testator of the defendants, in trust for the complainants, a sum of money ■consisting of gold and United States treasury notes. The money was to be loaned on bills of exchange or bonds, secured by a mortgage on real •estate, with the interest payable semi-annually if practicable. As the .interest was-collected the trustee was to pay it to the complainants, [659]*659during their respective lives, in the proportions provided by the will. The other provisions of the bequest are not material, as respects the questions involved in this aspect of the case. The will was admitted to prooate in November, 1870, and John S. Kennedy was appointed administrator of the estate. Kennedy, with the consen^ of complainants, arranged with R. & J. McLester, a mercantile firm of which the nominated trustee was a member, to let the complainants hfive goods on a credit, and look to him for payment out of the semi-annual interest. When .the first payment was made, June 30, 1871, McLester, as trustee, gave Kennedy a receipt which specified on its-face that the sum received was six months interest on the money willed to Sarah Winn by her mother, Lucinda Perteet, and for which he was appointed trustee. Each six months thereafter, to January, 1874, receipts were given to Kennedy for the interest, signed by McLester as trustee for complainants. When the first receipt was called .for, McLester declined to sign it as trustee, saying that he had only agreed to let complainants have goods, and that payment therefor was to be made with the interest, and that he did not intend to accept the trust; but signed the receipt on being assured by Kennedy that what he wanted was a proper voucher on his settlement as administrator; that signing it as trustee would not bind him as such, without a formal acceptance ; and that “ he would not accept the general trust.” In the first receipt, the word trustee is in McLester’s handwriting. The subsequent receipts were prepared with the descriptive words written thereon, before carried to him to sign; and the evidence tends to show that at the time of signing each succeeding receipt, he made, the same declaration of an intention not to accept the trust. In August, 1874, Kennedy made a final settlement of his administration, on which a decree was made in favor of McLester as trustee for the trust money in the hands of the administrator. On being informed that such decree had been rendered, he disavowed the authority to use his name, and in August, 1876, filed in the probate court a protest, and refused to permit any process for the collection of the money to be issued on the decree in his name. When Kennedy, after the final settlement, offered him the notes of Baugh, Kennedy & Co., to whom money of the estate had been loaned, he refused to receive them, and refused to accept the trust. This was the first time, as the witness states, he had made formal and postive refusal to accept the trust. The question arising on these facte is, whether, under the circumstances, signing the receipts and receiving the interest bound him to an acceptance, notwithstanding the cotemporaneous parol declaration that he did not intend to accept.

In 1 Perry on Trusts, § 261, it is said : “ The general rule is, that every voluntary interference with the trust property will stamp a per[660]*660son as an acting trustee, unless such interference can be plainly referred to some.other ground of action than the acceptance of the trust.” Any voluntary interference is, prima facie, an acceptance; and such interference having been shown, the onus is on the person appointed trustee to show that i£ is clearly referable to some other ground of action. It is not a question whether it is referable to an acceptance of the trust. It is presumably so, unless shown to be otherwise. There must be no ambiguity in this respect. If it is a matter of doubt whether the intention was to accept the trust, or to act in some other capacity, the doubt will be resolved against the trustee, and he will be held to have accepted the trust and all its responsibilities. The policy of the law will not permit a person to place himself in a condition in which he can say he is or is not trustee, as may subserve his personal interest.

It may be said generally, that any acts relating to the control, management or disposition of the subject matter of the trust, any assertion of ownership, or execution of the duties of the trust by a person nominated trustee, with notice thereof, will be regarded an acceptance. “Any act by which the trustee manifests an intent to acquire or exercise any influence in the management of the property, will tend to fix upon him the responsibility of the trust.” In Conyngham vs. Conyngham, 1 Ves. 522, the appointed trustee was held to account because of receiving the rents and profits, though he claimed to have acted only as friend and agent. Lord Hardwicke says: “It was incumbent upon him, if he would not have acted as trustee, to have refused, and not going on in this ambiguous way, to leave himself at liberty to say he acts as trustee or not. Instead of this, he goes on receiving'the produce; on this foundation he is directed to account.” The execution of a deed, which cons t-ained no recital of a disclaimer, has been held of itself sufficient to evidence that the persons who executed it had accepted and acted in the trusts of the will, though the deed contained a recital that it became unnecessary for them to act, and they never, intermeddled in the trust; and made the deed, by request to convey the legal estate vested in them by will. Wich vs. Walker, 14 Eng. Ch. R. 702. If, however, the appointed trustee executed no other act than a release of the legal estate, such deed of release containing a disclaimer, and the meaning and intent being to disclaim, no inference of an acceptance of the trust will arise. Nicholson vs. Wordsworth, 2 Swan 315.

Had nothing more been done than merely to carry out the arrangement or agreement under which R.'& J.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Drane v. Gunter
19 Ala. 731 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1851)
Howard v. Gilbert
39 Ala. 726 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1866)
McCarthy v. McCarthy
74 Ala. 546 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1883)
Stewart v. Iglehart
7 G. & J. 132 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1835)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. L. Rep. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-winn-ga-1886.