Priscilla Alden Beach v. Rome Trust Company, a Domestic Corporation, and Johnson D. McMahon and Robert Beach, Administrator Cta of the Goods and Chattels of Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased, Priscilla Alden Beach v. J. Maynard Jones, Surrogate of Oneida County, State of New York Rome Trust Company, a New York Banking & Trust Company Johnson D. McMahon Individually and as Vice-President of Rome Trust Company Director of Beach Lumber Company, a New York Corporation Counsel for Rome Trust Company Counsel for Beach Lumber Company Counsel for Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased Counsel for Robert Beach Counsel for Estate of Samuel H. Beach, Jr, Robert Beach, Individually and as of Estate of Samuel H. Beach, J.

269 F.2d 367, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 1959
Docket25416-25417
StatusPublished

This text of 269 F.2d 367 (Priscilla Alden Beach v. Rome Trust Company, a Domestic Corporation, and Johnson D. McMahon and Robert Beach, Administrator Cta of the Goods and Chattels of Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased, Priscilla Alden Beach v. J. Maynard Jones, Surrogate of Oneida County, State of New York Rome Trust Company, a New York Banking & Trust Company Johnson D. McMahon Individually and as Vice-President of Rome Trust Company Director of Beach Lumber Company, a New York Corporation Counsel for Rome Trust Company Counsel for Beach Lumber Company Counsel for Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased Counsel for Robert Beach Counsel for Estate of Samuel H. Beach, Jr, Robert Beach, Individually and as of Estate of Samuel H. Beach, J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Priscilla Alden Beach v. Rome Trust Company, a Domestic Corporation, and Johnson D. McMahon and Robert Beach, Administrator Cta of the Goods and Chattels of Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased, Priscilla Alden Beach v. J. Maynard Jones, Surrogate of Oneida County, State of New York Rome Trust Company, a New York Banking & Trust Company Johnson D. McMahon Individually and as Vice-President of Rome Trust Company Director of Beach Lumber Company, a New York Corporation Counsel for Rome Trust Company Counsel for Beach Lumber Company Counsel for Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased Counsel for Robert Beach Counsel for Estate of Samuel H. Beach, Jr, Robert Beach, Individually and as of Estate of Samuel H. Beach, J., 269 F.2d 367, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408 (2d Cir. 1959).

Opinion

269 F.2d 367

Priscilla Alden BEACH, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ROME TRUST COMPANY, a domestic corporation, and Johnson D.
McMahon, and Robert Beach, Administrator CTA of
the Goods and Chattels of Estate of
Carrie A. Beach, Deceased,
Defendants-Appellees.
Priscilla Alden BEACH, Plaintiff-Appellant.
v.
J. Maynard JONES, Surrogate of Oneida County, State of New
York; Rome Trust Company, a New York Banking & Trust
Company; Johnson D. McMahon, individually and as
Vice-President of Rome Trust Company; Director of Beach
Lumber Company, a New York Corporation; Counsel for Rome
Trust Company; Counsel for Beach Lumber Company; Counsel for
Estate of Carrie A. Beach, Deceased; Counsel for Robert
Beach; Counsel for Estate of Samuel H. Beach, Jr,; Robert
Beach, individually and as Executor of Estate of Samuel H.
Beach, J., Defendants-Appellees.

Nos. 279-280, Dockets 25416-25417.

United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.

Argued April 23, 1959.
Decided Aug. 17, 1959.

Robert L. Collins, New York City (Harry J. Coman, New York City, on the brief), for plaintiff-appellant.

James Griffin, Rome, N.Y. (O'Shea, Griffin & Jones, Rome, N.Y., on the brief), for defendant-appellee Rome Trust Co.

Johnson D. McMahon, Rome, N.Y., pro se and for defendant-appellee Robert Beach.

Donald L. Austin, for defendant-appellee J. Maynard Jones.

Before LUMBARD, Circuit Judge, and GALSTON and ANDERSON, District Judges.

LUMBARD, Circuit Judge.

These appeals are from orders of James T. Foley, J., in the District Court for the Northern District of New York declining jurisdiction in favor of the Surrogate's Court of Oneida County, New York, in a diversity action brought by the beneficiary of a testamentary trust which was created out of an estate then and now in the course of administration in the Surrogate's Court, against the administrator C.T.A., a testamentary trustee under letters of trusteeship issued by the Surrogate, and an attorney alleged to have participated with them in certain breaches of trust. In the first action Judge Foley declined jurisdiction. The second action was brought for an injunction against proceedings for an accounting in the Surrogate's Court, subsequently commenced by defendants, and the cause was dismissed for the reasons which governed the first disposition.

