Schloss v. Rives

159 A. 745, 162 Md. 346, 1932 Md. LEXIS 127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 8, 1932
Docket[No. 50, January Term, 1932.]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 159 A. 745 (Schloss v. Rives) 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
Schloss v. Rives, 159 A. 745, 162 Md. 346, 1932 Md. LEXIS 127 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

Digges, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the question of the validity of an order of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City allowing commissions to the appellee, a conventional trustee appointed by the will of Julius Schloss, deceased. The order appealed from is: “That James J. Rives and Florence W. Schloss, trustees, in this cause be and they are hereby allowed commissions at the rate of two and one-half per cent! on the amount of corpus of the trust estate being administered in this cause, which has been invested for the first time by the said trustees, said commissions to be equally divided between the two trustees.”

The appellant and appellee were appointed by the said will of Julius Schloss as co-executors and trustees; the appellant being the widow of the testator. The inquiry involves a construction of Item 8 of the will, which is the only part of it concerning commissions-. Item 8 provides: “I nominate as my executors, who later are to serve as trustees of my estate my widow, Florence W. Schloss, and my friend James J. Rives, and she is to be excused from giving any and all bond in either capacity, provided that in case of the death or retirement of either trustee, the survivor, with the approval of my brother William Schloss, and my brother-in-law, Leon White-hill, shall name a successor or successors, and this shall be done from time to time as the contingency may arise, and such successor or successors shall be vested with all the rights and have all the duties and responsibilities of the trustees originally named by me. Provided further that said James J. Rives is to receive as his executor’s fees, one-half of one per cent., and he or some one standing in his stead as trustee, is not to receive more than one per cent, commission on annual income, and is not to be paid anything as commission or fees for making any change in in *349 vestment.” The testator died in the year 1925 and left an estate of approximately $500,000. As construed by decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City (from which decree no appeal was taken), the will provided that the entire income from the estate should go to the widow. It made no provision for commission or compensation to Mrs. Schloss, either as executrix or trustee.

A large portion of the estate was represented by the interest of the testator in the firm of Schloss Bros. & Co. .The co-executors qualified as such, and administered the estate in the Orphans’ Court of Baltimore City, converting the estate, or the principal part thereof, into cash. In 1925, having completed the administration in the orphans’ court, they petitioned the Circuit Court of Baltimore City to assume jurisdiction, and since then, as trustees appointed under the will, have been performing their duties under the order and direction of that court, paying to Mrs. Schloss the income, and paying to the appellee one per cent, commission on the income. The appellee is a competent business man, and had been employed by Schloss Bros. & Co. in an important and responsible position for many years prior to the death of the testator. It is clear from the record that such relationship between the testator and the appellee was the moving cause for his being appointed co-executor and trustee. The record further shows that the administration of the estate in the orphans’ court, and later in the equity court, devolved upon and was performed in large measure by the appellee; that this duty has been faithfully and efficiently performed; that he received as compensation in the orphans’ ‘Court one-half of one per cent, of the estate, as provided for in Item 8 of the will; that he has so far received as compensation in the equity court one per cent, commission on the annual income from the estate, — this, also, as provided by the will. He is now asking, and has been allowed by the •order of the lower court, one and one-quarter per cent, on the amount of corpus of the trust estate which has been invested for the first time by the trustees; which amount, as shown by the Exhibit Ho. 1 filed with the testimony, is *350 $394,765.23. The compensation thus allowed to the appellee for making original investments would therefore he $4,-934.57. The appellant contends that he is not entitled to this last stated amount, because the provisions of the will, correctly construed, eliminate the same and confine the appellee, as trustee, to one per cent, of the annual income. We do not understand that the appellant contends that, if the will were silent as to compensation to the trustee, the equity courts of Baltimore City could not legally allow commissions in accordance with the established practice in those courts ; but her contention is that the language of the will effectually precludes any such allowance.

There have been many decisions of this court dealing with the allowance of commissions to executors, administrators, and trustees. From these decisions certain propositions are established as the settled law of this state: First, that the early English rule in respect to the nonallowance of commissions to conventional trustees, unless the instrument creating the trust provided for compensation, is not the rule that has prevailed in Maryland; but that beginning with the decision in Ringgold v. Ringgold, 1 H. & G. 11, it has been held that, by an equitable construction of, and by analogy to, the statutes allowing commissions to executors, administrators, guardians, and trustees under judicial sales, and the principles upon which those statutes were based, compensation should be allowed to a conventional trustee as a reasonable indemnity for services rendered by him in the discharge of his duties, although m> provision for1 such compensation is made in the instrument creating the trust. Miller's Eq. Proc., sec. 557; Perry on Trusts, secs. 916-919; Ringgold v. Ringgold, supra; Sanderson v. Pearson, 45 Md. 483; Bentley v. Shreve, 2 Md. Ch. 215; Northern Cent. Ry. Co. v. Keighler, 29 Md. 572; Whyte v. Dimmock, 55 Md. 452; Abell v. Brady, 79 Md. 94, 28 A. 817. Second, that, where the compensation of a conventional trustee is fixed in the instrument making the appointment, the same will ordinarily and generally be allowed. Mitchell v. Holmes, 1 Md. Ch. 287; Parker v. Leighton, 131 Md. 407, at page 422, 102 A. 552. *351 In Mitchell v. Holmes, where, as in this case, the same person was executor and trustee, it was said: “He has already received as executor, eight per cent, upon the personal estate now in his hands as trustee; and the answer of the defendant Holmes, insists, that the trustee is only entitled to ten per cent, commission on the gross income of the personal estate. Rut the testator has said, that he shall have ‘ten per cent, upon the whole amount of property, which may come into his hands as trustee.’ Hot upon the amount of income, but upon the amount of property, and this declaration of the testator gives the law of the case. The compensation thus fixed by the testator to be paid to the trustee, is to be paid to him as such; regarding him, when acting in that capacity, as filling an office wholly distinct from the office of executor.

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Bluebook (online)
159 A. 745, 162 Md. 346, 1932 Md. LEXIS 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schloss-v-rives-md-1932.