Wilcox v. Hubbell

163 N.W. 497, 197 Mich. 21, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 551
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1917
DocketDocket No. 12
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 163 N.W. 497 (Wilcox v. Hubbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilcox v. Hubbell, 163 N.W. 497, 197 Mich. 21, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 551 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Ostrander, J.

William Wilcox, 83 years of age, and a bachelor, of Honeoye Falls, Monroe county, N. Y., a small village about 16 miles from Rochester, died December 22, 1912, at Honeoye Falls, intestate. His sister, Lorinda Kendall, George Hubbell, son of a deceased gister, Susan Riehards, a daughter of another deceased sister, Raymond H., Sanford P., Louise M., Robert C., and Marion Wilcox, of Grand Rapids, Mich., children of Frederick P. Wilcox, a nephew of the deceased, survived him. Robert C. and Marion Wilcox are infants, represented by their mother as next friend. On the 30th day of October, 1912, William Wilcox, by an instrument executed in the county of Monroe, in the State of New York, duly acknowledged on the same day before a notary public for that county, sold and assigned, transferred and set over to the Michigan Trust Company, of Grand Rapids, 86 mortgages, described in said instrument, together with the notes, bonds, or other obligations to which the mortgages were collateral. On the same date he executed another instrument, to which he and the Michigan Trust Company, of Grand Rapids, are' parties, which excepting the acknowledgments thereto, is here set out:

“This agreement made this 30th day of October, 1912, in duplicate, by and between William Wilcox, of Honeoye Falls, Monroe County, N. Y., and the Michigan Trust Company of Grand Rapids, Mich., hereinafter called the trustee, witnesseth:
“(1) Said Wilcox has a number of notes secured by mortgages on real estate in Kent county, Mich., and he desires to be relieved of the same. He has this day assigned all of said notes and mortgages to said trustee, and he may from time to time place in the hands of said trustee moneys and other property, all of said notes, mortgages, moneys, and other property [24]*24to be held by the said trustee in accordance with the terms of this instrument.
“(2) Said trustee shall manage and control all of the property turned over to it under this agreement in such manner as it shall deem best. It shall have the right to invest and reinvest the principal of all moneys coming into its hands under this agreement in interest-bearing or income-producing notes, mortgages, bonds, or other securities. It shall have the right to sell and assign all or any part of the properties now or hereafter embraced in this trust, at such times and at such prices and upon such terms as said trustee may deem to be for the best interest of the trust. It shall have the right to take all legal steps and institute and conduct all suits or legal proceedings, either in its own name or in the name of said Wilcox, which may be necessary or proper for the purpose of realizing on or collecting any sums which may be due on any of the securities embraced in this agreement. It shall have the right to pay all taxes and assessments which may be levied upon any property embraced in this agreement, as well as all taxes, assessments, and insurance premiums upon properties covered by real estate mortgages and which the trustee may deem it necessary or proper to pay in order to protect the interests of the trust. Said trustee shall have the right to make such other and further disbursements as in the judgment of said trustee may be necessary or suitable for the proper care and management of the property embraced in this trust. The trustee is authorized to make such disbursements out of the funds belonging to this trust or to advance moneys therefor if it deem it best so to do, such advances to be refunded to said trustee out of said trust property.
“(3) Said trustee shall be held to no obligation under this agreement, save the exercise of good faith and ordinary diligence in the discharge of those duties which by the terms of this agreement it has undertaken.
“ (4) The trustee shall keep a true account of all the affairs of the trust and shall on the 1st days of January and July in each year, or as soon thereafter as is reasonably practical, render to said Wilcox a statement of its receipts and disbursements as such trustee [25]*25during the six months preceding, keeping separate the principal of the trust fund from the income therefrom, and shall also render to the said. Wilcox such a statement at any time whenever requested so to do.
“(5) The trustee shall receive for its services under this agreement one-half of 1 per cent, per annum of the principal of said trust fund, to be paid semi-annually from the income from said trust fund. If the principal of the trust fund is increased by additions thereto made by said Wilcox, or in any other manner, the trustee’s fees shall be increased proportionately. The trustee shall also deduct from said income all reasonable expenses or charges of whatsoever kind or nature, including attorney and counsel fees, tó which said trustee shall be put in the performance of the trust or obligations created by this agreement, or by reason of its connection with the properties embraced in this agreement, or the management or discharge thereof.
“(6) The net income from the trust fund in the hands of said trustee under this agreement, after payment of its fees and expenses, shall be paid to the said Wilcox from time to time in such amounts as he may request. Should the said Wilcox not use all the said income, he may from time to time direct the said trustee to transfer any part of such accumulated income to the principal of the trust created by said instrument, and the same shall thereupon and thereafter be in all respects a part of the principal of the trust fund and be subject to all the provisions of this instrument governing such principal.
“(7) The trust created by this instrument shall terminate upon the death of the said Wilcox. All moneys then in the hands of said trustee from the income of the trust created by this instrument shall, after the payment of the trustee’s fees and expenses as hereinbefore provided, be paid by the said trustee as the said Wilcox may by his will direct, or in default of such will to his heirs at law. The principal of said trust fund, including all properties and rights of every name and nature, shall, upon the death of the said Wilcox be transferred and delivered by the said trustee as follows, viz.: To the children of his late nephew, Frederick P. Wilcox, Louise M. Wilcox, Eaymond H. [26]*26Wilcox, Sanford P. Wilcox, Robert C. Wilcox, and Marion Wilcox, in equal shares, share and share alike.
“It is agreed that said William Wilcox and said trustee may at any time within two years from date, by mutual instrument, executed with the same formalities and in the same manner as this instrument is executed, provide for a different disposition at the termination of said trust of the property constituting the principal of the trust fund hereby created.
(Copy) (M. T. Co.) (Seal)
In witness whereof, the said William Wilcox has hereunto set his hand and seal and the said trustee has caused these presents to be executed by its proper officers and its corporate seal to be hereto affixed the day and year first above written.
William Wilcox. (Seal.)
The Michigan Trust Company,
By Lewis H. Withey,
President.
and George Hefferan,
Secretary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 N.W. 497, 197 Mich. 21, 1917 Mich. LEXIS 551, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-v-hubbell-mich-1917.