Loud v. Winchester

30 N.W. 896, 64 Mich. 23, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 665
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 N.W. 896 (Loud v. Winchester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loud v. Winchester, 30 N.W. 896, 64 Mich. 23, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 665 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Campbell, O. J.

This case was in this Court, and decided at the October term, 1883 (52 Mich. 174), upon a bill to establish the rights of the various parties under a trust including a lumbering estate managed in the name of the Oscoda Salt & Lumber Company. The controversy brought in for decision the conduct of the trustees, and of Winchester, the secured creditor, and was also intended to get relief for the alleged misconduct of Wasey and Winchester, and their associates or subordinates. A decree was made by the court below, substantially sustained by this Court, leaving the trust in the same hands, and ordering measures to close it up.

In pursuance of our decree the parties proceeded to an accounting, and upon most of the balances there is no complaint made. But various charges for losses were allowed against Winchester, and some also against Wasey, and certain of their respective claims were rejected. The cause is now before us on appeal, to obtain the disallowance of the sums alleged to be wrongly charged, and the allowance of what is claimed to have been wrongly rejected.

A preliminary series o£ objections is made, on behalf of Winchester, that there are no specific charges in the bill, and no provisions in the decree, which opened the door to an inquiry into the losses and other items charged against Winchester,who, it is said, is entitled, on the record, to his whole debt of $275,-000, less actual payments made in reduction of it, without regard to the,cross or counter claims that are set up as arising from his legal misconduct; and it is also insisted that Winchester is not liable for conduct of others not actually engaged in or authorized by himself. Wasey’s objections are chiefly based on his discretionary powers as trustee, which he insists protect him where there was no actual fraud.

In our opinion, there is not much in this record, so far as the disputed items are concerned, which has not already been settled by our former decision. It was plainly Baid there that, in an action like this, to call persons to an account for [27]*27the maladministration of a trust, it was not reasonable to require a complainant to set out in his bill the misdoings which he could not be expected to fully understand until he had obtained disclosures. It was there said:

“It is not generally presumable that the beneficiaries have such information from independent sources. When, therefore, a bill is filed to call trustees to an account, any testimony throwing light on their management bears directly on the performance of this duty, and may be considered in taking the accounts and in determining the view to be taken of the conduct of the trustees.”

It was also our opinion that, after Winchester had attempted to repudiate complainant’s rights, he and Wasey had been so connected in their dealings that he was individually responsible for their effect on the interests of the trust. Upon both these points we see no reason to change our former views. There has been no testimony taken which Winchester has not had the means of meeting as fully as if it had been foreshadowed in the pleadings. And the approval and acquiescence of Winchester in Wasey’s view of his powers, and the almost complete actual approval of his specific acts, appear more fully now than before.

We shall not depart from our previous conclusions; and while there is, in some instances, a strong argument made to show that they do not cover some portions of the present dispute, we do not propose to change any results that depend upon them.

Before considering the separate items, some reference is proper to certain considerations" of natural equity which were urged upon our attention.

We do not doubt, and are entirely convinced, that in the outset of these transactions Mr. Winchester had gone to further lengths than wisdom would warrant in giving accommodations to complainant and his associate, who had expanded their business under this encouragement until it became unmanageable, and would have swept away all their valuable [28]*28property had he not compromised and reduced his demand, and agreed upon this trust arrangement to work it out. Counsel are justified in claiming this was very liberal treatment. But it is quite manifest that the course which led to it was a very dangerous, one for all parties; and, while it would not sound well for complainant to find fault with Winchester for humoring his schemes, the terms of the trust are inconsistent with the continuance of any such wild course in the future. And, whatever may have been complainant’s moral debt of gratitude for the past, it in no way relieved Winchester and the trustees from doing business on business principles. Most of the present difficulty has been caused by a course of dealings which, as was pointed out in our former decision, departed radically from the purposes of the trust, and the testimony on the accounting indicates that nothing but a remarkable course of prosperity in the lumber interests has made it possible to work out a favorable issue from dealings that depended on too many contingencies to be safe in their nature. Winchester’s death or failure would, at more than one time, have been disastrous to the trust in the shape in which these dealings put it. Trustees have no right to assume such risks; and had not Wasey dealt with the funds on the assumption that Winchester was the substantial beneficiary, and with his co-operation, the management might have been different. The result, as now shown, is favorable, and the residuary property is valuable, and no dishonest appropriation has appeared on the part of any one. How far this result would have followed from more timid or cautious management we cannot do more than conjecture; but it does not appear very plainly that the profits have exceeded what would have been realized from a similar property in ordinary hands.

The chief items charged to Mr. Winchester, and objected to, arose out of the transactions in Cleveland, known as the Monroe transactions.

[29]*29It appears that in 1880, about the time when complainant was practically shut out from the business, a written contract was made between Monroe Brothers & Co. and Mr. Wasey, acting in the name of the Oscoda Salt & Lumber Company, which was the business name of the trust, whereby the latter agreed to furnish Monroe Brothers & Co. such lumber as they should need, upon these conditions, in substance: The title

to all lumber then held by Monroe Brothers & Co., and of all future shipments, was to be in the name of the Oscoda Company till fully paid for, and insured by the Monroes, to be invoiced to them at agreed prices, and provided for by notes or acceptances; the Monroes to bear all expenses and receive all profits, keeping their capital, estimated at $25,000,. in Cleveland, with the right in the Oscoda Company to inspect the books, and wind up the business in case of diminished capital or the death of W. R. Monroe. In March, 1882, a planing-mill was put into the same conditions of title.

This contract contemplated power in the Monroes to sell the lumber without restriction. It contained on its face no promise or purpose of doing any more for the Monroes than selling them lumber on time paper. It was, as we held before, an arrangement which, without any further privileges, had the object of putting a practically unlimited amount of the trust property in another jurisdiction and at serious risk.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 N.W. 896, 64 Mich. 23, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loud-v-winchester-mich-1887.