Macy v. Burchell

131 Misc. 602, 228 N.Y.S. 388, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1305
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 131 Misc. 602 (Macy v. Burchell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Macy v. Burchell, 131 Misc. 602, 228 N.Y.S. 388, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1305 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1927).

Opinion

Delehanty, J.

This case was tried before Mr. Justice Cotillo and submitted to him, but owing to his severe illness he was unable to dispose of the same, and by consent the matter was put back [604]*604on the calendar of this court and on its call submitted to me for determination by the attorneys upon the record taken before Mr. Justice Cotillo. I take the case as I find it and dispose of it upon such record.

Two causes of action are stated in the complaint, the first being an action to impress a secret trust on the property therein mentioned, and the second for a construction of the 5th paragraph of the will of Katherine J. Macy, deceased.

In my opinion there is no question that there was a secret trust agreement made between Katherine J. Macy, the donee of the power of appointment under the Jordan trust deed, and Clarence E. Thornall and Susan A. Burchell, in regard to the property which was to pass under the 4th paragraph of her will. It is apparent that the defendants Clarence E. Thornall and Susan A. Burchell, the devisees mentioned in such paragraph, were, not to have and did not have any beneficial interest in the property so devised to them absolutely; that the intention of Katherine J. Macy was to be carried out as expressed in a secret trust agreement and that the property was to be held by said Thornall and Miss Burchell as trustees for the purpose of carrying out certain trusts in favor of her son, Francis H. Macy. The only question involved, therefore, is as to the nature and effect of such secret trust agreement.

In my opinion it sufficiently appears that at the time the will was drawn or a few days thereafter Thornall knew of the letters put in evidence and. was shown them, or drafts thereof, by Mrs. Macy, and that be told her he would comply with her wishes. Mrs. Macy told Thornall that she was placing these letters in her safe deposit box together with her will. Whatever inconsistency may seem to appear in the evidence is entirely dissipated by the answer of Thornall when he was asked, Did you refer [meaning in their conversation] to the $100 mentioned in this letter? ” referring to the letter addressed to him and Susan A. Burchell, and he answered, “ I did.” So it must be evident that Thornall knew of this letter and its contents and saw it during the life of Katherine J. Macy, either at the time the will was drawn or shortly thereafter. The defendant Thornall claims that he had conversations with Mrs. Macy in reference to her wishes as to her disposition of this property mentioned in the 4th paragraph of her will, and that the substance of the conversations with her was not altogether similar to the contents of the letters addressed to Thornall and Miss Burchell, but they were somewhat similar. He states that as the result of the conversations that he bad with Mrs. Macy he complied with her wishes and that by such statement he referred [605]*605to the Krellwitz deed of trust as the carrying out of her wishes, which he had promised to do. The plaintiff thus contends that the secret trust arrangement was in effect as stated in the letter to Thornall and Miss Burchell heretofore mentioned which in wording is similar to the provisions of her devise of the property in the 5th paragraph of her will, and defendants contend that the wishes of Katherine J. Macy were as contained in the Krellwitz deed and that Thornall and Susan Burchell carried out her wishes by making such deed.

It is true that on their briefs the defendants claim that Thornall and Susan A. Burchell were under no legal obligation to make this conveyance in trust or carry out the wishes of Katherine J. Macy, but, as above stated, the evidence was sufficient to disclose such a legal obligation. Under the 4th paragraph of the will the property was devised to Thornall and Susan A. Burchell as joint tenants and not as tenants in common, so whatever was acquiesced in by Thornall was binding upon Susan Burchell. (Matter of O’Hara, 95 N. Y. 403; Amherst College v. Ritch, 151 id. 282.) Moreover, there seems to be some evidence of the fact that before the death of Katherine J. Macy, Susan A. Burchell was notified of the provision made in paragraph 4 of the will. Besides the fact that Thornall and Susan A. Burchell did execute a trust deed (the Krellwitz trust deed) in favor of Francis H. Macy, is evidence that there was some secret trust arrangement by which this property was not to be vested absolutely in Thornall and Susan A. Burchell. Persons to whom valuable property has been transferred absolutely are not apt to divest themselves thereof for the benefit of others unless there is some legal obligation to do so. Defendant Thornall was an attorney at law and a friend of the family of Mrs. Macy. He had drawn her will and she had confided to him her wishes as to the secret trust. As an attorney and counselor at law in whom she placed implicit confidence, it was his legal duty to disclose to her before her death or at the time he was told of her wishes whether he would or would not carry them out. Silent acquiescence is the same in effect as an express promise. As said by the court in the case of Matter of O’Hara (95 N. Y. 403, 422): “ The learned presiding judge at the General Term, while affirming this judgment formally that it might more swiftly come to our bar, sent with it a very wise and prudent caution. He said: ‘ It seems clear to us that the law ought not to encourage arrangements for the disposition of property by testators, such as this case discloses.’ In Wallgrave v. Tebbs (2 K. & J. 313, 320) the vice-chancellor said that the duty of a devisee under the circmnstances stated was to throw up the prop[606]*606erty.’ Any devise or bequest of this character is dangerous and indefensible. It exposes testators to the suggestion of unnecessary difficulties as inducements to the artifice of an absolute devise concealing an illegal trust. It exposes the devisee to temptation and even when he acts honestly, to severe and unrelenting criticism. It subserves no good or useful purpose. If we sustain it we admit that any statute may be thus evaded, and that equity cannot redress the wrong.”

I hold that, though the devise of the property mentioned in the 4th paragraph of the will of Mrs. Macy to Thornall and Miss Burchell was absolute on the face thereof and vested the title in them, such devisees took no beneficial interest therein, but were to hold it under a secret trust arrangement, and I further hold that the secret trust arrangement between Katherine J. Macy and Thornall and Susan A. Burchell was as indicated in her letter addressed to them. It makes little difference, however, in the disposition of this case whether you take the claim of the plaintiff as to what the secret trust arrangement was or that of the defendant Thornall, as in either case the secret trust arrangement would be illegal and void. (Real Prop. Law, §§ 42, 103, 178, 179.)

The validity of the execution of the power of appointment by Mrs. Macy is to be determined by the provisions of the Jordan trust deed. It must be viewed in the same light as if the 4th paragraph of Mrs. Macy’s will was read into such trust deed. The present case is different from any that I have been able to find reported, in that* the Jordan trust deed, under which the power of appointment was created, in the alternative provides that the donee thereof, dying without making any such appointment or disposition of such property, then the trustees under the trust deed were to convey and assign the same unto the children and descendants of any deceased child or children then living of Mrs.

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Related

Macy v. Burchill
223 A.D. 702 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
131 Misc. 602, 228 N.Y.S. 388, 1927 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/macy-v-burchell-nysupct-1927.