Patteson v. Horsley

70 Va. 263
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 8, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 70 Va. 263 (Patteson v. Horsley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patteson v. Horsley, 70 Va. 263 (Va. 1877).

Opinion

Moncure, P„

delivered the opinion of the court.

By the deed of the 4th day of June, 1857, of which an official copy, marked “ Exhibit A,” is filed with the bill in this case, the land, slaves and money therein mentioned (except the slaves Harriet, Eanny and Mary Susan), were conveyed by the grantor, Mary C. Horsley, to the grantees, her sons, Charles Y. Horsley and John Horsley, in trust, for the use and benefit of her daughter, Ann E. Mills, and Nicholas Mills, Jr., husband of the said Ann E., and the children of the said Ann E. Mills and Nicholas Mills, Jr., then living or which might be thereafter born, upon the trusts recited in said deed, as follows, to-wit:

“1. During the life of the said Ann E. Mills and Nicholas Mills, Jr., and the survivor of them, the said property and money shall be held and the income thereof applied to the support of them and the survivor of them and their children born and to be born.
“ 2. At the death of the survivor of them the said property and its increase shall be divided among the issue of the said Ann E. Mills and Nicholas Mills, Jr., per stirpes.
“3. During the life of the said Ann E. Mills any of the above granted property may be exchanged for other property by the trustees, by and with the written consent of the said Ann E. Mills, and after her death it may be so exchanged by and with the written consent of Nicholas Mills, Jr.
“ 4. At the death of the survivor of the said Nicholas Mills, Jr., and Ann E. Mills, all the property hereby [268]*268granted, (except the slaves Harriett, Fanny and Mary .Susan, and they, in the event of their several owners dying childless or unmarried,) shall be divided according to the laws of descents and distributions. If the said Nicholas Mills, Jr., and Ann E. Mills shall die without children of their marriage, then all the above property shall go to the next of kin of the said Ann E. Mills,” &e., &c.

The property described in the said deed as “money” consisted of bonds of the Virginia and Tennessee Kailroad Company to the par amount of nine thousand dollars, secured by mortgage and guaranteed by the city of Lynchburg, on which interest at the rate of six pier centum per annum was payable semi-annually, and it seems was then and continued thereafter, so long as the said stock was held under the said trust, to be paid punctually, though the market value of the said bonds did not exceed ninety cents in the dollar, if it equalled that rate.

The court is opinion that such was the nature of the trust created, and such the strictness of the settlement made in regard to the said property by the said deed, that no disposition could be made of the principal of the trust subject, or any part thereof, without the agency and decree of a court of chancery, except in the mode expressly prescribed by the deed. In that mode only could the trustees and beneficiaries, or any of them, dispose of the said property or any part thereof.

That mode is prescribed by the third article of the declarations of trust aforesaid, to-wit: “ 3. Luring the life of the said Ann E. Mills any of the above granted property may be exchanged for other property by said trustees by and with the written consent of the said Ann E. Mills, and after her death it may be so exchanged by and with the written consent of Fichólas Mills, Jr.”

[269]*269Ebw, here it will he observed that power is given to L ° the trustees, not to sell any of the above granted property, but to exchange it for other property, and not to do even that of their own accord only, however well satisfied they might he of the advantage of such exchange to any or all of the beneficiaries. They could do it only “ by and with the written consent of the said Ann E. Mills,” or after her death “by and with the written consent of Nicholas Mills, Jr.”

The grantor in the deed had a right to withhold from the trustees and beneficiaries any power of disposition whatever, of the principal of the trust subject during the continuance of the trust, and of course they had a right to give such a power of disposition subject to such conditions and restrictions as they might choose to prescribe, however capricious or unmeaning such conditions and restrictions might seem to be. Cujus est dare ejus est disfonere.

But it was no capricious or unmeaning condition or restriction imposed on the power of disposition given to the trustees in this case, to require that any exchange made by them of any part of the principal of the trust subject should he “with the written consent of the said Ann E. Mills,” &c. She, in her own light and as one of the heads of the family, was deeply interested in the trust, and it was reasonable to require that any act of disposition by the trustees of any part of the principal of the trust subject should be sanctioned by her mitten consent.

"While an “ exchange ” may seem strictly to imply that one subject, of investment should be directly given for another, yet a more liberal and reasonable construction would no doubt authorize an exchange to be made indirectly by selling one subject, and with the proceeds of sale buying another in its place, if the act were done bona fide.

[270]*270The court is further of opinion, that while such a hniitecl and restricted power of disposition was given to the trustees as aforesaid, they ought only so to have dis-Pose(i of any part of the trust subject when, in their judgment and according to their discretion, such disposition would be beneficial to the parties interested in the trust; an(i they would not have been warranted in making such a disposition merely by the written consent of the said Ann E. Mills. That was a safeguard and precaution which the framer of the trust chose to superadd to the judgment and discretion of the trustees. She authorized such an exchange to be made only when thus determined on and sanctioned. Any other disposition of any part of the trust subject made by the trustees in any other manner, ivas a breach of trust by them for which they were responsible, as also were any other persons who may have knowingly participated with them in such breach of trust.

The court is further of opinion, that the transaction between the trustee and appellee, John Horsley, and the appellee, Gustavus A. Hancock, on or about the 2d day of May, 1859, whereby the said trustee sold to the said Hancock the said bonds of the Virginia and Tennessee railroad company, guaranteed by the city of Lynchburg, amounting to the principal sum of $9,000, in consideration of the bond of the said Hancock for the sum of $8,280, payable on or before the 1st day of July, 1863, with interest from the 1st day of July, 1859, to be paid semi-annually on the 1st of January and July in each year, secured by deed of trust on real estate in the county of Albemarle, was a breach of trust in the said trustee, in which the said Hancock participated, having notice, actual or constructive, of the facts which constituted such breach of trust, and the same having been committed at his instance and for his benefit; and that the said trustee and the said Hancock are therefore liable to the bene[271]*271ficiaries in tlie said trust for all damages sustained by them in consequence of the said breach of trust. It is at least doubtful whether the said transaction could he con sidered as an exchange

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Bluebook (online)
70 Va. 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patteson-v-horsley-va-1877.