Court Opinion

ID: 3869200
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 09:03:26.437635+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:51:38.591040
License: Public Domain

The question raised by the bill and answers is whether a sum of money in the hands of the respondent Ames, as trustee under the will of James M. Clarke, deceased, is to be regarded as a part of the principal of the trust estate or as income.
The question arises on the following facts: The testator, on or about April 21, 1885, purchased for the sum of $9,000, at a sale under a mortgage given by John Erastus Lester to the Citizens Savings Bank, a certain parcel of land situated in Johnston known as the Lester Estate, and thereupon entered into and continued in possession of it to the time of his decease. Subsequently thereto, and while the estate was in the possession of the trustee under the will, Lester, the mortgagor, filed a bill to redeem against the Citizens Savings Bank as the mortgagee of the estate, and on July 8, 1893, obtained a decree of this court permitting the redemption of the estate on payment to the mortgagee of $16,797.28. Lester paid this sum to the bank, and thereupon regained possession of the estate. On an accounting by the bank with the respondent Ames, as trustee, $12,475.75 of the money paid to the bank as the condition of redemption was found due to Ames, and was paid to him by the bank. The difference between the sum thus received by the trustee and the $9,000 paid by the testator for the estate on its purchase, to wit, $3,475.75, is the sum in controversy.
The complainant, who is the beneficiary for life under the trust created by the testator, and entitled in the first instance to the income of the trust estate, claims that the fund should be paid to her as part of the income, while the respondents Shewell and Sprague, who on the death of the complainant will become beneficiaries under the trust, contend that it is to be deemed part of the principal of the trust estate. The ground of the complainant's claim is that the money in question was paid to the trustee as interest on the $9,000 paid by the testator, from the date of the mortgage sale to the time of the accounting by the bank with the trustee.
We do not think that the claim of the complainant can be maintained. The investment of the $9,000 in the purchase *Page 403 
of the real estate was made by the testator. It was real estate which passed to the trustee under the trust, and the complainant as beneficiary received the income of it as a part of the trust estate down to the time of the redemption. When the $12,475.75 came into the hands of the trustee to take the place of the real estate which had been taken away from the trust estate by the redemption, it represented the value of, and was substituted for, that real estate, which had constituted a part of the capital of the trust estate. That in ascertaining the value of that real estate as between the bank and the trustee, as representative of the purchaser at the mortgage sale, interest was paid on the price paid for it by the testator, does not, as it seems to us, affect the question. The important fact is that the money paid by the bank to the trustee took the place of the land of which the trust estate had been deprived by the redemption. In Gibson v.Cooke, 1 Met. 75, damages for the taking of land for a railroad were held to be substituted capital of the trust estate, of which the land had formed a part, and not income. Again, in Heard v.Eldredge, 109 Mass. 258, money paid to a corporation for a part of its real estate taken by right of eminent domain, when distributed as a dividend to the shareholders, was held to belong to the capital and not the income of a trust fund invested in shares. See also Holland v. Cruft, 3 Gray, 162, 180, in which the court remarks: "The principle therefore appears to be fully settled, both upon well considered reasons of justice and expediency, and upon a series of authorities, that where land is devised as real estate, and either by the direction of the testator himself, or by operation of law, such real estate is converted into money for the purpose of better investment, or for any other purpose consistent with the design and purpose of the ultimate destination to which the real estate was appropriated, there the money is substituted for, and stands in the place of the devised real estate, and shall go to the same persons and in the same proportions, and vest in possession and enjoyment at the same times and upon the same contingencies, which would have affected the real estate, had it remained specifically in real estate." *Page 404 
We decide that the fund in question is to be deemed principal and not income of the trust estate.