The Pennsylvania Company, C. v. Gillmore

59 A.2d 24, 142 N.J. Eq. 27, 1948 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63, 41 Backes 27
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 30, 1948
DocketDocket 148/78
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 59 A.2d 24 (The Pennsylvania Company, C. v. Gillmore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Pennsylvania Company, C. v. Gillmore, 59 A.2d 24, 142 N.J. Eq. 27, 1948 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63, 41 Backes 27 (N.J. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinion

Frederick Hemsley died March 15th, 1915, leaving a last will and testament which was duly probated in the office of the surrogate of Atlantic County. This last will and testament, among other things, created several trusts and designated The Pennsylvania Company for Insurance on Lives and Granting Annuities as trustee. For each of his three grandchildren, Quincy A. Gillmore, Jr., Frances West Hemsley Gillmore (now Williams) and Frederick Hemsley Gillmore, the decedent created three separate trusts of $25,000 each, for which he bequeathed $75,000 to the designated *Page 29 trustee. For his sister, Elizabeth H. Avery, he created a trust for which he bequeathed $50,000 to the designated trustee. With the residue of his estate he created a trust for his widow and his daughter, Frances West Hemsley Gillmore.

No accounting was filed by the trustee until 1944. To this accounting the life tenants and remaindermen filed exceptions. The matter was thereupon referred to Hiram Steelman, Esquire, a special master, to audit the accounts and to hear and report upon the exceptions. This matter is now before us upon exceptions taken to the report of the special master. Exceptions were so taken both by the life tenants and the remaindermen and by the trustee. For the purpose of convenience we shall hereafter refer to the life tenants and remaindermen as the exceptants and to the trustee as the accountant.

The original exceptions taken by the exceptants were directed entirely at the investments by the accountant in mortgages, the security for which was real estate located in the State of Pennsylvania. These mortgages included not only whole mortgages but as well participations in mortgages and real estate mortgage bonds.

For a concise statement, the objections of the exceptants may be classified as follows: (1) that the trustee had no authority to invest in mortgages, parts of mortgages or real estate mortgage bonds where the real estate which was security for the mortgages was located in the State of Pennsylvania; (2) that participations in mortgages or real estate mortgage bonds were illegal investments because the issuing companies had not complied with the law of the State of New Jersey; (3) that some of the mortgages, mortgage participations and real estate mortgage bonds were illegal investments because of the nature and value of the real estate mortgaged; (4) that the trustee should be surcharged because it failed to properly diversify its investments and invested too large a portion of the corpus of the estate in mortgages, mortgage participations and real estate mortgage bonds.

In addition to contesting the several grounds heretofore set forth as the basis of the exceptants' claim for liability on *Page 30 the part of the accountant, the trustee affirmatively alleges as defenses (1) that the exceptants are estopped from disputing the legality of the investments because of an implied approval, and laches; (2) that the breaches of the trustee's duty, if any occurred, were mere technical breaches, and that because of the lack of fraud or bad motive they are absolved from any resulting loss; (3) that the management of the estate generally shows a profit. In addition, both the exceptants and the accountants attack the allowance of interest as made by the special master on the investments which he conceived were illegal.

For the purpose of a clear understanding of the exceptions and the law involved, these several exceptions will be treated in the order hereinabove set forth.

I.
INVESTMENTS IN MORTGAGES WHERE THE SECURITY WAS PENNSYLVANIA REAL ESTATE.
Exception is taken to the determination of the special master that it was legal to invest in mortgages where the land involved was Pennsylvania real estate.

All of the questioned mortgages were purchased before the passage of P.L. 1938 ch. 198, and this statute is therefore inapplicable.

At the time these investments were made the pertinent statute authorizing investments in whole or entire mortgages read as follows:

"VI. In bonds secured by first mortgage upon real estate; provided, the amount loaned upon any such bond and mortgage shall not at the time of making such loan exceed sixty per centum of the estimated worth of the real estate covered by such mortgage; provided, also, that the rate of interest upon any of the above enumerated securities in which such investments may be made shall not be less than three per centum nor more than six per centum per annum; this act shall not apply where the deed of trust, or the last will and testament of any testator, or any court having jurisdiction of the matter specially directs in what securities the trust funds shall be invested, and every such court is hereby given power to specially direct by order or orders, from time to time, additional securities in its discretion in *Page 31 which trust funds may be invested and any investment thereof made in accordance with any such special direction shall be legal, and no executor, administrator, guardian or trustee shall be held liable for any loss resulting in any such case." P.L. 1907ch. 146 p. 383 § 6.

By P.L. 1920 ch. 192 p. 377, as amended by P.L. 1922 ch. 144p. 255, and P.L. 1927 ch. 81 p. 144, the investment in parts of bonds or bonds secured by trust mortgages and in participation certificates which entitle the owner to a proportionate share in a number of mortgages under a trust agreement, was authorized. The statute as finally amended in 1927 reads in part as follows:

"1. Any executor, administrator, guardian or trustee whose duty it may be to loan moneys entrusted to him in addition to the securities in which he may invest the same under the provisions of the act to which this is a supplement, may invest the same in shares or parts of bonds secured by mortgage or bonds secured by trust mortgage, and in participation certificates or coupon bonds which shall entitle the holder to a proportionate share in a series or number of mortgages and bonds or extensions or renewals thereof, deposited under a trust agreement with a trust company, bank or title guarantee corporation organized under the laws of this State, or a national bank authorized to do business in this State, which shall be a first lien upon improved real estate, provided the amount of such mortgages shall not at the time of the making of such loan exceed sixty per centum of the estimated worth of the real estate covered by such respective mortgages at a rate of interest not less than three per centum nor greater than six per centum per annum; * * *."

For present purposes, the phraseology concerning any limitation on the word "mortgages" was not changed from 1920 to 1927, and continued as above set forth during the entire period during which the accountant purchased such bonds or participation certificates.

It is conceded that the statutes did not, by their express terms, restrict investments to mortgages encumbering New Jersey real estate. The theory advanced by exceptants is that in no event were mortgages encumbering real estate, the situs of which was beyond the New Jersey boundary, a good investment.

As authority they cite McCullough's Executors v. McCullough,44 N.J. Eq. 313; 14 Atl. Rep. 123, and Macy v. MercantileTrust Co., 68 N.J. Eq. 235; 59 Atl. Rep. 586. *Page 32

In McCullough's Executors v. McCullough, supra

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Bluebook (online)
59 A.2d 24, 142 N.J. Eq. 27, 1948 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 63, 41 Backes 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-pennsylvania-company-c-v-gillmore-njch-1948.