We hold that as to those claims the prosecution of which would constitute an interference with the previously attached quasi in rem jurisdiction of the Surrogate's Court the district Court's order of dismissal was correct; but that insofar as the plaintiff's claims would not interfere with such a prior jurisdiction, it was improper either to dismiss them, or to retain them and then abstain from the exercise of jurisdiction. We hold further that for the reasons set forth at length in Sullivan v. Title Guarantee & Trust Co., 2 Cir., 1948, 167 F.2d 393, Judge Foley correctly declined to enjoin the subsequently initiated proceedings in the Surrogate's Court.

The facts alleged in the complaint and taken as true for present purposes, are briefly as follows. Plaintiff's father, Samuel H. Beach, Sr., died testate in 1941 leaving a will which made his wife, Carrie A. Beach, the sole heir and distributee of his estate, but which, in provisions that would have been effective had Carrie predeceased Samuel, manifested an intention that the two children of Carrie and Samuel, the plaintiff, Priscilla Alden Beach, and Samuel H. Beach, Jr., share equally in the estate. Carrie Beach died on November 15, 1951 leaving a will which, according to the complaint, purported to carry out the wishes of Samuel, and therefore to divide the estate equally between Priscilla and Samuel, Jr. The will of Carrie, which is annexed to the complaint, provided in terms for outright gifts of personalty and realty to Samuel, Jr., for a gift in trust to Priscilla for life of common stock in the Beach Lumber Co. and one-half the residue of the estate, and for an absolute gift of the remaining one-half of the residue to Samuel, Jr. Under the terms of the trust the issue of Priscilla are remaindermen, but in default of such issue, Samuel, Jr. or his issue are designated. Under the terms of the trust the designated trustee, the Rome Trust Company, was instructed to vote the Beach Lumber Co. common stock 'only as directed by my son, Samuel H. Beach, Jr.,' and was expressly given the power to retain investments held at the death of the testatrix and to invest the corpus without restriction to investments legal for trust funds in the State of New York.

Upon the death of Carrie, Samuel, Jr. became the administrator C.T.A. of her estate under the terms of the will which was admitted to probate February 26, 1952, and in 1953 the Rome Trust Company assumed its duties as trustee, receiving, amongst other securities, the common stock of Beach Lumber Co. Very shortly thereafter Samuel, Jr., died, and Robert J. Beach, his son, was named his administrator C.T.A., as well as administrator C.T.A. of Carrie's estate. None of the several fiduciaries thus involved with the assets of the estate of Carrie have as yet rendered an accounting despite plaintiff's demands that they do so. Plaintiff has received income in the amount of $1,500 per year from the trustee.

Johnson D. McMahon was counsel to Carrie Beach, and to Samuel Beach, Jr., and is presently counsel to and director and vice-president of the Rome Trust Company, as well as counsel to and a director of the Beach Lumber Company. Robert J. Beach has succeeded his father as president of the Beach Lumber Company, and holds all the stock of the company which is not in the trust.

The correctness of the decision below necessarily turns upon the nature of the claims asserted in the complaint, and accordingly we now consider them in some detail. The complaint, which As the district court noted, is very loosely drawn, alleges five causes of action against various combinations of defendants. The first cause of action seeks an accounting of the estate and of the trust to determine whether the trustee in fact received the proper portion of the residue, it being alleged on information and belief that the total estate of Carrie was in the neighborhood of $30,000. Plaintiff in part derives this figure from the fact that the estate of Samuel, Jr. was valued at about $200,000. She apparently asserts that the trust estate should be about equal to this sum, although it is not alleged that Samuel, Jr. was without other income, and it appears from affirmative allegations that he served actively as chief officer of Beach Lumber Company. While the complaint refers to plaintiff as if she were the legal and equitable owner of one-half of the Carrie estate, there is no allegation that she is anything other than a life beneficiary of the trust established by the will. Plaintiff sets forth her income from the trust as $1,500 per year, and alleges that as against the supposed corpus, presumably $150,000, her income reveals a corpus of only $25,000, at 6%.

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269 F.2d 367, 1959 U.S. App. LEXIS 3408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/priscilla-alden-beach-v-rome-trust-company-a-domestic-corporation-and-ca2-1959.