McQuaide v. . Perot

119 N.E. 230, 223 N.Y. 75, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 1158
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 12, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 119 N.E. 230 (McQuaide v. . Perot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McQuaide v. . Perot, 119 N.E. 230, 223 N.Y. 75, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 1158 (N.Y. 1918).

Opinion

Pound, J.

The question sought to be presented on this appeal is to what extent one of the legatees or next of kin of a decedent acquires the right, upon the allegation that the personal representatives of the estate refuse to sue, to maintain an action to set aside a sale by decedent to his trustee of an interest in personal property held in trust for him, on the ground that some advantage was taken; some withholding of information as to its value resulting in inadequacy of consideration.

The essential facts stated in the complaint are that James P. McQuaide was in the year 1903 the owner of one-fourth of the capital stock of the National Conduit and Cable Company; that he then transferred such stock in trust to the defendant Perot, who was also the owner of one-fourth of such stock, by a written agreement, whereby Perot obtained absolute control of such shares, *78 including the right to sell same, for the life of McQuaide, but not exceeding ten years; agreed to pay McQuaide’s debts amounting to about $26,000; also to pay $700 a month to McQuaide’s wife Sara, for her life for the use of herself and his children, and the balance of the income from such shares of stock or the proceeds thereof to McQuaide.

This agreement gave to Perot and the defendant Jackson the control of seventy-five per cent of the stock of the corporation.

In 1906 McQuaide, by written agreement, sold to Perot and Jackson his interest in his stock and in such trust agreement. The sale was subject to the trust in favor of the wife Sara and the children above referred to. The consideration was the payment of debts of McQuaide amounting to about $25,000; $10,000 a year for five years in monthly installments; $200,000 at the end of five years and $50,000 at the termination of the, trust in favor of the wife Sara.

McQuaide died in England on July 10, 1915. He left surviving him his wife Sara and four children, of whom‘the plaintiff is one. He left a last will apd testament executed in the year 1913 in which he named the defendant, “ my wife Gertrude Reynolds McQuaide,” as executrix and after making other provisions for her, including the income payable to him under the Perot-Jackson contract, he directed that the residue of his estate be divided into eighteen shares, one-half thereof to be paid to my said wife Gertrude Reynolds McQuaide; ” one-sixth to his daughter the defendant Sophie Florence; one-ninth each to his daughter the defendant Isabelle and to his son the defendant James and one-ninth to his daughter Gabrielle, the plaintiff. Letters testamentary were issued in England to Gertrude Reynolds McQuaide North and letters of administration were issued out of the Surrogate’s Court of New York county to Sara S. McQuaide.

*79 Plaintiff alleges that the sale by McQuaide to Perot and Jackson of his interest in the shares of stock held by Perot under the trust agreement was made without knowledge on McQuaide’s part that the value of such shares had increased from $400 a share in 1903 to $600 a share in 1906, although he knew what the income from the stock was; that Perot and Jackson, knowing such true value, without disclosing the facts to McQuaide,. persuaded him to execute the agreement of sale without having independent advice; that this was a breach of the trustee’s duty of fair dealing and full disclosure; that plaintiff has demanded of the administratrix of the estate and the testatrix of the will that an action be brought to set aside the sale and each has refused; that the other children and legatees of McQuaide have refused, to become parties plaintiff with her. She, therefore, demands that the sale of the stock to Perot and Jackson be set aside and declared null and void and that an accounting be had. She sues in the right of the estate and for its benefit because of the refusal of the personal representatives to sue.

•Defendants Perot, individually and as trustee, ' and Jackson demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against them. The demurrers have been sustained and the complaint dismissed.

It is elementary that the executors or administrators represent the legatees, creditors and distributees in the administration of the estate; that their duty is to recover the property of the estate; and that the legatees and next of kin are concluded by their determination in respect to actions therefor and have no independent cause of action, either in their own right or the right of the estate. This rule has been stated in somewhat general language to be “ subject to the exceptions of cases of collusion, of insolvency of the personal representatives, of refusal by *80 them to sue, whether collusively or bona fide ” (Hilliard v. Eiffe, L. R. 7 Eng. & Ir. App. 39) or of the existence of other special circumstances such as the fraudulent transfer of the trust property by the personal representatives themselves. (4 Ann. Cas. 196; 20 Ann. Cas. 96; Agne v. Schwab, 123 App. Div. 746.) But the refusal to sue must be more than a bare refusal. It must be an unreasonable refusal. (Harvey v. McDonnell, 113 N. Y. 526, 531.) The personal representatives must exercise good sense. If they made everything that was wrong the subject of litigation they might involve the estate in needless delay and expense. Policy and expediency must aid them to decide whether mere inadequacy of consideration, not shocking the conscience, but resulting from a breach of the duty of full disclosure due from trustee to beneficiary should justify them in embarking on a serious litigation on the mere assertion of a legatee that material information was withheld from the decedent. The winning of a law suit may prove a Pyrrhic victory and the possibility of defeat is always present. The legatees and riext of ldn cannot take the business of the estate out of the hands of the personal representatives on a mere difference in policy without giving substantial reasons. Plaintiff represents one-ninth of the residuary estate of the decedent. She seeks to impress her own notions of sound judgment upon the court against what must be assumed to be, in the absence of any contrary allegation, tbe honest decision not only of the personal representatives but of the owners of eight-ninths of the residuary estate. General equitable principles must control as against isolated expressions in opinions which suggest that mere refusal of the personal representatives to proceed to reclaim property alleged to have been transferred by reason of a fraud practiced upon the decedent is enough to create a cause of action in the legatees. Such expressions cannot be construed as mean *81 ing that in a matter of discretion one such legatee may make an election to disaffirm the transfer, binding upon the estate against the unanimous honest decision of all others interested therein.

The facts stated in the complaint are consistent with an honest determination on the part of the personal representatives after deliberation not to attack the transaction complained of. Plaintiff alleges that when the agreement to sell McQuaide’s rights in the stock for $325,000 was made, the stock was worth $750,000. But at that time McQuaide had parted with the control of the stock by the trust agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
119 N.E. 230, 223 N.Y. 75, 1918 N.Y. LEXIS 1158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcquaide-v-perot-ny-1918.