Tschiffely v. Tschiffely

107 F.2d 191, 70 App. D.C. 386, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1939
DocketNo. 7241
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 107 F.2d 191 (Tschiffely v. Tschiffely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tschiffely v. Tschiffely, 107 F.2d 191, 70 App. D.C. 386, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717 (D.C. Cir. 1939).

Opinion

STEPHENS, Associate Justice.

The appellants, Claude Tschiffely, Dolly T. Myers, and C. Stott Tschiffely, plaintiffs below, appeal from an order of the District Court of the United States for the District of Columbia dismissing their amended complaint, upon the ground that it was wanting in equity. By this complaint, the appellants sought to establish and enforce an express trust of lands of which, as children of one Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr., deceased, they claim to be beneficiaries. The applicable section of the Statute of Frauds, D.C.Code (1929) tit. 11, § 3, which we print in the margin,1 requires that the declaration or creation of a trust of lands shall be proved by a writing. To show that they were able to satisfy this statute, the appellants set out in their complaint the writing upon which they relied. The same follows:

“Wheatlands
“April 6, 1891
“Dear .Frederick:
“I deem it expedient and more in keeping with strict business principles, that I transfer unto you or your estate the title to the Ridge Street properties. It is true that the three girls thoroughly understand that these properties are to be willed to you or to your estate by the last survivor in compensation for money loaned to repair and improve these properties, however, in the event Kate should bear children these secondary heirs might not agree to a verbal understanding in the matter, and hence any future litigation would prove distasteful and ruinous to all parties concerned.
“Affectionately your father
“Frederick A. Tschiffely”

It was alleged in the complaint that this letter was returned by Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr., to his father, with the following notation upon the back:

“Dear Pa,
“Expediency is a fine panacea in many cases, but economy is the better course to follow in this matter. To transfer titles of properties to me would incur unnecessary expenses in recording deed, and furthermore obligate me or my estate to meet any future expenditures such as taxes and necessary repairs.
“For the present we will let the matter rest as it now stands.
“Affectionately,
“F. A. Tschiffely, Jr.
“Post-office Hunting Hill, Md.”

According to the allegations of the com-* plaint, the trust said to be evidenced by the foregoing paper arose and was as follows: At some time prior to his death on July 20, 1892, Frederick A. Tschiffely, Sr., had borrowed from his son, Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr., a sum of money for the purpose of improving and repairing real properties which, subsequent to the date mentioned, became and are now known as Lot 33 in Square 513 in the City of Washington, District of Columbia, being premises numbers 437, 439, 441, 443 and 445 Ridge Street. [193]*193Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr., refused to accept a note evidencing this loan, and it was agreed between him and his father that the latter would hold the Ridge Street property in trust for the son and his heirs, subject to the use of the father and his wife, and Elizabeth Whiting Tschiffely, Linda Louise Tschiffely and Kate Stone (later Kate Stone Reichard), during their lives. The three persons last named were daughters of Frederick A. Tschiffely, Sr., and sisters of Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr. On April 6, 1891, “pursuant to and as evidence of the said trust agreement, the said Frederick A. Tschiffely, Senior, executed a declaration of trust in the form of a letter dated April 6, 1891 and sent by him to his son, Frederick A. Tschiffely, Junior.” This was the paper set forth above. Upon his death on July 20, 1892, Frederick A. Tschiffely, Sr., left a last will and testament dated August 29, 1885, by the provisions of which his three daughters above mentioned “were devised certain real estate, including improvements on Ridge Street, N. W., in Washington, District of Columbia, in fee simple subject to the payment of a certain proportion of the rents and profits from such property to the wife of the testator, Elizabeth A. W. Tschiffely, during her life.” The three daughters took title to the Ridge Street real estate “pursuant to the said will of Frederick A. Tschiffely, Senior, with full knowledge of and subject to the trust agreement hereinbefore referred to, whereby the said Ridge Street real estate was ' held by them as trustees for their own use during the lives of them and the survivor of them, the said trust to terminate and the said property to revert on the death of the survivor of them to the said Frederick A. Tschiffely, Junior, and his heirs. Pursuant to such knowledge and the terms of the trust Elizabeth Whiting Tschiffely and Kate Stone Reichard devised their interest in the said Ridge Street properties to Linda Louise Tschiffely, who was the survivor of the said three sisters.” Linda Louise Tschiffely died on August 8, 1937. By her last will and testament, she devised the Ridge Street property to Clifton L. Tschiffely (a son of Frederick A. Tschiffely, Jr., and a brother of the appellants) and Lacy Balch Tschiffely, his wife. Clifton L. Tschiffely and his wife, “although knowing of the said trust agreement intend and propose to keep and retain these properties as their own and without regard for the equities therein of these petitioners [the appellants] as children and heirs of the said Frederick A. Tschiffely, Junior, to the manifest injury and damage of your petitioners.” Clifton L. Tschiffely and Lacy Balch Tschiffely are the defendants below and the appellees here.

The complaint was dismissed upon motion of the appellees, under which the facts stated above must be taken as true. Upon these facts, the dismissal of the complaint was correct. To satisfy the statute, the writing must disclose the existence and terms of the trust and must not be equivocal, that is, equally consistent with the existence of some other type of obligation. As is stated in 1 Bogert, Trusts & Trustees, § 87, p. 304:

“In general the answer [to the question what must the writing contain] is that the writing must give a correct picture of the oral trust actually agreed upon. It must contain the trust terms which were in fact fixed. The court, on reading the memorandum, with the aid of oral evidence as to the surrounding circumstances, must be able to decree with certainty the administration of the trust actually agreed upon. . . . And an English judge has said;!2! T take it, therefore, that when this Court is called upon to establish or act upon a trust of lands by declaration or creation, it must not only be manifested and proved by writing, signed by the party by law enabled to declare the trust, that there is a trust, but it must also be manifested and proved by writing, signed as required, what that trust is.’
* * *
“But a paper which admits rights in another which are explainable on other grounds than the existence of a trust will not do. The writing must by fair interpretation state the presence of an equitable interest by way of trust, and not merely the existence of some actual or prospective beneficial interest in the land or some ill-defined duty of a moral or legal character.”

The frequently quoted language of Sir Richard Pepper Arden, Master of the Rolls, in Forster v. Hale (1798), 3 Ves.Jr., 696, 707, is: [194]

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Bluebook (online)
107 F.2d 191, 70 App. D.C. 386, 1939 U.S. App. LEXIS 2717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tschiffely-v-tschiffely-cadc-1939.