Langroise v. Cummings

123 F.2d 969, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2862
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 29, 1941
DocketNo. 9770
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 123 F.2d 969 (Langroise v. Cummings) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Langroise v. Cummings, 123 F.2d 969, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2862 (9th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

HEALY, Circuit Judge.

Appellant is the executor of the estate of James McDonald, Jr., who died in Idaho on July 2, 1936. Appellee Cummings presented a claim against the estate and upon its disallowance he sued, recovering a judgment from which the executor appeals.

The estate consists of McDonald’s share in a testamentary trust set up by his father, James McDonald, Sr., who died in 1915. The instruments creating the testamentary trust provided for the payment of an annuity to the son, and as those instruments were later construed McDonald was entitled to receive currently all the income accruing to his undivided half interest in the corpus.1 This undivided interest was not to be turned over to him until 1943. The corpus of the trust, valued at several million dollars, was invested largely in stocks and bonds.

Prior to 1931 McDonald, Jr., became heavily indebted. To secure some of these debts he had made assignments of the income and annuities and in some instances the assignments included his share of the trust corpus itself. At least one creditor who had obtained judgment was threatening to levy execution upon the share, and there were threats of action from other quarters. Efforts of McDonald to borrow on the security of his interest were unavailing and in his extremity he turned to Cummings, a Tennessee friend of long standing.

At a meeting held in Chattanooga in December, 1931 the two men entered into three contracts in writing. By the first McDonald assigned to Cummings his interest in the annuities, income and corpus of the testamentary trust as security for a loan of $50,000 evidenced by three promissory notes. These bore interest and provided for the payment of reasonable attorney’s fees in the event of suit. Cummings was appointed attorney in fact to receive all money or property belonging to McDonald under the trust, and the trustees were directed to pay the same to him.

The second contract, which we will call the Cummings trust agreement, deals with the application of “the amount received as surplus income over and above the amount necessary to pay debts secured by assignments.” So far as here material it provides for the payment by Cummings, out of such surplus income, (a) of an annuity of $2,000 per month to McDonald and his family, (b) of the necessary expenses of Cummings’ “agency and trusteeship”, and (c) for the application of the balance to the payment pro rata of the claims of certain listed unsecured creditors. The third contract provides for the appointment of Leo J. Falk to act as agent of Cummings in Idaho. For his services Falk is to receive $2,500 a year to be paid by Cummings out of the $5,000 which McDonald has by way of compensation agreed to pay Cummings. There is a further provision that “in case there should be a material falling off of the income now estimated to be paid by the trustees to Cummings, as agent aforesaid, all the parties hereto agree that each shall take a corresponding reduction in the allowances to' be paid under this agreement and the agreements herein referred to,” (namely, the assignment and the Cummings trust agreement) .

Cummings at once distributed among the creditors the $50,000 which he had loaned McDonald. During the ensuing years he received, as trustee, the large sums periodically paid as income and annuities from, the testamentary trust. He personally made advances to himself as trustee, and as trustee he borrowed with the approval of McDonald various sums from banks and others. All these funds he disbursed, in part directly to McDonald and in part to creditors to whom he made in all three general distributions. Smaller sums were disbursed in payment of expenses of his trust. In the course of these transactions he effected a number of settlements with creditors, resulting in substantial reductions in their claims. The record shows that he applied himself faithfully and with [972]*972diligence to his duties as trustee. In 1932, and again in August, 1935, he made reports to McDonald showing in detail all receipts and disbursements, and these accounts had the approval of McDonald in writing. The monies received and paid out, as shown by the last account, amounted in round figures to $200,000.

Meanwhile the income from the testamentary trust had declined, and on August 5, 1935 there was a complete stoppage both' of income and annuities because of a notice of distraint served on the testamentary trustees inspired by an alleged failure of McDonald to pay federal income taxes. Thereafter and until McDonald’s death, prior to which the payments had not been resumed* Cummings personally advanced to McDonald for living expenses sums aggregating close to $6,000. During the same period he made further advances to his trust. In November, 1935, McDonald agreed in writing that the sums advanced him' by Cummings since the stoppage of the annuity payments, and the sums to be thereafter advanced until the resumption of such payments, were to be secured by the 1931 assignment.

Thus matters stood when McDonald died. Two of the notes given Cummings in 1931 were unpaid. The third had been paid by the testamentary trustees, but Cummings with McDonald’s sanction had used the proceeds to effect a highly advantageous settlement with a secured creditor;' and McDonald had given a new note in its place. The unpaid principal of the three notes exceeded $51,000, and there were large arrearages of interest. Also outstanding were the advances by Cummings to himself as trustee, certain unpaid expenses, and the several loans by third persons to the trusteeship for which Cummings had individually obligated himself and most of which he repaid out of his own pocket. There were no funds in Cummings’ hands as trustee to apply on this varied indebtedness.

Some time after his appointment the executor obtained from the testamentary trustees the surrender of securities representative of McDonald’s share of the testamentary trust. At the same time there was turned over to the executor the sum of $34,166.20, the equivalent of the annuities and income accruing to McDonald prior to his death,’ payment of which had been temporarily withheld because of the assertion of the federal lien. This was in 1938. Meanwhile Cummings had presented his claim. It consisted of two groups of items: (a) direct obligations of McDonald comprising his notes and the advances made to him, all of which were confessedly secured under the 1931 assignment of corpus; and (b) the unpaid so-called trustee items, including an item for trustee compensation accruing prior to McDonald’s death. The total claim, exclusive of interest, was in the neighborhood of $79,000. The claimant reserved his right to enforce in the proper forum his rights under the 1931 assignment and contracts.’

Cummings’ claim was presented within the statutory time but was not acted upon by the executor until two years and eight months thereafter when it was rejected in toto. Suit was instituted early in 1940, within three months after the rejection. In his answer the executor set up a number of defenses, the chief ones argued here being (1) the statute of limitations; (2) absence of personal liability of McDonald for the so-called trustee items; and (3) alleged failure of the claimant to comply with required formalities in presentation.

1. It is conceded that when McDonald died and when the claim was later presented none of the items in suit was barred.

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Bluebook (online)
123 F.2d 969, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 2862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/langroise-v-cummings-ca9-1941.