Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Cahn

62 A. 819, 102 Md. 530
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 10, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 62 A. 819 (Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Cahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safe Deposit & Trust Co. v. Cahn, 62 A. 819, 102 Md. 530 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

*532 McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

There are three appeals in this record. Two of the questions brought up for decision are involved in all of the cases, whilst there are separate, subordinate inquiries which are confined to the first and third appeals respectively. Before stating any of the questions which are to be considered, a brief narration of the facts must be given, in so far as they affect the first contention which is common to all the cases; and subsequently the facts bearing on the other general question will be stated, and when the subsidiary inquiries are later on, dealt with, the facts pertaining to them will be mentioned, if not incidentally alluded to earlier.

Three bills in equity were filed in the Circuit Court offBaltimore City by the appellant, the Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore City, against the several appellees. To each bill demurrers were interposed; the demurrers were sustained and the bills were dismissed upon the sole ground that a Court of equity was without jurisdiction to grant the relief prayed. It appears from the face of the'bills and exhibits that in the year eighteen hundred and ninety-five a certain Wesley A. Tucker departed this life leaving a last will and testament in and by which his widow, Rebecca J. Tucker, and his son, William Trump Tucker, were appointed executrix and executor, and were named and constituted trustees of the propierty therein disposed of on the trusts and conditions therein mentioned and set forth: That the executrix and executor after administering on the estate of the decedent, conveyed and transferred that portion thereof falling within and covered by the trusts created by the will, to themselves as trustees:

That the Circuit Court upon appropriate proceedings taken, assumed jurisdiction over the administration of the trusts named and described in the will and over the trust property and estate subject thereto: That a portion of the trust estate was invested in three hundred and twenty-eight shares of the capital stock of the Merchants and Miners Transportation Company, and in two hundred and eleven shares of the capital stock of the Northern Central Railway Company; and that *533 the certificates representing all of those shares stood in the names of Rebecca J. Tucker and William Trump Tucker, trustees of Wesley A. Tucker, deceased: That by certain orders passed at different times by the Circuit Court in the trust estate proceedings, the trustees were authorized to sell the above-named shares of stock with a view to the re-investment of the proceeds in other securities: That as to one hundred shares of the Merchants and Miners Transportation Company’s stock the sale was directed by the Court to be made at the Public Stock Board of Baltimore, and as to the entire two hundred and eleven shares of the Northern Central Railway Company’s stock, the sales were directed by the Court’s orders to be made at the highest market price obtainable on the Public Stock Board of Baltimore City; and as to one hundred of the remaining two hundred and twenty-eight shares of the Merchants and Miners Transportation Company’s stock the order instructed the trustees to sell at the highest market price obtainable at the Public Stock Board of Baltimore, “or otherwise, provided the same shall not be sold at less than one hundred and seventy ($170) dollars per share;” and as to the remaining one hundred and twenty-eight shares of the same stock the Court’s order permitted the sale to be made at the “market price upon the Public Stock Board of Baltimore City, or at private sale at not less than $[75.00 per share:” That all of the above-mentioned certificates thus plainly earmarked and distinctly identified as forming parts of the corpus of the trust estate of Wesley A. Tucker, deceased, and clearly showing that they did not belong to Rebecca J. Tucker or William Trump Tucker individually, were sold by the appellees — who are bankers and stock brokers — under circumstances, some of which need not be mentioned just here because having no relation to the branch of the case now being considered, but which will be stated later on when the liability of the several firms separately proceeded against comes to be discussed: That the appellees sold all the shares for the individual benefit and account of William Trump Tucker, and credited the proceeds of the sales to the individual account of *534 William Trump Tucker and paid the .proceeds by check to him individually, without indicating in any way on the face of the checks that-they represented the proceeds of the sale of stock belonging to a trust estate, and without naming Rebecca J. Tuckeras trustee or payee, and without describing William Trump Tucker; the person named as payee therein, as trustee, although the appellee firms knew full well, both from information gathered from previous dealings with William Trump Tucker, and from the fact that the certificates all showed on their face that they represented stock standing on the books of the two corporations above-mentioned, in the names of Rebecca J. Tucker and William Trump Tucker, trustees of Wesley A. Tucker, deceased, that said stock, in fact belonged to and formed part of the trust estate of the decedent: That William Trump Tucker took the proceeds of said sales, thus paid to him individually, and converted them to his own private use without accounting to his co-trustee or to the trust estate therefor; that after wasting and despoiling the trust estate to a large amount he departed to, 'and is now residing in, some place unknown, and that he is utterly insolvent: That both Rebecca J. Tucker and William Trump Tucker were subsequently removed from the trusteeship and that the Safe Deposit and Trust Company was duly appointed in their stead. The three bills contained in the record were filed by the Safe Deposit and Trust Company, the substituted trustee. In the first, certain individuals who formerly traded as Frank B. Cahn & Company, and later in conjunction with a special partner as Roberts, Cahn & Company, were proceeded against to recover from them the sum of about seventeen thousand dollars representing the proceeds of the sale of one hundred shares of the capital stock of the Merchants and Miners Transportation Company; in the second, certain individuals constituting the same firm of Roberts, Cahn & Company, were proceeded against to recover from them the sum of forty-two thousand, one hundred and thirty-eight dollars and thirty-nine cents, being the amount of the proceeds of the sale of the remaining two hundred and twenty-eight shares of *535 the Merchants and Miners Transportation Company’s stock ; and in the third, certain individuals constituting a still later firm of Roberts, Cahn & Company were proceeded against to recover from them something more than twenty thousand dollars, being the amount of the proceeds of the sales of the two hundred and eleven shares of the capital stock of the Northern Central Railway Company. The liability of all the appellees is based upon their participation in Tucker’s breach of trust.

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Bluebook (online)
62 A. 819, 102 Md. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safe-deposit-trust-co-v-cahn-md-1906.