Pollack v. Bowman

49 A.2d 40, 139 N.J. Eq. 47, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 343
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMay 20, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 49 A.2d 40 (Pollack v. Bowman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollack v. Bowman, 49 A.2d 40, 139 N.J. Eq. 47, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 343 (N.J. 1946).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Colie, J.

This cause comes before us upon the appeals of Pollack and Hosek, executrix and executor of the estate of a deceased life tenant under the will of Andrew T. Fletcher and upon the appeal of Little Sisters of the Poor, a charitable corporation and the residuary legatee under the said will. The executors and trustees of the Fletcher estate, Harold H. Bowman and Paterson Savings Institution have filed a cross-appeal.

*49 The cause was heard before Vice-Chancellor Fielder whose conclusions are reported in 23 N. J. Mis. R. 63. The opinion below states the facts in detail and consequently there is no necessity to restate them herein.

The main appeal raises the following questions as to the conduct of Bowman and the Paterson Savings Institution acting as executors and trustees of the Fletcher estate — (1) were they guilty of fraud or lack of good faith; (2) did they exercise reasonable care in handling the Fletcher estate; and, (3) if they did not, and mismanaged the estate to the loss o'f complainants, may they be surcharged for such loss in the face of the fact that the Orphans Court has passed upon their final account as executors and has also passed upon numerous intermediate accounts as trustees P The cross-appeal of Bowman and Paterson Savings Institution challenges that part of the decree below directing the sale of all the common stocks remaining in the estate and surcharging the trustees with such loss as may result from such sale.

The Vice-Chancellor found no evidence of fraud or bad faith upon the part of either Bowman or the Paterson Savings Institution and our examination of the record leads to the same conclusion.

On the question of reasonable care, the inquiry has two distinct and separate phases. The first arises from the sale to one Hastings of all of the capital stock of Bakers & Consumers Compressed Yeast Co., hereinafter referred to as Yeast Company; the other arises from the retention in the trust of common stocks which the decedent Fletcher held in his lifetime and which were turned over to Bowman and the Savings Institution as trustees when they were discharged as executors.

Shortly after Fletcher’s death, Bowman and the Savings Institution deemed it advisable to dispose of the Yeast Company, but a ready buyer could not be found until Hastings entered into negotiations to purchase the company. Bowman and the Savings Institution knew that Hastings had been employed as an accountant by Fletcher for years, and between the time of Fletcher’s death and the sale of the Yeast Com *50 pany, both Bowman and the Savings Institution maintained close contact with Hastings in its management. The terms for the purchase of the Yeast Company stock called for payment of $100,000 in cash by Hastings, and Mr. Patón of the Savings Institution testified to his understanding that Hastings was to borrow the money on his personal credit. The fact was that Hastings could not borrow the money personally but raised the needed sum on the Yeast Company’s credit, he having persuaded the executors to delete from the contract a provision which would have prevented him from pledging the assets of the Yeast Company to borrow the $100,000. It is well to bear in mind that up to the time when Hastings persuaded the executors to delete this essential provision from the contract, there had been nothing, so far as the record discloses, to make them suspicious of Hastings. However that may be, the request on the part of Hastings was sufficient to put on Bowman and the Savings Institution the duty of inquiring why Hastings wished the protective provision eliminated. They made no inquiry although Mr. Patón, a vice-president of the corporate executor, testified that he realized that the result would be to leave it open to Hastings to use the assets of the Yeast Company to borrow the $100,000.' This failure to make inquiry upon the part of Mr. Patou who handled the matter for the corporate executor and on the part of Mr. Bowman, a New York lawyer, and presumably a man of experience, is inexplicable except upon the basis that they placed great faith in Mr. Hastings. We conceive that it is the duty of executors to base their decisions upon something more substantial than faith and that it is their duty to take reasonable precautions to safeguard the trust estate. When the executors deleted from the contract the provision which would have foreclosed Hastings from pledging the Yeast Company’s assets to raise the $100,000 without any inquiry as to the reason for such deletion, they, in our judgment, failed to exercise reasonable care.

Having found that the éxecutors in this respect were negligent, the question remains whether they should be surcharged for the loss resulting therefrom and that turns upon the effect *51 of the decree of the Passaic County Orphans Court approving the final account of the executors of the Eletcher estate. This court, speaking through Mr. Justice Garrison in Shearman v. Cameron, 78 N. J. Eq. 532, said that “It is a doctrine of universal acceptation that the judgment of a competent court acting within its jurisdiction is conclusive upon parties and privies as to all matters adjudged upon which the parties were of- right entitled to be heard. * * * The legal question is whether the procedure of the court afforded an opportunity to litigate, not whether the parties concerned availed themselves of it.” The only exceptions to this rule are in cases where there is fraud, mistake, injustice, or lack of jurisdiction, or in cases where assets come to hand after the filing of the account. Cf. Clapp, Wills and Administration in, New Jersey, § 376. The complainants-appellants urge us to disregard this well-established rule and to adopt in its. stead the statement of Vice-Chancellor Fielder in In re Shaw, 122 N. J. Eq. 536, that “To estop a cestui que trust on the ground of implied acquiescence, from complaining against a breach of trust by his trustee, it must appear by full and satisfactory proof that the cestui knew all the facts, understood his legal rights and acted deliberately in not objecting to an investment he knew, or should have known, he had the right to object to.” There were many features in which In re Shaw, supra, differs from the instant case. In that case the trustee set up a single trust whereas the will directed the setting up of separate trusts; the trustees invested in illegal investments contrary to the directions of the will and furthermore the trustee-in making investments was dealing with itself which, as the Vice-Chancellor said, is “an act the law does not countenance.”

The executors’ account filed in 1931 gave to Joseph Hosek, through whom the appellants Pollack and Hosek derive their status, the opportunity to litigate and not having done so, appellants may not do so eleven years later. They are clearly in laches and the subject-matter is res adfudicata.

With respect to the common stocks, the retention of which is the basis upon which it is sought to surcharge the trustees, *52 the situation, so far as laches and estoppel is concerned, is more glaring.

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

Related

In Re Koehler
129 A.2d 442 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1957)
Donnelly v. Ritzendollar
101 A.2d 1 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1953)
Behrman v. Egan
86 A.2d 606 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1951)
Ditmars v. Camden Trust Co.
76 A.2d 280 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)
Liberty Title & Trust Co. v. Plews
70 A.2d 784 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)
Van Der Veer v. Ames
70 A.2d 517 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1950)
Dickerson v. Camden Trust Company
64 A.2d 214 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1949)
Liberty Title Trust Co. v. Plews
60 A.2d 630 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1948)
Dickerson v. Camden Trust Co.
53 A.2d 225 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1947)
Ditmars v. Camden Trust Co.
49 A.2d 313 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 A.2d 40, 139 N.J. Eq. 47, 1946 N.J. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollack-v-bowman-nj-1946.