Riordan v. Riordan

248 N.W. 21, 216 Iowa 1138
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedApril 4, 1933
DocketNo. 41798.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 248 N.W. 21 (Riordan v. Riordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riordan v. Riordan, 248 N.W. 21, 216 Iowa 1138 (iowa 1933).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

On April 8, 1930, the Washington Loan & Trust Company was appointed guardian of the “Riordan trust”, and filed a bond of $25,000 signed by the Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company, appellant, as surety.

On the day of its appointment, the Washington Loan & Trust Company received $21,773.94 in cash for the Riordan trust. This amount was immediately deposited in its own personal account in the Commercial National Bank, but not in its capacity as trustee.

The Washington Loan & Trust Company closed its doors and L. A. Andrew was appointed receiver thereof on October 5, 1931. Thereupon, the company resigned as trustee.

On December 9, 1931, the Washington Loan & Trust Company, trustee, filed its final report in the Riordan trust estate. Therein it took credit for $4,151.42 alleged to have been paid for the purchase of four county bonds, and $16,000 alleged to have been paid for the purchase of three mortgages executed by Mr. and Mrs. Kallaus, Mr. and Mrs. Miller, and Mr. and Mrs. Schantz.

On December 14, 1931, Eardley Bell, Jr., was appointed successor trustee of the Riordan trust, and duly qualified. The new *1140 trustee filed objections to the final report of the Washington Loan & Trust Company, trustee, on the following grounds:

1. Because said trustee converted the $21,773.94 received on April 8, 1930, to its own use by depositing it in its own personal account in the Commercial National Bank where it was commingled with its own personal funds and those of other estates.

2. Because the trustee pretended to invest the moneys of this trust in certain county bonds and real estate mortgages belonging to the Washington Loan & Trust Company.

3. That on May 26, 1930, the Washington Loan & Trust procured an order of court authorizing said investments, by concealing the fact that such securities were the property of the Washington Loan & Trust Company itself.

The new trustee claimed that all such investments were fraudulent and void, and he elected to treat them as such because it was an attempt of the trustee to purchase securities from itself.

These allegations were denied by the old trustee and its surety, the Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company, and they, in answer and cross-petition, allege: That the Washington Loan & Trust Company, as trustee, on May 26, 1930, secured an order of court authorizing the purchase of three mortgages aggregating $16,000 and executed by Mr. and Mrs. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. Schantz, and Mr. and Mrs. Kallaus, and four county bonds of $4,151.42; that pursuant to said order, the trustee claimed to have purchased from J. M. Bratten, J. G. Maxwell, and L. F. Woodburn, trustees, the Schantz note and mortgage of $5,500, the Miller note and mortgage of $2,500, and the Kallaus note and mortgage of $8,000; that such investments were legal; that there is no liability to the new trustee; that the final report be approved; and that L. A. Andrew, receiver of the Washington Loan & Trust Company be ordered to deliver to Eardley Bell, the new trustee, all securities in' his hands for the credit of the Washington Loan & Trust Company, trustee.

The surety further asked that, in the event the court holds the surety liable on its bond for any part of the trust funds, it be subrogated to the rights of the Washington Loan & Trust Company and its receiver in any securities involved.

The new trustee denies the allegations of the cross-petition relating to the alleged investments, and re-alleges the grounds of objection made to the final report.

*1141 He further alleges: that the Schantz, Miller, and Kallaus notes and mortgages alleged to have been purchased by the Washington Loan & Trust Company, as trustee, from J. M. Bratten, J. G. Maxwell, and L. F. Woodburn, trustees, were in fact the property of the Washington Loan & Trust Company and never had been transferred to said alleged trustees; that the application for, and order authorizing the investment of, said funds were fraudulently made and obtained by willfully concealing the actual facts from the court; that the Washington Loan & Trust Company was then individually the legal title holder to all of said securities; that the court had no power to permit any deposit of the trust funds in the Washington Loan & Trust Company, or to permit said company to transfer the legal title of any of the moneys of the trust to itself, or to purchase such securities from itself; that the order of court was void, and of no protection to the trustee, or the surety on its bond.

L. A. Andrew, receiver of the Washington Loan & Trust Company, alleges that all investments made by the Washington Loan & Trust Company were legal, and that he is not in any manner liable to the new trustee.

The court also found that the Washington Loan & Trust Company had commingled the assets of its own with the assets of other estates of guardians and administrators which it was handling, and that it being impossible to determine the equitable rights of all of such parties of interest in this action, it therefore authorized the Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company to file its claim of intervention in the receivership of’ the Washington Loan & Trust Company for adjudication therein.

The lower court disapproved the final report of the Washington Loan & Trust Company, as trustee; sustained the objections of the new trustee, and found the Washington Loan & Trust Company and the surety on its bond liable to the Riordan trust in the sum of $24,158.19, less a credit of $1,743.65 for moneys advanced, and rendered judgment against both for $22,314.54 and interest from February 5, 1932.

The evidence shows that on April 8, 1930, the Washington Loan & Trust Company, trustee, received for the Riordan trust estate the sum of $21,773.94; that this money was immediately deposited in the Commercial National Bank, in the personal account of the Washington Loan & Trust Company, with other funds belonging to it *1142 and other estates; that said moneys were commingled with all other moneys of the said Washington Loan & Trust Company and moneys of other estates without any segregation whatsoever; that these funds were used by the Washington Loan & Trust Company in its own business.

The testimony further shows that the Washington Loan & Trust Company, trustee, filed an application with the district court for authority to invest in the following securities: Mr. and Mrs. Miller note and mortgage of $2,500; Mr. and Mrs. Kallaus note and mortgage of $8,000; Mr. and Mrs.- Schantz note and mortgage of $5,500; 2 M Louisa county bonds and in 2 M Franklin county bonds. That these securities were all in the name of the Washington Loan & Trust Company; that they were in the hands of Bratten, Maxwell, and Woodburn as agents of the Washington Loan & Trust Company; that the notes, mortgages, and bonds referred to were executed to the Washington Loan & Trust Company long before it was appointed trustee of the Riordan trust.

The evidence shows that Bratten et al.

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248 N.W. 21, 216 Iowa 1138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riordan-v-riordan-iowa-1933.