Roosevelt v. Land & River Improvement Co.

11 Misc. 595, 33 N.Y.S. 536, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 304
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 595 (Roosevelt v. Land & River Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roosevelt v. Land & River Improvement Co., 11 Misc. 595, 33 N.Y.S. 536, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 304 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.

This case presents several novel and difficult questions, and I have given to it much thought. The main principles to be applied in the disposition of most of the questions presented are, however, well settled, and ¿t is only .because of the peculiar circumstances which exist, and the ingenuity with which Weeks endeavored to cover up his frauds, that render the disposition of the questions troublesome.

The defendant, the Land & Eiver Improvement Company, take the broad ground that no cause of action is shown, and that the plaintiff is unable to bring his case within a recognized principle of equity. A short statement of the case will, I think, show that all the facts necessary to entitle the plaintiff to relief under well-settled principles of equity are present, and that the only difficulty is in determining to just what relief plaintiff is entitled. The plaintiff and Weeks were trustees under the will of William E. Howland, and as such had in their possession, as part of the trust estate,, certain securities. Weeks suggested to the. plaintiff, his co-trustee, that as these securities were selling at considerable premium it w'ould be advantageous to dispose of them and to invest the proceeds in bonds and mortgages. To that the plaintiff assented, and Weeks sold the securities and received the proceeds. Subsequently Weeks proposed to plaintiff to invest the sum of $Í5,000, a part of the proceeds, in three of these bonds secured by mortgages on property in the city of Hew York,'known as the “ Danziger bonds and .mortgages,” and plaintiff, after an examination of the. value of the property, assented. These loans were duly made, and the money paid to Danziger by Weeks, he, however, taking the bonds, and mortgages in his own name instead of to himself and the plaintiff as trustees. Subsequently Weeks produced these [597]*597bonds and mortgages as the property of the trust estate, and showed them to plaintiff, although plaintiff’s attention was not called to the fact that they were in Weeks’ individual name. These facts are substantially undisputed, and I think show conclusively that these bonds and mortgages became, at that time, securities in which the trust estate was invested.

I do not think it is necessary to consider the question as1 to the extent to which courts of equity have followed trust funds where the trustee has appropriated them to his own use, for it is clear that the investment by Weeks of the money of the Howland estate in the three Danziger bonds and mortgages was an express investment of the funds of the Howland estate in these mortgages for the benefit of the trust. When Weeks paid the money to Danziger he had in his possession money belonging to the estate to an amount exceeding the amount of the investment, and, under the agreement between- himself and his coexecutor, Mr. Eoosevelt, it was understood that the money was to be invested in these specific mortgages as part of the trust estate. Hpon his payment of that sum of money to Danziger, he appropriated the sum paid to Danziger as an investment of a portion of the Howland trust estate, and the securities in which that money then became invested became a portion of that estate. The fact that the bonds and mortgages were taken in his name individually, instead of in the name of himself and his co-trustee as trustees, could make no difference as between himself individually and the beneficiaries of the Howland estate. He had in his hands money of the Howland estate to invest. With the consent of his co-trustee, he invested that money in these bonds and mortgages ; and the bonds and mortgages when executed became securities in which the trust fund had been invested and a part of the estate, and a court of equity, at any time, upon the request of any one interested in the estate, would have compelled Weeks to convey those bonds and mortgages to the trustees as part of that estate.

There is no evidence to show that the money of any other estate, or any other trust fund, contributed directly or indi[598]*598rectly in any way to this investment, or that any third party had acquired any interest in these securities. And thus these mortgages in question became, as between Weeks and those interested in the Howland estate, securities of the estate to which the estate became at once entitled. The assigns of Weeks succeeded,to the interest of Weeks at the time of the assignment. It is immaterial, therefore, whether or not the money paid by Weeks to Danziger can be traced directly to any Specific moneys that Weeks had received as trustee of the Howland estate. He had money of that estate in his possession, and acting as trustee, with the .assent of his co-trustee, he appropriated money in his possession to investments for the benefit of the estate; and when he had appropriated that money for that purpose, it became then money of the estate, and the securities in which it was invested became the securities of the estate, irrespective of the form in which the money was invested or the persons in whom the legal title to the securities was placed. The only way in which the title of those securities could be divested from the estate would be a transfer by Weeks to a person who acquired an interest in them, without knowledge of the fact that they were securities of the estate, for a valuable consideration. The authorities amply sustain this conclusion.

The precise condition was stated by the Court of Appeals as an example in the case of Van Alen v. American National Bank, 52 N. Y. 1, as follows : “ My agent collects $100 rent for me and puts the bills in one pocket and takes the same amount from .another pocket and deposits it, and notifies me. Are my rights gone by the change of the money ? I think not. Stripped of unsubstantial forms, the case presented is that of a person delivering stock or bonds to an agent for sale, with directions to deposit the proceeds in a bank to the credit of the agent, but to keep it in that way for him, and the agent follows the directions. Can there be a doubt as to the ownership of the money as between the agent and the principal ? Clearly not. Suppose the pi-incipal had directed the agent to loan the money on a note or mortgage, would not the [599]*599security belong to the principal ? The bank defendant upon receiving the deposit became the debtor ostensibly to the depositor, but equitably to the real owner.”

That is just what happened in this case. Weeks had received the money of his principal, the trust estate ; he had undertaken to invest that money in these specific bonds and mortgages. He did invest that money and took back the mortgages as the securities of the investment. It can make no difference whether that money was the identical bills received by Weeks from the sale of securities of the trust estate in Weeks’ hands or other money of Weeks that he had appropriated as the money of the trust estate, he having received the. proceeds of the other securities belonging to the estate, and at the time of the investment having them in his possession.

The same principle was reaffirmed and applied in Baker v. New York Nat. Exchange Bank, 100 N. Y. 31, where the court say: “ Conceding that Wilson and Brother used the specific proceeds for their own purposes, and their identity was lost, yet when they made up the amounts so used, and deposited them in the trust account, the amounts so deposited were impressed with the trust in favor of the principals and became substituted for the original proceeds and subject to the same equities.”

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Related

Merchants' Bank v. Weill
29 A.D. 101 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 595, 33 N.Y.S. 536, 67 N.Y. St. Rep. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roosevelt-v-land-river-improvement-co-nysupct-1895.