Sherman v. White

62 Ill. App. 271, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 427
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJanuary 22, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 Ill. App. 271 (Sherman v. White) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman v. White, 62 Ill. App. 271, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 427 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shepard

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellee, Catherine M. White, is the widow, and sole executrix and legatee, of Hugh A. White, deceased, who died in March, 1894.

For a period of about nine years next preceding his death, Hugh A. White was trustee under the will of Francis C. Sherman, deceased, by virtue of appointment, as such, by a decree of the Circuit Court, to take the place of certain former trustees. As such trustee he had charge of what is known as the Sherman House property, in the city of Chicago, and was in receipt of a large income therefrom.

The said will of Francis C. Sherman provided, in terms, that the trustee therein named, and his successor, should . “ hold and manage said Sherman House property * * * during the natural life of my said wife and children, and until the death of the last survivor of them, and until the youngest child of any and all of my said children shall become and be of the age of twenty-one years, and then convey the same to the heirs of my said children, the heirs of each child representing and being entitled to one equal share.”

After the death of said White, the appellant James H. Swan was appointed, in like manner, his successor, and by the decree appointing Swan, the appellee was directed to. pay over to him all the moneys in her hands belonging to said Sherman trust, and to account with him in reference to the affairs of the trust.

This bill was filed by said Swan as trustee, and all persons now living who are interested in said trust, viz., the two surviving children of said Francis C. Sherman, and their respective children, to enforce the accounting so ordered.

The controversy is confined to certain railroad stocks bought by White with the money of the estate, and certain commissions received by White on insurance premiums paid by him.

. One of the provisions of a codicil to said will was as follows :

“I direct that the compensation to be received by any trustee in said will contemplated for the performance of any duty of any kind or description, as such trustee, shall not exceed fifteen hundred dollars per annum.”

As to the railroad stocks, it appears that on February 25, 1888, White purchased, with the funds in his hands belonging to said trust, 100 shares of the stock of the Chicago, Bock Island and Pacific Bailroad Company for §11,300; and again, on October 27, 1888, he purchased another 100 shares of the same stock, and 100 shares of Missouri Pacific Bailroad Company stock, paying therefor funds of the estate to the amount of §18,150, making a total, so used, of $29,450. The certificates for said stock were taken by White in his individual name, and not as trustee.

It appears that White was accustomed to make reports every six months, showing his receipts and disbursements, to the heirs of the estate, who are the appellants with Swan, the trustee; and that two of the heirs were not of age when the stocks were bought, and that one of them did not become of age until in 1892.

Accordingly, in his report of July 1, 1888, which was the report next following the purchase of the first 100 shares of Rock Island stock, it was made to appear that he had bought for the estate some stock in that company, but without specifying how many shares, to the amount of $11,300, and had received a dividend thereon.'

In his report of January 1, 1889, which was the one next following the purchase of the 100 shares in the Missouri Pacific company, and another like number of shares in the Rock Island company, he made no mention of having purchased those stocks, but, presumably, in order to account for the money paid for them, his report stated as follows : “Pd. Winchester & Co., acc’t loan; Voucher No. 249, $18,150.”

In that same report, under the heading of investments and assets, he stated: “ To cash invested in railroad securities, $29,450.”

This amount of $29,450 was the aggregate of his stock purchases as already stated, and it is carried along in all subsequent reports down to and including July 1, 1890, under the heading of investments as, “ Cash invested in railroad securities.”

Prom that date it is successively called, “ Cash invested in R. R. stock,” and “ invested in stocks,” until in the last report of January 1, 1894, it is denominated under the heading of “ resources,” as “ Sundry railroad stocks (cost), $29,450.”

Wherever in the reports there occurs a statement of receipts from the railroad companies, it is usually as interest' but is sometimes mentioned as dividends.

In none of the reports is it stated, except inferentially, that any Missouri Pacific stock had ever been bought for the estate, or was held by it, and in but one report, that of July 1, 1892, was it ever stated how many shares of stock in either company was owned by th'e estate. In that report it is parenthetically stated that the estate has 200 shares of Rock Island stock. And in no report, nor in any other manner, until after Mr. White’s death, was it made known to the heirs that all or any of the stocks stood in his individual name.

These matters are here mentioned because of their possible significance in connection with the question to be considered later on with reference to the knowledge and acquiescence, by the appellant Sherman heirs, in those investments, as claimed by the appellee.

The moneys so used by the trustees were derived from the rents of the. particular Sherman House property ivhich was the subject or body of the trust. That property was incumbered by mortgage, which would mature in July, 1892, to the extent of $450,000, at the time these surplus funds were so used, and it was probably the duty of the trustee, under the will, to accumulate and temporarily invest the surplus rents until such times as they could be applied in liquidation of such incumbrance.

Such seems to have been the reasonable intention of the testator, Francis C. Sherman, for, by his will, he directed the trustee to pay from such rents only certain limited sums to his wife and children respectively, and to apply the remainder to the payment of said indebtedness until the same should be fully paid.

In the nature of an ordinary mortgage indebtedness, payments by way of application thereon are not permissible whenever it may suit the convenience of the mortgagor, and it would, therefore, be but to apply a reasonable and common rule to the trustee to require him to use reasonable diligence to employ at interest such considerable sums as may come to his hands during the period that they must await opportunity for application upon the indebtedness which their accumulation is intended to discharge.

Whether, after such surplus rents were accumulated,, they constituted an augmentation or increment to the body of the trust estate, viz., the Sherman House property, or were properly mere income, and not principal, we do not care to follow the arguments of counsel concerning, for we regard the duty of the trustee toward the same as unaffected thereby. His trust duties toward the same, under the terms of the will, were to collect, hold and apply the same as di: rected.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Will of Gleeson
124 N.E.2d 624 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1955)
Corby v. Seventy-One Hundred Jeffery Avenue Building Corp.
60 N.E.2d 236 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1945)
Hill v. Hill
82 A. 338 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1912)
Jarrett v. Johnson
116 Ill. App. 592 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 Ill. App. 271, 1895 Ill. App. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-white-illappct-1896.