Murdoch, State's Attorney v. Elliot

58 A. 718, 77 Conn. 247, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 94
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 12, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 58 A. 718 (Murdoch, State's Attorney v. Elliot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murdoch, State's Attorney v. Elliot, 58 A. 718, 77 Conn. 247, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 94 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Torrance, C. J.

The complaint in .this case charges the trustees of the Morgan School fund with maladminis *248 tration and impairment of the trust fund, and prays for an accounting, the removal of the trustees, and the repayment by them of any money for which they may be found liable upon such accounting. The defendants denied the charges, and the case was heard by a committee. Against the acceptance of the report of the committee the plaintiff remonstrated, but the court overruled the remonstrance and accepted the report.

It appears from the report that Charles Morgan began in 1870 to establish and endow a school in the town of Clinton in this State, and by a series of gifts, set forth in certain exhibits made a part of the report, conveyed the school property and an endowment fund to certain trustees of his own selection. The original trastees were John D. Leffingwell, Alfred Hull, Andrew J. Hurd and George E. Elliot. Hull died in 1877 and was succeeded by Elisha R. Redfield. Leffingwell died in 1886 and was succeeded by Charles A. Elliot; and in 1897 Redfield was succeeded by James M. Wellman. In October, 1870, Morgan conveyed to the original trustees the land in Clinton upon which the school buildings were subsequently erected, to be held by them and “ their heirs and successors forever, in trust upon and for the uses, trusts, and purposes ” expressed in the deed. The deed described the trust and the powers of the trustees, and provided for the perpetuation of the board of trustees in the following words : “ To take, hold, and exclusively possess and manage the same and the said building or schoolhouse to be completed thereon, and all property connected therewith ' or appertaining thereto, and the school or schools of whatever grade or order that may from time to time or at any .time be established or continued therein or upon said premises, all for the use and benefit of the said town of Clinton, and the improvement of the moral and educational condition and interests of the people thereof, and the organization, duration, regulation, and conduct of such school or schools shall at all times be under the exclusive management, direction, and control of said trustees, or their successors. Whenever a vacancy or vacancies shall occur in the said *249 board of trustees by death, resignation, removal from said town, inability to serve as such, or otherwise, the survivors as remaining trustees are hereby authorized, empowered, and directed so soon as may be and at a meeting to be held in said town for that purpose, which all shall have reasonable notice to attend, to proceed to fill such vacancy or vacancies; and the person or persons so elected shall thereupon succeed to and be invested with all the right, title, and interest in and to said trust estate and property, and all rights, powers, and duties touching the same, and the management, direction, and government of said school, that his predecessors or either of the trustees herein particularly named at any time possessed. But no person who is not a resident of said town of Clinton shall ever be elected to or hold the office or place of such trustee.”

Upon this land Mr. Morgan caused to be erected a school building which he furnished and completed ready for use as a school; the whole representing an expenditure of $70,000. In addition to this, at divers times between 1870 and 1878, he gave to said trustees, in trust for substantially the same purposes as are in the aforesaid deed expressed, as an endowment fund for said school, the sum of $200,000. He also, in 1874, gave to said trustees the sum of $5,000 as a fund to be known as the “ Morgan Prize Fund,” the income of which was to be used for providing prizes'for scholars in said school. About the year 1871 a high school and common schools were by the trustees established in the school building erected by Mr. Morgan, and such have ever since been continuously maintained.

The specific charges made in the complaint against the trustees are in substance the following: (1) that one of them, George E. Elliot, with the knowledge of the others, took from the trust fund $7,000 and converted it to his own use; (2) that the “ Morgan Prize Fund ” has been wasted, lost or greatly impaired by the misconduct of the trustees ; (8) that there has been a large loss of both principal and income upon the reinvestment of the trust fund secured by bond and mortgage upon real estate in the cities of New *250 York and Brooklyn; (4) that the trustees have persistently refused to render any account to the town of Clinton, or to any of its officers, and have never rendered any account to any court of this State; (5) that there is great danger that the trust funds will be further wasted or impaired, and that the trustees are unfit to have the management of said trust funds.

With reference to the first of these charges the finding of the committee is as follows : “ This $7,000 was drawn from the trust fund with the consent of all of the defendants, and Avas used to pay a debt due from the said Elliot to the Clinton National Bank, of which bank said Leffingwell, one of the defendant trustees, was president. . . . On February 10th, 1884, the said Elliot gave to said trustees his mortgage deed to secure the payment of said $7,000. Said deed conveyed a tract of land in said Clinton, with the dwelling-house and other buildings thereon, containing about one acre, and also a certain tract of outlying land containing about thirty acres, of which about eighteen acres were woodland. The evidence indicated, and it is found, that the value of the property given as security yvas somewhat greater than the amount of the loan. The mortgage deed represented the title free from incumbrance, and contained the usual covenant of warranty. The condition of the title did not cleaily appear from the evidence. It did, hoAvever, appear that two brothers of said Elliot quitclaimed to him on June 26th, 1897, such interest as they had in the mortgaged property. About November 1st, 1899, George W. Quintard, son-in-law of said Morgan, purchased the said Elliot mortgage from the trustees, and paid to them therefor $7,000.” Concerning the payment of interest on this mortgage, the finding is in substance as follows : No money Avas paid by Elliot to the trustees for interest, but it Avas paid by deductions from Elliot’s salary as treasurer of the trust funds. No entries of such interest were made on the cash book at the time when such payments should have been made; but “ entries for such interest payments and for salary drawn, corresponding in amount to such payments, were entered subsequently to *251 the time when such salary might have been drawn, the said entries for salary being either interlined or entered at the head of the respective pages of the cash book on which they appear.”

With reference to the charge concerning the “ Morgan Prize Fund ” the finding, in substance, is as follows : Said fund was originally invested in a United States bond which was paid in October, 1881. Then it was invested in five bonds of the Texas Central Railroad Company of $1,000 each, bearing seven per cent interest. “ In 1885 these bonds defaulted.their interest and were surrendered, and in place thereof the trustees received, on the reorganization of the company which issued the bonds, twenty-five shares of its preferred stock and fifty of its common stock, and these stocks they still hold.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Andrews v. appeal/probate, Fairfield, No. Cv00 037 90 29 S (Aug. 19, 2002)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 10413 (Connecticut Superior Court, 2002)
Ramsdell v. Union Trust Co.
519 A.2d 1185 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
Willard v. McKone
232 A.2d 322 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1967)
Phillips v. Moeller
170 A.2d 897 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1961)
Sternberg v. St. Louis Union Trust Co.
66 F. Supp. 23 (E.D. Missouri, 1946)
Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. Appeal From Probate
10 Conn. Super. Ct. 96 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1941)
Shirk v. Walker
10 N.E.2d 192 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1937)
In Re the Trust Estate of Holt
33 Haw. 352 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 1935)
McCarthy v. Tierney
165 A. 807 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Suffolk v. Leiter
261 Ill. App. 82 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)
Carroll v. Arnold
141 A. 657 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1928)
Wylie v. Bushnell
115 N.E. 618 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1917)
Waller v. Hosford
130 N.W. 1093 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1911)
First School District v. Eighth School District
61 A. 234 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A. 718, 77 Conn. 247, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murdoch-states-attorney-v-elliot-conn-1904.