Ormiston v. . Olcott

84 N.Y. 339, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 404
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 1, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 84 N.Y. 339 (Ormiston v. . Olcott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ormiston v. . Olcott, 84 N.Y. 339, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 404 (N.Y. 1881).

Opinion

Finch, J.

Our own study of this case, and the very careful researches of the counsel by whom it was argued have alike failed to discover any judicial decision, or any legislative enactment, which directly and in terms declares as the law of this State that an executor or testamentary trustee may not invest the funds in his custody, under any circumstances, in good mortgages upon real estate situate outside of the State. And yet the general drift of authority and considerations relating to the safety of trust funds seem to require that such should be regarded as the general rule, and that investments beyond the jurisdiction of the court should not be sustained unless in very rare and exceptional cases, and under very unusual and peculiar circumstances. The rule should not be made arbitrary and inflexible, and so rigid as to admit of no possible exceptions, for it is merely an outgrowth or consequence of the broader and admitted proposition that the duty of a trustee in mailing investments is to employ such diligence and such prudence as, in general, prudent men of discretion and intelligence in such matters employ in their own like affairs. (King v. Talbot, 40 N. Y. 76.) While, therefore, we are not disposed to say that an investment by a trustee in another State can never be consistent with the prudence and diligence required of him by the law, we still feel bound to say that such an investment, which takes the trust fund beyond our own jurisdiction, subjects it to other laws and the risk and inconvenience of distance and of foreign tribunals, will not be upheld by us as a general rule, and never unless in the presence of a clear and strong necessity, or a very pressing emergency. The cases in our courts have quite clearly recognized the rule that an executor must invest in government or real estate securities (Ackerman v. Emott, 4 Barb. 626); but apparently no occasion has arisen until the *344 present to determine the effect of such an investment made beyond our'jurisdiction. It would often be unjust to beneficiaries to compel them to accept such investments, and tend to increase the risk of ultimate loss. The proper and prudent knowledge of values would become more difficult and uncertain ; watchfulness and personal care would in the main be replaced by confidence in distant agents, and legal remedies-would have to be sought under the disadvantages of distance, and before different and unfamiliar tribunals. We do not hesitate, therefore, to recognize and declare as the general rule that the trustee who invests beyond the jurisdiction does so at the peril of being held responsible for the safety of the investment. But this rule relates only to voluntary investments by the trustee, having the fund in his hands and full opportunity and freedom" of choice, and does not govern a case where, by the act of the testator, a foreign investment has been made; nor a case where, without the fault of the executor, the assets have been transmuted into a debt which can only be secured and saved by taking a foreign security. The question at bottom is in every instance the prudence and diligence of the executor, and that always must be measured, and may be modified by surrounding circumstances. In the present case, the General Term have treated the Ohio mortgage taken by the executor as a voluntary investment of trust funds beyond the jurisdiction. We do not concur with that view of the facts. The assets of the estate had all passed into the possession of the executor, Horse, and the defendant had taken no part in their possession or management. Upon the death of Horse, the defendant became sole surviving executor, and, as in duty bound, sought to reclaim the remaining assets. He found none remaining as such, and a personal liability substituted by the act of Horse and not by his own. He found that his associate executor had mixed such assets with his own property, partially converted them to his personal use,. and in part lost them by unsafe-investments. We do-not know as a fact that the estate of Horse was insolvent, nor can we be certain that it was solvent. One thing, however, is quite apparent. *345 The trust funds had been practically absorbed in the estate of Morse, and had been changed into a debt due from that estate. The duty which devolved upon the surviving executor and which he proceeded to perform was one, not of investment, but of collection. He stood in the presence of an emergency which required him to do, not so much what he preferred, as what he could. He swears in his answer that what he did was done in good faith and “ in the full belief that it was the best possible arrangement to secure the fund from the estate of Morse.” He took from that estate a bond and a mortgage on real estate in Toledo, which was assigned to him by Morse’s representatives, and guaranteed by the widow who was sole legatee, and at that time solvent, and also further collaterals for greater safety. The surrogate in his decree finds these facts to be true, and they stand wholly uncontradicted. The situation, therefore, is plain. The estate of Morse could not raise and pay the ready money. The surviving executor was shut up between two alternatives. He must either present his claim, await the slow process of administration, take all the chances of the solvency of the estate, run every risk of the' honesty and prudence of its administration and of possible sacrifices, and .trust to the slight watch possible over affairs transacted by others, or he must accept the securities offered, at the time perfectly good, and having no fault except that in part they were beyond the jurisdiction. If the estate of Morse was solvent the guaranty of the sole legatee held its entire surplus, and if insolvent a good security for the full amount was better than a partial and uncertain dividend. We have no difficulty in concluding that it was defendant’s duty to accept the securities offered, and that his omission to do so would have been imprudent and unwise. Hor do we hesitate to say that his action does not come under the rule which forbids a foreign investment. To hold that it does would establish a perilous precedent. It might hamper the collection of debts by trustees and executors due in foreign States, and drive them to refuse ample security and thereby encounter grave risk of loss. We are of opinion, therefore, *346 that the defendant violated no rule of prudence in taking the security objected to, and should not be made personally liable for so doing.

Two other grounds were presented on which, it is alleged, such liability can be sustained. It is admitted that up to the death of Morse, the defendant, although co-executor, took no part in the management of the trust. It is claimed that this was negligence which rendered him liable for the misconduct of Morse. It is not disputed that the rule applicable to executors, as such, is that each is liable only for his own acts, and one cannot be made responsible for the negligence or waste of another, unless he in Some manner aided or concurred therein. (Sutherland v. Brush, 7 Johns. Ch. 22; Monell v. Monell, 5 id. 283; Manahan v. Gibbons, 19 Johns. 427.) It is claimed, however, that the rule is more stringent where executors are also trustees, and the case of Bates v. Underhill (3 Redf. 365) is brought to our attention.

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Bluebook (online)
84 N.Y. 339, 1881 N.Y. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ormiston-v-olcott-ny-1881.