Woddrop v. Weed

26 A. 375, 154 Pa. 307, 32 W.N.C. 189, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 884
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1893
DocketAppeal, No. 220
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 26 A. 375 (Woddrop v. Weed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woddrop v. Weed, 26 A. 375, 154 Pa. 307, 32 W.N.C. 189, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 884 (Pa. 1893).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Thompson,

P. R. Weed, who died April 1st, 1882, by his will devised all his property real and personal and mixed whatsoever the same majr be and wheresoever the same may be to his brother Mills B. Weed in trust nevertheless for the following uses and purposes, to wit: That he shall possess, hold and manage the same and conduct, carry on the business and trade, barter and buy and sell and do all things that may appertain to said estate, its business or its products, and make such investments and purchases for the property real and personal as he may deem for the best interests of the property. If he shall deem it judicious to do so he is authorized to make sale of any part or parts óf the estate hereby devised and give title therefor, and with proceeds of such salé he is authorized to make such investments, and generally to do such acts and things incident to the carrying on of the business for the benefit of the cestui que trusts hereinafter named as he may deem judicious. That said Mills B. Weed in consideration of the services rendered by him shall receive a reasonable support out of the trust funds for personal services rendered. The trust was to continue-during life of Mills B. Weed. After deducting all the expenses, he was directed to pay out of the net income annually to the testator’s wife one fourth, the wife of Mills B. Weed one fourth, to his son one fourth, and one fourth to the education of the children of Mills B. Weed and Mary Weed.

At the time of the death of F. R. Weed he was engaged in conducting a banking business as F. R. Weed & Company, a lumber business in firm name of Weed & Allen, and also did business at Trout Run, having a country store there. Mills B. Weed, as trustee of the estate thus devised, continued these several branches of business in which the testator had been [311]*311engaged. While thus conducting these businesses the trust estate became insolvent and the master finds as a fact that Mills B. Weed was also insolvent. While the estate was thus insolvent Mills B. Weed, as trustee, and in the name of Weed & Allen, on March 16, 1891, executed and delivered to J. J. Croker in trust a promissory note for $76,758.71 with a warrant of attorney to confess judgment thereon, and on Maz-ch 17,1891, judgment was entered thereon. On March 16, 1891, said Weed as trustee azid in the name of Weed & Allen executed and delivered to the First National Bank of Owega, New York, another promissory note for $25,000, with warrant of attorney to confess judgment, azid ozi March 17, 1891, judgment was entered-thereon. On March 17, 1891, executions were issued on these judgmezzts.' On March 19,1891, said trustee executed, and delivered to J. J. Crocker and J. Clinton Hill a deed of assignment of all propez-ty of said estate izz trust to pay the creditors.

Two questions arise in this case, whether the said trustee, the estate being insolvezit, could by confessing the judgments in question enable the pez-sons. to whom they were given to obtain a preference over other creditors of the trust estate, and whether the trustee had aziy authority to execute the deed of assignment of the trust estate for the benefit of its creditors.

The business of F. R. Weed deceased was continued by Weed as trustee for the estate. The character and nature of the different kinds of business required large credits. The basis of a banking business is necessarity credit. That of the lumbering business by reason of the magnitude of the operations demands a resort to credit, and that of a large country store almost by necessity requires extensive credit. These credits thus required in the business were obtained by the trustee in conducting the same, azzd the creditors, upon the faith of the trust estate, gave them. The trustee so dealt with them for the trust estate, and his authority to do so was contained in the will creating the trust. He was authorized by it tp conduct and carry on busizzess and trade, barter, buy and sell in and for all things that pertain to said estate, its business or its products. As a trustee he had complete power to deal with the trust estate to aziy extent that he- might deem for its best interests in obtaining credit for the conduct of the business. Occupying this [312]*312position of trust and dealing with the trust estate, the creditors dealt with him. While the wife and the others are named in the will as cestui que trusts, there came into existence, by reason of the power of the trustee, the estate embarked in trade, the credit given the trust estate in the business, a class of persons whom equity in case of insolvency will protect by the preservation of the trust property from destruction or dissipation. This equity has its foundation in the estate which is embarked in business and to which credit has been given. “ Trust property which has been embarked in trade is primarily liable to creditors for debt, and will be applied as far as it will go to the liabilities: ” Hill on Trustees, 4th edition, star page 443. In re Garland, 10 Vesey, Jr., 110, it was said by Lond Chancellor Eldon : “ Next it is admitted they (the creditors) have the whole fund that is embarked in the trade, and in addition they have the personal responsibility of the individual with whom they deal, the only security in ordinary transactions of debtor and creditor. They have something very like a lien upon the estate embarked in trade.”

In Matthews v. Stephenson, 6 Pa. 496, it was said: “We cannot doubt but that it was the intention 'of the grantor to give the power of contracting debts upon the credit of the fund or property. Such power would seem to be necessarily implied in a general power to carry on a store. More especially as he ex presses the most unbounded confidence in his son, who was the trustee, and that he would conduct the whole business for the benefit of the beneficiaries and of the objects of the grantor’s bounty. It would be monstrous to hold that the trustee and the agent himself, altogether without property as appears from the deed of trust, should be allowed to carry on business on the strength of the trust property, according to the custom of the country, and then permit him or any one else to allege that the trust property was not liable because he was not expressly authorized to contract debts in so many words. The stock of the beneficiaries was repaired and renewed by these debts contracted; they got the benefit of them and the trust property ought to be liable.” In Baskins’ Ap., 34 Pa. 272, it was said: “As the trust funds in his hands are by the term of the deed charged with the remaining debts incurred by Thomas Stephenson under the power granted to him by that instrument, Mr. Baskins [313]*313is a trustee and liable to account as such to the creditors of the trust. But it is in his capacity as trustee that he is to account, and therefore the proper place to file and settle his account is in the court of common pleas and not in the orphans’ court.” The trust estate is primarily liable for the debts contracted upon the faith of it. As it is insolvent, and the trustee, as the master finds, is also insolvent, he became a trustee for its creditors. As such he was bound to protect all their rights and preserve the trust estate for distribution among them according'to their respective rights, and had no right to give a preference to any of them. The estate being insolvent all of its creditors stood upon an equality, and a creditor who has received a judgment for the purpose of liquidating the amount of his claim has no right to enforce said, judgment by execution to the destruction of the estate or the rights of other creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
26 A. 375, 154 Pa. 307, 32 W.N.C. 189, 1893 Pa. LEXIS 884, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woddrop-v-weed-pa-1893.