Young v. Victory

150 So. 624, 112 Fla. 66, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 2170
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedSeptember 22, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 150 So. 624 (Young v. Victory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Victory, 150 So. 624, 112 Fla. 66, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 2170 (Fla. 1933).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

On the 23rd of July, 1933, in the City of New York, twelve persons signed an instrument in writing, which they described as a “Declaration and Articles of Trust,” in which it was stated that they had agreed between themselves “and with all persons who may hereafter become interested herein, and especially with all persons' who may hereafter convey or deliver property of any kind or character to us or to our successors, as such” that they would, as *68 SUch Trustees', hold and administer all property of any kind that may be conveyed or delivered to them, or received by them as Trustees, in trust for the purposes thereafter set forth in the instrument.

The purposes set forth in the instrument are narrated in two articles. Article I contains two paragraphs, one declaring that the twelve signers of the instrument should be known and designated “in their collective capacity” as the Gulf Guaranteed Mortgage Bond Company, a trust estate,” and that in such name “so far as convenient and practicable” they shall hold, manage, control, operate,. and administer the trust estate and execute and sign all instruments. It is repeated that the name is “intended as' a designation or title of the Trustees in the collective capacity in which they shall conduct the business of the said trust estate.” The second paragraph provides that the title to property acquired under the declaration of trust “shall vest in and be held by the Trustees.” The trust estate is referred to in the paragraph as a “common law company” and the conveyance of any property to or for the use of the trust estate shall vest the title thereof in the trustees'.

Article II of the document contains thirty-seven sections in which the purposes, powers, methods of operation, rights of certificate or share holders, duration of the trust, number of “shares or units, of participative interest” and form of certificate, number of preferred shares and form of certificate are set out in full detail. Section thirty-four provides that in consideration of the fact that Edward Condon “originated the idea,” formulated the “plans” for the development of the scheme and prepared the “instruments necessary for the creation, establishment, conduct and government” of the trust estate, the trustees were “empowered, authorized and instructed” to issue and deliver to Mr. Con- *69 don ten thousand of the twenty thousand “Common Participative Shares,” which the document signed by them provided should be the total issue of such shares. The shares to be issued to Mr. Condon were to be charged to “preliminary organization account.”

Section thirty-six contained provisions designed to counteract the anticipated attempts of those who might thereafter seek to defeat the purpose or work of the trust estate.

Section thirty-three attempted to vest in the trustees in their collective capacity the “powers, functions, authority and responsibility” that “inure to any natural person or individual under the common law.” No money was to have been borrowed, debt incurred, obligations assumed or real property transferred except by the unanimous consent of all the “Trustees at the time in office” and the signature of each trustee was required to “make such transaction binding upon the trust estate.”

No provision was made for creating an estate except by the sale of shares or units. Section thirty provided that the “trust estate, and all its property of whatever kind and wherever located, shall be represented by twenty thousand (20,000) shares or units, of participative interest.” The shares would have no nominal value. The trustees were authorized to issue those certificates of participative interest “in payment for any property authorized to be purchased by the terms of this instrument at its reasonable value” or “in payment for labor performed or work done or money paid or for the purpose of developing any properties' of the trust estate” or to carry on any business.

The registered shareholders constituted the cestuis que trustent of the estate to whom the trustees were to be in no wise “liable otherwise than as this' instrument specifically” *70 provides, which specific liability to the beneficiaries of the trust the instrument fails to define.

Three officers were required to be chosen by the trustees for purposes which are not clearly set out in the instrument. The language of part of Section twenty-six pertaining to such officers, who were to be styled as President, a Secretary and a Treasurer and which purports' to define their duties, is as follows: “The duties of the officers so elected shall be such as usually devolve upon those holding like or similar positions and as stated in this instrument.”

Sections one to nine, inclusive, contain all necessary provisions for acquiring property, businesses, and leases and disposing of the same, but nowhere is any means provided for acquiring an estate except by the sale of so-called participative units or shares and preferred shares, ten thousand in number, of a par value of one hundred dollars, which latter the trustees had the power to retire in three years' at not more than one'hundred and ten dollars and accumulated interest.

One section, numbered twenty-five, provided that the “registered shareholders, for the time being, and no one else, shall be the cestui que trustent of this instrument.” It is especially declared that a “trust and not a partnership is created by this instrument and that the shareholders' are cestui que trustent only, with only such rights as are conferred upon them as such cestui que trustent hereunder, and neither the trustees' nor the shareholders, nor any of them, shall be deemed in any way liable or otherwise than as in this instrument specially provided.”

Section nineteen however provides that “no shareholder or security-owner of this trust estate shall have any title, legal or equitable, in or to the trust estate, real or personal, at any time held by the Trustees, or in or to any part there *71 of.” The trustees were to “take and hold the title, both legal and equitable, to all property conveyed or delivered to or held by them and included in the trust estate.”

So by that instrument the signers sought to create a “trust estate” without any estate or property of any character, nor with any money with which to acquire an estate except by the sale of twenty thousand “participative units or shares” of no par value and ten thousand “preferred shares” of one hundred dollars each par value. A trust in which the trustees were to hold both legal and equitable title to all property acquired, and in which the shareholders, called the “cestui q%ie trustent,” should have no interest legal or equitable whatsoever in the property to be acquired nor the, money or property with which they may have purchased the shares held by them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
150 So. 624, 112 Fla. 66, 1933 Fla. LEXIS 2170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-victory-fla-1933.