New England Trust Co. v. Triggs

135 N.E.2d 541, 334 Mass. 324, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 669
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 15, 1956
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 135 N.E.2d 541 (New England Trust Co. v. Triggs) 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
New England Trust Co. v. Triggs, 135 N.E.2d 541, 334 Mass. 324, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 669 (Mass. 1956).

Opinion

Whittemoee, J.

The petitioners appeal from a decree of the Probate Court allowing their nineteenth through twenty-fourth accounts as modified to surcharge them in the twenty-fourth account with various sums totaling $32,513.38. The principal basis of the surcharge is the judge’s finding and ruling of wilful breach of trust in the premature sale of securities to benefit the trustee bank through deposit of the proceeds in its commercial department pending determination of questions arising as to distribution after the death of the fife beneficiary.

The appellants are accounting as trustees under paragraph Tenth of the will of Lewis Dewart Apsley which was admitted to probate in 1925. In paragraph Eighth the testator had left his “home place” in the town of Hudson to his wife Abigail and after her death to the town, for use as a home for aged and indigent people. In the Tenth paragraph he bequeathed the sum of $200,000 to his grandnephew Harriman Apsley Reardon and The New England Trust Company, the appellants, in trust to pay the income to his wife for her life and upon her decease “one hundred thousand ($100,000) of the principal ... to said Town of Hudson ... for the support, upkeep and maintenance of . . . [the home given under paragraph Eighth] and the remaining one hundred thousand dollars . . . shall be held and disposed of ... as follows . . . . ” Abigail died April 9, 1948. As applied in the then circumstances the remaining language of paragraph Tenth operated to give one half of the “remaining one hundred thousand dollars” to appointees under the will of Apsley’s grandniece, Laura M. Heisler (payment being due to Harold Gordon Lacy, executor of her will, those thus at interest being hereinafter referred to *327 as “Lacy”), and to leave the other half thereof in the trust, to be held for the benefit of Reardon for his life, with power of appointment in him and gifts over in the event of its nonexercise.

The principal of the trust on Abigail's death was about $165,000. Distribution to Lacy and the town was delayed by doubts as to whether the town was entitled to $100,000 or one half of the principal and whether the town in view of the small size of the gift in relation to the cost of carrying out the designated purpose would take under paragraphs Eighth and Tenth for that purpose or could and would take under a cy pres decree, and because of the consequent proceedings in the Probate Court to resolve these doubts. A decree of distribution was entered on June 25, 1951, providing that the town should receive one half the net principal rather than $100,000, and that the town should administer the fund under an annexed cy pres plan. Distribution under the decree was made for the account of the town on September 19, 1951, and to Lacy on October 3, 1951.

Reardon was an inactive trustee and the management of the trust in all aspects was in the trust department of the trust company. The officers or employees in charge consulted with Reardon from time to time.

Between May 6, 1948, and June 9, 1948, the trustees sold sufficient securities from the principal of the trust to raise a little over $100,000 in cash. The sales were of common stocks, preferred stocks, and bonds of good or excellent investment quality which were easily and promptly marketable at any time under usual conditions. On October 27, 1949, the trustees redeemed at par $28,000 of U. S. Series G 2j^’s. The proceeds of the sales and of the redemption were deposited at once in an account in the commercial department of the trust company entitled “The New England Trust Company, Trustee, Executor, Guardian, and so forth, ” in which other trust funds awaiting investment or distribution had been regularly deposited for a long time and on which no interest was paid. These proceeds were not invested or placed at interest at any time prior to distribution.

