Mercantile Trust Co. v. Bergdorf & Goodman Co.

173 A. 31, 167 Md. 158, 93 A.L.R. 1205, 1934 Md. LEXIS 95
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 12, 1934
Docket[Nos. 31-33, April Term, 1934.]
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 173 A. 31 (Mercantile Trust Co. v. Bergdorf & Goodman Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mercantile Trust Co. v. Bergdorf & Goodman Co., 173 A. 31, 167 Md. 158, 93 A.L.R. 1205, 1934 Md. LEXIS 95 (Md. 1934).

Opinion

Sloan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question on this appeal is the validity as to future creditors of a deed of trust made by the judgment debtor for her, the settlor’s, benefit. Thfe chancellor decreed the sale of sufficient securities of the corpus to satisfy the judgment, and the settlor, trustee, and infant remainder-man appealed.

On the 30th day of January, 1923, Helen H. Bennett, who was then twenty-four years of age, and unmarried, made a deed of trust to the Continental Trust Company and Thomas E. Cottman of stocks, bonds, and other personal property, amounting, according to an appraisal made in 1931, to nearly $400,000, “in Trust to hold and manage the same and to pay over the net income therefrom quarterly unto the said Helen H. Bennett during her natural life, and from and immediately after the death of the said Helen H. Bennett, to assign, transfer, pay over and convey the principal of said trust fund, together with all accrued and unexpended income therefrom, to such persons in such shares and proportions as, of such estates and upon such terms and conditions, the said *160 Helen H. Bennett may by her last will and testament direct or appoint; and in default of such direction or appointment, then said Trustees shall transfer and deliver said trust estate to her lawful issue living at the time of her death per stirpes and not per capita, free and discharged from this trust. If the said Helen H. Bennett should die without leaving issue surviving her, and without exercising this power of appointment, said Trustees shall transfer and deliver said trust estate to such persons as may be her next of kin, if personal property, or to her heirs at law, if real property, under the then existing laws of Maryland.”

The Continental Trust Company resigned and was discharged as trustee, and the Mercantile Trust Company was appointed in its stead, and Thomas E. Cottman after-wards died, and the Mercantile Trust Company, since his death, has administered the trust as sole surviving trustee.

Helen H. Bennett reserved the right to revoke the trust to the extent of cash or securities of the market value of $50,000, and this right has been exercised by her, so that the corpus of the estate now in the hands of the trustee is controlled by the power and disposition heretofore quoted. In June, 1928, the settlor was married to Bulkeley L. Wells, and they have a son, Bulkeley L. Wells, Jr., for whom Charles A. McNabb appears as guardian ad litem. She also has two sisters, Margaret D. Cottman and Elizabeth C. Cunningham, and all are parties defendant to the petition of the judgment creditor, Bergdorf & Goodman Company, the appellee. Mrs. Wells became involved to a stock brokerage house in New York, and in 1931 borrowed from the Mercantile Trust Company, out of the corpus of the trust estate created by her, $150,000 and'gave as additional collateral a life insurance policy for $180,000. The aggregate value of the corpus of the estate, exclusive of her note to the trustee, is now about $90,000, yielding about $5,000 a year, of which $3,400 is being used to pay the premium on the life insurance policy. This was all approved by a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City.

*161 On August 19th, 1932, the appellee, Bergdorf & Goodman Company, procured a judgment in New York against Mrs. Wells for $5,090.18, the balance due to that day on bills contracted from August 3rd, 1929, to June 10th, 1930, amounting to $7,234, and, being unable to collect in New York, it came to Baltimore and filed its petition, wherein it recited the facts of its judgment and the deed of trust made by Mrs. Wells in 1923, and prayed that the deed be declared in fraud of creditors and void; that the Mercantile Trust Company be enjoined from paying out any part of the corpus or income of the trust to any one until the petitioner’s rights be determined, and for general relief, with the result that the chancellor ordered the Mercantile Trust Company to sell and dispose of enough of the corpus of the estate to pay the appellee.

It was agreed in a stipulation between the parties that the deed of trust was not made “in contemplation of incurring any specific indebtedness thereafter, or of obtaining any large amount of credit thereafter, or of engaging in any hazardous business venture,” and that the settlor at the time did not convey all of her property to her trustees, she retaining personal property of the value of $45,000; that she was solvent and able to meet all of her obligations as they became due.

In a paper published in the Daily Record of May 9th, 1934, in which the subject is ably discussed and the decisions exhaustively reviewed, the author says a diligent search reveals only sixteen cases which can be said to be directly in point, and two of these are Brinton v. Hook, 3 Md. Ch. 477, an authority, but not a precedent, decided in the old Court of Chancery in 1850, the first reported case in this country, and Scott v. Keane, 87 Md. 709, 40 A. 1070, and these the appellee contends are decisive of the question here presented, while the appellants contend that they are distinguishable on the facts from the instant case. The appellee, in support of its contention, also strongly relies on the broad statement of the rule contained in Bump on Fraudulent Conveyances, 330, where it is said: “A conveyance to the use of the grantor during *162 his life, with power to dispose of the property by will, or direct its course after his. death, is a conveyance to his use, and the property so conveyed is liable to those who deal with him after its execution,” so quoted in Scott v. Keane, page 722 of 87 Md., 40 A. 1070, 1073. The appellee cites in its brief Moore on Fraudulent Conveyances, 423, where it is said: “A conveyance of property to be held in trust for the benefit of the grantor during his life, with remainder over, with reserved power of appointment or devise or disposition at his death, is fraudulent and void both as to existing and subsequent creditors, and both the principal and income may be subjected to the claims of such creditors,” which cites Brinton v. Hook, 3 Md. Ch. 477, and Scott v. Keane, 87 Md. 709, 40 A. 1070, as authorities to support the text.

The chancellor in Brinton v. Hook, supra, accurately summarized the provisions of the deed attacked in that case when he said: “The trusts of this deed, are 1st, for the use of the grantor and his wife during their joint lives, and the life of the survivor, with power to them jointly to dispose absolutely of the property during their joint lives; 2dly, in case the grantor should survive his wife in trust, to permit him to dispose of the property at his pleasure; and, 3dly, whether he survives her or not, in trust for such person or persons as he may appoint by his will, and in case of his failure, to make such testamentary appointment, then in trust for his heirs-at-law.” And then he goes on to say: “The whole interest, therefore, of the wife, is an interest in common with her husband during their joint lives, or for her own life, in case she should survive him.

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Bluebook (online)
173 A. 31, 167 Md. 158, 93 A.L.R. 1205, 1934 Md. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mercantile-trust-co-v-bergdorf-goodman-co-md-1934.