Newhouse v. Canal National Bank of Portland

124 F. Supp. 239, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2853
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 10, 1954
DocketCiv. 689
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 124 F. Supp. 239 (Newhouse v. Canal National Bank of Portland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newhouse v. Canal National Bank of Portland, 124 F. Supp. 239, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2853 (D. Me. 1954).

Opinion

CLIFFORD, District Judge.

This is an action by Elizabeth F. New-house, George C. Fry, Jr., Olney M. Fry, and Sheridan Brooks Fry for an accounting and to recover trust income paid to a third party allegedly in breach of trust. The plaintiffs are certain of the beneficiaries of a trust established under the will of Mary J. E. Clapp. 1 This action is against Sidney St. F. Thaxter and Montgomery Blair, Jr. 2 individually, and in their capacity as trustees under the will; and against the Canal National Bank of Portland, 3 a third party, individually, *241 and in its capacity as trustee under a mortgage indenture with the Clapp estate.

Plaintiffs Elizabeth F. Newhouse, George C. Fry, Jr., and Olney M. Fry are residents and citizens of states other than the State of Maine, and are the only children of George Gardiner Fry, one of the beneficiaries named in the will, who died in March 1937. Since the death of their father, these plaintiffs have been entitled to receive each a Viz share of the net income, if any, of the testamentary trust of the residuary estate created by the will, and have taken an active interest in the affairs of the trust. Edgar L. Newhouse, husband of Elizabeth F. New-house, acted for his wife and occasionally for her two brothers during the years with which this Court is concerned.

The other plaintiff, Sheridan Brooks Fry, is the only child of Alfred Fry, one of the beneficiaries named in the will, who died on December 5, 1933. He is entitled to *4 share of the net income of the estate.

The defendants, Sidney St. F. Thaxter and Montgomery Blair, Jr., were duly appointed and are still acting as trustees under the will. Sidney St. F. Thaxter was appointed on March 25, 1924, to succeed David W. Snow, one of the original trustees. Montgomery Blair, Jr., was appointed on January 30, 1941, to succeed Gist Blair, the other original trustee who died on December 16, 1940. Gist Blair, a member of the Clapp family, was an income beneficiary under the will and an active participant in all the affairs of the trust. No major decision concerning the estate was made during his lifetime without consultation between him and his co-trustee.

Prior to the trial of this case upon its merits, this Court raised the issue of jurisdiction. After a hearing, it was found that the present action did not involve purely probate matters and would not interfere with the future administration of the trust or the power of the state probate court over the corpus of the trust. This Court held, therefore, that it had jurisdiction in equity to consider and determine the issues here presented. Newhouse v. Canal National Bank of Portland, D.C., 94 F.Supp. 830.

At the pretrial conference of this case, it was agreed to limit the evidence to the issue of liability and that the question of damages would be considered later, if necessary.

Briefly, the plaintiffs allege that the trustees without authority paid trust income to persons other than beneficiaries of the trust and therefore committed a breach of trust. In seeking reimbursement for the moneys so paid out, the plaintiffs have joined the Bank as a constructive trustee, contending that it participated with the trustees in the alleged breach of trust. The plaintiffs do not contend, however, that the defendants were guilty of any fraud or bad faith and the case is entirely free from any intimation in that regard.

The material facts of this ease are as follows: Miss Mary J. E. Clapp died in September, 1920, in Portland, Maine. Her will was probated and allowed in the Probate Court of Cumberland County in the following month. There was included in the residuary trust created by the will the Homestead lot, so-called, on which was built the house which had been occupied by the Clapp family as their home. By the twelfth clause of her will, Miss Clapp directed that the Homestead lot be retained by the trustees during the entire life of the trust and that “no portion thereof be sold or otherwise disposed of except by ordinary and customary leases.” In her will she directed that the house on the Homestead lot be taken down and that, in its place, “a handsome, imposing, and substantial block” be erected in memory of her father and grandfather, to be “especially adapted for occupancy by stores, offices, and halls.” She further authorized the trustees to use any other portions of her real and personal estate as were necessary for the purpose of erecting the Clapp Memorial Building. She recommended that the construction of the Clapp Memorial Building should cost not less than $300,-000.

*242 David W. Snow and Gist Blair were the original trustees. In 1922 they instituted equity proceedings in the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, seeking a determination of their authority, under the terms of the will, to borrow money on the credit of the estate, enforceable against the entire assets of the trust; And further requested authority to borrow money and procure loans, to give promissory notes, bonds, or other obligations in their capacity as such trustees, to be enforceable against the entire trust estate, except said Homestead lot. The defendants in said proceeding were the then beneficiaries of the trust, being all the persons then in being who had any interest either in the income or principal, and included the plaintiffs in the case at bar. On May 10, 1922, Justice Scott Wilson of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, issued a final decree which provided that the trustees were authorized under the terms of the will, for the purpose of erecting the Clapp Memorial Building, “to borrow money and procure loans from time to time, to give promissory notes, bonds or other obligations in their capacity as trustees, enforceable against the whole trust estate, except said Homestead lot.”

Pursuant to this decree, the trustees under the will executed and delivered to the Bank a mortgage indenture providing for the issue of $300,000 principal amount of bonds secured exclusively by the so-called Clapp or. Schulte Block property. At the same time, $300,000 principal amount of bonds were issued under the mortgage indenture, such bonds being in the form prescribed by the decree. The bonds bore interest at the rate of 6% per annum, and matured by their terms on June 1, 1937. The entire proceeds from the sale of the bonds were used by the trustees for the erection of the Clapp Memorial Building. At all times thereafter the Homestead lot consisted of the Clapp Memorial Building and a lot for the parking of motor vehicles situated in the rear thereof.

The Bank, in addition to being the trustee of the mortgage indenture, also functioned as the bank in which the trustees deposited the funds to meet the mortgage payments.

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Bluebook (online)
124 F. Supp. 239, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2853, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newhouse-v-canal-national-bank-of-portland-med-1954.