Morse v. Hill

136 Mass. 60
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 136 Mass. 60 (Morse v. Hill) 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
Morse v. Hill, 136 Mass. 60 (Mass. 1883).

Opinion

Field, J.

In 1872, four persons, who had been appointed trustees under the will of Thomas Whittemore, sold and conveyed, through one Comee, to Otis T. Ruggles and Joseph Whittemore, two of their number, six fourteenths of a leasehold estate in Cornhill in Boston, belonging to the trust; and this bill in equity is brought by the present trustee and three beneficiaries under the will, for the purpose of obtaining a reconveyance of this property to the trust, and for other incidental relief.

The four trustees were Otis T. Ruggles and John E. Cowles, sons in law of the testator, and Joseph Whittemore and Benjamin B. Whittemore, his sons. Benjamin B. Whittemore died on March 16, 1876; Ruggles died in March, 1877; Cowles ceased to be trustee before the removal of Joseph Whittemore, in what manner does not appear; and Joseph Whittemore was removed from the trust by the Probate Court on May 1,1877. Morse, the present sole trustee, was appointed on January 15,1878.

At the time of this conveyance, Ruggles and Joseph Whittemore owned the remaining eight fourteenths of the leasehold estate, of which seven fourteenths were subject to a mortgage given by them to the trustees. The consideration for the conveyance was $10,350, of which the sum of $350 was paid in cash, and the remaining $10,000 was added to the $10,000 remaining unpaid on the existing mortgage, and a new mortgage on the whole estate for $20,000 was given by them to Comee and assigned to the trustees, on which the interest and $2500 of the principal have been paid. The lease was for a term of one hundred years from August 1, 1838, reserving rent. The exact words of the trust are not set out, but it is found by the master that the trust is, in effect, that the trustees in their discretion shall pay the income to each surviving child of the testator during life; and on his or her death, to any husband for life, and to any widow during widowhood; and on the death of both husband and wife, ot on the remarriage of the widow of a deceased son, their share of the principal fund shall be transferred absolutely to their children, or, if there should be no issue living, then such share shall be added to the principal fund. The trustees are empowered to sell and convey any of the trust property discharged of the trust, and the purchaser is exempted from any [62]*62obligation to see to the application of the purchase money. The present trustee has apparently no beneficial interest in the trust. The contingent interests of grandchildren, or of others than the tenants for life or widowhood, are not represented, unless the trustee or the tenants for life or widowhood represent them. Of the persons who have a present vested equitable interest in the trust, a part only desire that the conveyance may be avoided.

About the same time that this Oornhill property was conveyed to Ruggles and Joseph Whittemore, certain real estate in Cambridge belonging to the trust was also conveyed, through one Gardiner, by the four trustees, to Benjamin B. and Joseph Whittemore, two of their number. This conveyance the plaintiffs do not ask to have avoided. The master finds that this purchase proved unprofitable to the purchasers. The two conveyances are undoubtedly so far separate that the beneficiaries can confirm one without confirming the other.

It has been held, that a part only of the beneficiaries can avoid a conveyance of trust property made by a trustee to himself, although a part desire to confirm it. In such a case, it would seem that, if the interests can be separated, the avoidance should be confined to the interests of those who complain. If these interests cannot be separated from the rest, either the whole conveyance must be avoided, or the court must proceed in such manner as it may find most beneficial to the trust. In this case, the interests of the different beneficiaries cannot well be separated.

The case discloses that there was no actual fraud on the part of the selling and purchasing trustees, but that the price paid was less than the property was worth, and that, although they acted under legal advice, this advice was erroneous. The defences argued are loches, certain proceedings and a decree in the Probate Court, and, as to Hill and St. Clair, that they are mortgagees for value without notice.

The bill was filed January 27, 1880. The deed to the purchasing trustees was recorded on September 27, 1872. The fact of the purchase was known to Mrs. Lucas and Mrs. Whittemore, two of the plaintiffs, as early as January, 1878, but they were assured that it was legal. There is no evidence that Mrs. [63]*63Gifford, also a plaintiff, knew of it until the early part of 1875, when she with Mrs. Lucas presented a petition to the Probate Court under the advice of counsel. The bill by implication alleges that all the plaintiffs had knowledge of the conveyance in 1874; but the present trustee was not then appointed, and it does not appear that he had any connection with the estate until his appointment. Certainly, from January, 1875, it must be considered that all the plaintiffs, except the present trustee, knew of the conveyance. Mrs. Whittemore then had no vested interest in the trust, and only acquired such an interest on the death, in 1876, of her husband, Benjamin B. Whittemore. Mrs. Lucas and Mrs. Gifford were acting under the advice of counsel. The account filed by the trustees in the Probate Court on March 23, 1875, shows the consideration of the conveyance to Comee. From that time, if not before, all the plaintiffs except the present trustee must have known the price paid. It is clear that these cestuis que trust did not intend to confirm the sale.

On November 11, 1875, the counsel for Mrs. Lucas and Mrs. Gifford, in behalf of his clients, gave formal notice to Mr. Hill that his title would be contested. In April, 1877, Mrs. Whittemore, with Mrs. Lucas and Mrs. Gifford, presented a petition to the Probate Court for the removal of Joseph Whittemore, then the sole trustee, on account of alleged breaches of trust, among which was this conveyance to himself; and in May, 1878, Mrs. Whittemore and Mrs. Lucas filed a paper in the Probate Court, in which they stated that they did not acquiesce in the sale, and were “ about to prepare a petition to the said honorable court to have the trustee now appointed by the said court bring a bill in equity to recover the land and other real estate, lease, &c., conveyed as aforesaid, and to have it reconveyed to the said trust estate.”

No reason appears why the dissatisfied beneficiaries did not immediately bring a bill in equity when they first learned of the conveyance, and of the price paid for it, and first knew that they had a right to avoid it. The appointment of a new trustee was not necessary to enable them to bring a bill. The rights and duties of a new trustee, in such a case as this is, may not be in all respects identical with those of the living eestuis que trust. The trust concerns persons who are not in being, or whose [64]*64interests are future and contingent. The doctrine that the eestuis que trust can within a reasonable time avoid such a conveyance, even although it is beneficial to the trust, and that, if they desire to avoid it, courts will not inquire whether it is beneficial or not, must be subject to some limitations. If all the beneficiaries are living and sui

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Bluebook (online)
136 Mass. 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morse-v-hill-mass-1883.