Loring v. Baker

106 N.E.2d 434, 329 Mass. 63, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 517
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 29, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 106 N.E.2d 434 (Loring v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loring v. Baker, 106 N.E.2d 434, 329 Mass. 63, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 517 (Mass. 1952).

Opinion

Wilkins, J.

This is an appeal by the defendant Lawrence Lowell Putnam, the minor daughter of the late Augustus L. Putnam, from a decree ordering the defendant Baker, surviving trustee of certain trusts, to repay in cash (rather than partly in securities in their present form) the amount of her legacy under the will of Abbott Lawrence Lowell which was given over by the plaintiff executor to her father, and by him received and deposited in a joint account of the trusts, of which he was a trustee, under the mistaken belief that he was her lawful guardian. This bill in equity is brought by the executor under the Lowell will to obtain repayment of the legacy. The issue as to the manner of repayment is raised in alternative prayers of a counterclaim in the answer of the defendant legatee, Lawrence Lowell Putnam, hereinafter sometimes referred to as Laura Putnam, the name by which she is commonly known. The right to repayment in some form is not questioned.

The judge found the facts to be as agreed. Later supplementary findings were filed by consent. Under date of December 2, 1935, certain settlors executed a declaration of trust, the beneficiary being the defendant legatee. Seven other declarations of trust, identical except for the beneficiary, were executed by the same settlors, three on the same date and four on December 29, 1937. The beneficiary of each trust is a child or stepchild of Augustus L. Putnam, who, throughout September, 1943, and until his death in 1947, served with the defendant Baker as trustee. Thereafter the defendant Baker served alone. Each trust contained a provision authorizing the trustees to commingle *65 funds of all the trusts and to make joint investments and to hold undivided interests of trust properties.

In September, 1943, Augustus L. Putnam and the defendant Baker, as trustees, maintained a single account in a Boston bank. On September 15, 1943, the plaintiff delivered a check for $10,000 payable to Laura Putnam in payment of the legacy, and received a receipt signed “Augustus L. Putnam — Guardian for Laura Putnam.” In fact, no guardian had been appointed. About September 16 Augustus L. Putnam indorsed the check, “Laura Putnam by Augustus L. Putnam, Trustee, Pay to Augustus L. Putnam and Richard K. Baker, Trustees u/d dated 12-2-35,” and deposited it in the trustees’ bank account. Prior to the deposit the amount to the credit of the account was $9,668.68. Thereafter up to October 17, 1943, income accruing to the several trusts was deposited to the account in the amount of $1,025. About October 17, 1943, Augustus L. Putnam and the defendant Baker as trustees, acting in good faith, purchased an interest in a syndicate known as the Taylor Oil Stock Purchase Syndicate, giving in payment a check for $15,000 on the trustees’ bank account, of which the balance on that date was $20,693.67.

In accounts for the eight trusts prepared by Augustus L. Putnam and the defendant Baker, or by the latter alone, covering periods beginning August 31, 1941, and ending October 1, 1949, the $10,000 legacy was carried as a loan by the defendant Laura Putnam upon which interest was accrued for the benefit of her trust at the rate of four per cent annually, and the $15,000 syndicate interest was shown divided and allocated to all eight trusts in the same proportions as were other investments commonly held and administered for these trusts. All the trusts have been administered together generally as a common trust fund, securities being purchased with the funds of all and being allocated, without division of the security, among the trusts on a proportional basis whereunder each of the four 1935 trusts has double the interest of each of the 1937 trusts. *66 In addition, some trusts held securities not shared with the others. In October, 1943, the eight trusts owned commonly held securities totaling $55,000.

On December 1, 1948, the duly appointed guardian of Laura demanded of the defendant Baker “the maximum amount” of the interest in the oil syndicate “to which she is entitled” and the balance in cash with interest. The syndicate manager is willing to recognize Laura Putnam as the owner of any share in the syndicate interest as may be determined by the court.

The final decree ordered the defendant Baker as trustee to pay to the plaintiff executor the sum of $10,000 together with interest from September 15, 1943.

The case at bar is not precisely like any we have found or have had brought to our attention. Here there is no conscious wrongdoer, in dealing with whom it is the policy of the law to be severe. The conscious wrongdoer cannot make a profit and is responsible for losses. Bowen v. Richardson, 133 Mass. 293, 296. At the option of the rightful owner, a constructive' trust or an equitable lien may be enforced against property acquired in exchange for property wrongfully disposed of by the conscious wrongdoer. Restatement : Restitution, § 202. Scott on Trusts, §§ 508, 517.2. See Locke v. Old Colony Trust Co. 289 Mass. 245, 253; Sullivan v. Sullivan, 321 Mass. 156, 158. Where a conscious wrongdoer commingles money of others but not of his own, each owner is entitled to share in the mingled fund or in property acquired with the fund in such proportion as his money bore to the whole amount of the fund. Restatement: Trusts, § 202, comment n. Restatement: Restitution, § 213. On such facts, the claimants are to share the profits and bear the losses equally. Scott on Trusts, § 519.

We likewise are not concerned with an innocent converter. The rules of law are more lenient with him. When one who is without knowledge of the facts which make him a converter wrongfully disposes of another’s property and acquires other property in exchange, the owner may enforce *67 an equitable lien but not a constructive trust. Restatement: Restitution, § 203. He is, of course, liable for the value of the property converted if its return has not been accepted. Jackson v. Innes, 231 Mass. 558, 560. Lawyers Mortgage Investment Corp. of Boston v. Paramount Laundries Inc. 287 Mass. 357, 361. Manhattan Clothing Co. Inc. v. Goldberg, 322 Mass. 472, 475-476. See Restatement: Torts, § 247; Prosser on Torts, § 15 (pages 110-111). Of the innocent converter, it has been said that if he exchanges the property for other property and makes a profit, “there is no reason of policy or of justice to require him to account for the profit thus innocently made.” Scott on Trusts, §§ 509 (pages 2446-2447), 463, 516.

The present case lies between that of the conscious wrongdoer and that of the innocent converter. Some issues here presented resemble the subjects of the caveats to Restatement: Restitution, §§ 202-204, .where it is pointed out that no opinion is expressed on the questions whether a constructive trust may be enforced (1) against a person who disposes of property of another and acquires in exchange other property with notice but without knowledge that the disposition is wrongful; and (2) against a converter who has disposed of the property converted and acquired in' exchange other property without knowledge but with notice of the facts which make him a converter.

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Bluebook (online)
106 N.E.2d 434, 329 Mass. 63, 1952 Mass. LEXIS 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loring-v-baker-mass-1952.