*328 At or about the time it was decided to sell the securities to raise $100,000 officers in the trust department discussed among themselves and with Reardon that there would be an allocation or earmarking as follows: the $100,000 proceeds of the sale of securities for the town, as the maximum it might receive, one half the balance (about $32,500) to Lacy in the form of the $28,000 of G bonds together with about $4,500 of the unsold securities, and the balance of the securities to the continuing trust for Reardon. For a time income was distributed accordingly but no allocation was made on the trustees’ books or by way of memorandum and the trust fund continued to be accounted for on the books as a single fund. No income was paid to the town prior to the decree herein and no income was paid to or for the account of Lacy after October 13, 1949, or to or for the account of Reardon after April 11, 1950, other than payment of a State tax for his account in March of 1951. The twenty-fourth account showed a balance of income of $3,214.

Under the cy pres plan the payment for account of the town was to the appellee Daniel J. Triggs, Esquire, as trustee to set up a corporation to hold the bequest and to hold also the proceeds of the sale of the real estate devised by paragraph Eighth of the will, for the benefit of the indigent and aged of the town. Mr. Triggs and Lacy contested the accounts and the case was heard under stipulations which provided that the amounts distributed in 1951 were full and proper except as such amounts might be increased (1) by the proportionate part of such amount of the trustees’ distribution fee of $1,825.84 as might be disallowed and (2) by adjustments necessary to reflect the liability, if it should be adjudicated, to pay interest on uninvested funds and to pay portions of the net income in fact received after the death of the life tenant.

Nearly three months after the close of the evidence Mr. Triggs moved to be relieved of the stipulation on which the case was heard on the ground that he had until recently been ignorant of the fact that the securities sold and redeemed if held until June 25, 1951, would have been worth $27,314.23 *329 more than was in fact received from the sale and redemption and if held would have yielded income of $23,368.06, and to reopen the hearing to allow these facts to be shown. Later Lacy filed like motions. These were allowed by the probate judge “to prevent a miscarriage of justice.”

The will provided, “Each of my trustees and executors, hereinafter named, shall be liable for his own receipts, payments and wilful defaults and for nothing else, and one shall not be hable for the other nor for errors of judgment.” The probate judge found and ruled that the trust company consciously violated the trust in order to benefit itself, that the trustees in conscious violation of their trust duties sold the securities and redeemed the G bonds with the intention of converting them, that they did convert them and were guilty of wilful defaults or, if that conclusion is not warranted, were guilty of reckless indifference to the interests of the beneficiaries and were in either event not protected by the exculpatory clause of the will. The decree entered as of February 3, 1954, charged the trustees with three quarters (that is, the town’s and Lacy’s shares) of the increase in sale and redemption prices which would have been realized and three quarters of the additional income which would have been received if the securities and G bonds had been held to June 25, 1951.

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

Related

IN THE MATTER OF THE COLECCHIA FAMILY IRREVOCABLE TRUST.
100 Mass. App. Ct. 504 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2021)
Commonwealth v. Buswell
9 N.E.3d 276 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2014)
In re the Trusts Under the Will of Crabtree
865 N.E.2d 1119 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 2007)
Buxton v. Buxton
770 A.2d 152 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 2001)
Weiss v. Weiss
984 F. Supp. 675 (S.D. New York, 1997)
Maryland National Bank v. Cummins
588 A.2d 1205 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1991)
In Re Colony Press, Inc.
83 B.R. 862 (D. Massachusetts, 1988)
Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Boone
489 N.E.2d 209 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1986)
Swiecicki v. Farmers & Merchants Bank
460 N.E.2d 91 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1984)
In Re Estate of Swiecicki
460 N.E.2d 91 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1984)
Richmond v. Wohlberg
431 N.E.2d 902 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1982)
Bright v. American Felt Co.
178 N.E.2d 855 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1961)
Dill v. Boston Safe Deposit & Trust Co.
175 N.E.2d 911 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1961)
New England Trust Co. v. Triggs
159 N.E.2d 415 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1959)
Second Bank-State Street Trust Co. v. Second Bank-State Street Trust Co.
140 N.E.2d 201 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 N.E.2d 541, 334 Mass. 324, 1956 Mass. LEXIS 669, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-trust-co-v-triggs-mass-1956.