Snyder v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.

48 A. 719, 93 Md. 225, 1901 Md. LEXIS 24
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 14, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 48 A. 719 (Snyder v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co.) 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
Snyder v. Safe Deposit & Trust Co., 48 A. 719, 93 Md. 225, 1901 Md. LEXIS 24 (Md. 1901).

Opinion

Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves the construction of certain clauses of the will of the late Richard H. Pleasants, and is taken from a pro forma decree of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City passed in a special case stated under the 47th Equity Rule, by which decree it was determined that the power given by the testator in the eleventh clause of his will to J. Hall Pleasants, trustee, to sell the testator’s real estate, devolved upon the appellee as his successor in the trust. After making certain *226 bequests to his wife and sons and other relatives, he devised and bequeathed by the sixth clause of his will all the residue of his estate of every description, to his brother, “J. Hall Pleasants, and his successors,” in trust for the sole use and benefit of the testator’s wife during her life, and in further trust after her death to divide the same into six equal parts, and to transfer and convey one of these parts to each of his four sons, and to hold in trust one of these parts for each of his two daughters.

In the seventh clause he directed that if for any reason his brother, the trustee named, should not make the partition above mentioned, then such partition should be made by “The Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Philadelphia.”

The eleventh clause, which contains the power of sale, is in these words: “I hereby invest my trustee, J. Hall Pleasants, with full power and authority to sell, or in any manner dispose of, and by his sole deed or deeds to grant and convey, lease and demise, any part or parts, or all of any real or leasehold property, which he iñay think proper to sell or dispose of, and to invest the proceeds of sale or sales under the provisions of this my will.”

J. Hall Pleasants and the testator’s wfidow were made co-executors of the will, and the twelfth clause of the will directed that as soon as the personal estate should be administered, and the trustee should have received from the executors the personal property belonging to the residue of the estate, he should transfer and deliver to The Fidelity Insurance, Trust and Deposit Company of Philadelphia, all stocks, bonds, or other obligations to pay money, and mortgages upon lands located without the State of Maryland, to be held by it as trustee under the will for the uses and trusts previously declared as to the said residue of his estate, and also directed that upon the death or resignation of the trusteeship by his brother, “The Safe Deposit and Trust Company of Baltimore” should succeed him as trustee of and for the real estate belonging to the trust estate. The personal estate having been duly adminis *227 tered, The Fidelity Insurance Trust and Safe Deposit Company of Philadelphia declined to accept the trust as to the securities and obligations beyond the State of Maryland, and the said J. Hall Pleasants was, on his petition, relieved of his duties as trustee under the will,'and the appellee was by order of Court appointed trustee in his place and stead, and he thereupon transferred and delivered to the appellee the residue of the personal estate belonging to the trust estate, and the appellee is now administering that trust. Subsequently J. Hall Pleas-ants also resigned the trusteeship of the'real estate, and the appellee has succeeded him in this trust.

On September 29th, 1900, the appellee contracted to sell to the appellants a portion of said real estate, being the country home of the testator, for $15,000, “the title to be good and merchantable, or the sale to' be declared off.” 'The appellants allege that the appellee cannot convey a good and merchantable title, because the power of sale vested in J. Hall Pleasants does not devolve upon the appellee, and that such title can only be secured through a proceeding' in equity to which all persons in interest are made parties. The case stated presents the two following questions for decision :

“1st. Did the power to sell testator’s'real estate, vested in J. Hall Pleasants, trustee, under the will of the testator, devolve upon the plaintiff upon the resignation of J. Hall Pleasints, trustee, under said will ?

“2nd. Will a deed, executed, acknowledged and delivered by the plaintiff to the defendants, convey the whole title that the testator had at the time of his death, in fee-simple, to the lands and improvements contracted to be sold ?”

Both these questions were by the pro forma decree' answered in the affirmative, and the defendants were required to perform and carry out their contract of purchase; but we are of opinion that the power of sale did not devolve upon the appellee and that the pro forma decree should be reversed.

In all such cases the question is one purely of intention, to be ascertained from a fair construction' of the whole will, and the nature and objects of the trust thereby created, and the *228 cardinal principle by which this Court has been governed in determining the devolution of such a power has been so well and plainly stated in the last reported case upon this subject that we restate it here. In Mercer v. Safe Deposit Company, 91 Md. 119, the Court said: “If upon such construction of the instrument, it appears that the power lodged with the trustees in connection with the trust, is a special confidence reposed in the particular trustee, or set of trustees, or is to be exercised only upon his or their personal judgment and discretion, such power can only be exercised by the designated donees, and will not pass to the substituted trustees. On the other hand, if it appears that the power is annexed to the office of the trustee for the purposes of the trust, and to promote its objects, then it will pass with the trust to the successors of the original trustees, and can be exercised by them.” _

An illustration of the latter class of cases is found in Druid Heights Park Company v. Oettinger, 53 Md. 46. .There the testator directed the accumulation of a fund of $20,000 to produce an annuity for the benefit of his wife for her life, and gave to his executors, who were also trustees under his will, power in both capacities to sell and dispose of any part of his real estate for the purpose of raising this fund. Myers was subsequently appointed trustee, in place of the original trustees, both of whom had died, and it was held that the power of sale passed to him, because the prime purpose of the testator was to provide this fund by the sale- of the real. estate if required for the purpose, and if the power were denied to the substituted trustee, the estate could not be. made productive and available for the cestui que trust, and it must be understood the testator intended the discretionary power to attach to the office of trustee he was creating. Another example of the same class of cases is found in Safe Deposit and Trust Co. v. Sutro, 75 Md.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A. 719, 93 Md. 225, 1901 Md. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snyder-v-safe-deposit-trust-co-md-1901.