Court Opinion

ID: 6440618
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-25 12:16:40.598896+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:51:24.764660
License: Public Domain

Wait, J.
This is an action on a promissory note secured by a mortgage to recover a balance remaining due after foreclosure of the mortgage. The note was signed “Michael R. Gomes, Trustee,” and it is the contention of the defendant that there was error in holding him liable personally upon the note. No question is now open on the right of the plaintiff, the surviving payee of the note, to maintain an action upon it. The single question is whether the defendant is protected from personal liability by § 42 of the negotiable instruments act, G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 107. That section provides: “Where the instrument contains, or a person adds to his signature, words indicating that he signs for or on behalf of a principal, or in a representative capacity, he is. not hable on the instrument if he was duly authorized; but the mere addition of words describing him as an agent, or as filling a representative character, without disclosing his principal, does not exempt him from personal liability.” There was evidence that the note was signed by the defendant, after objection by the deceased payee, on the defendant’s assertion that he would sign only as trustee. No words in the note recited or suggested any other principal. A conveyance was made at the same time by the plaintiff to “Michael R. Gomes, Trustee,” of the land then mortgaged back to secure the note. This deed disclosed that Gomes was to hold the land as trustee for his daughter upon trusts specifically set out, which gave him authority to sell and mortgage and otherwise to deal with the property and the proceeds of sale or mortgage, for the benefit of the daughter. No beneficial interest, other than rights to compensation and expenses, was reserved to Gomes himself.
*385We fail to see here any other principal than Gomes, or any representative capacity in which he stood in signing. No words appear limiting his liability to the corpus of the trust property. Such a trustee is a principal. He represented himself. The situation is very different from that in Baker v. James, 280 Mass. 43, where the language of the note showed that the payee was dealing with a trust that was by him treated as a person for whom those who signed were acting as representatives, and this was supported by evidence corroborating such treatment. The law, however, has not yet gone to the length of giving a quasi personality to all property held in trust, so that a signature as trustee to an instrument dealing with it demonstrates acceptance of a contractual relation to the property rather than with the trustee on the part of the holder of the instrument so signed. Ordinarily one who holds property in trust is the principal in dealings with it and in negotiations relating to it; he is not the agent or representative of the property. This position may be modified by agreement in appropriate circumstances; but no such modification appears here. Such modification may appear in cases of what are sometimes called “Massachusetts trusts,” where the trustees are recognized as agents not themselves responsible upon notes of the trust. Bowen v. Farley, 256 Mass. 19, and Adams v. Swig, 234 Mass. 584, deal with such trusts, and are not controlling here.
The judge and the Appellate Division were right.

Order dismissing report affirmed.