Court Opinion

ID: 5462220
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-09 19:40:00.961384+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:32:56.315554
License: Public Domain

By the Court, Ingalls, J.
The principal question arising upon the facts found in this case, is whether Brown and Ellis acquired a valid title to the property sold at the executor’s sale. Ellis was the executor, and Brown was his surety, and the auctioneer who sold the property by the procurement of Ellis. Previous to the confirmation of the sale, by the surrogate, Brown contracted with Ellis to sell and convey to him one undivided half of the premises ; which contract was consummated by a conveyance by Brown to Ellis subsequent to such confirmation, and upon the same day that Ellis, as executor, conveyed to Brown the premises sold at the executor’s sale. . The Revised Statutes (vol. 2, p. 109, § 27, Edm. ed.) provide as follows: “ The executors or administrators making the sale, and the guardian of any minor heirs of the deceased shall not directly or indirectly purchase, or be interested in the purchase of, any part of the real estate so sold. All sales made contrary to the provisions of this section shall be void. But this section shall not prohibit any such purchase by a guardian for the benefit of his ward.” The salutary principle contained in this provision of the statute, in its application to' trustees, in regard to the sale of property held *13in trust, has received the repeated, sanction.of the courts, and has been rigidly, enforced. The revisors accompanied their original report of this section with the following note: “ The general principle, that a trustee shall not purchase the trust property extended so as to make the purchase void.” In De Caters v. Le Ray De Chaumont, (3 Paige, 179,) the chancellor remarks: “ It is the settled law of the court, that the trustee for a sale cannot become a purchaser on his own account, or as the agent of another, or through the agency of another.” In Davoue v. Fanning, (2 John. Ch. 257,) Chancellor Kent says: “If a trustee, acting for others, sells an estate and becomes himself interested in the purchase, the cestui que trust is entitled to come here as of course, and set aside the purchase, and have the property re-exposed to sale,” (p. 260.) “However innocent the purchaser may be in the given case, it is poisonous in its consequences. The cestui que trust is not bound to prove, nor is the court bound to judge, that the trustee has made a bargain advantageous to himself.” In Hawley v. Cramer, (4 Cowen, 735,) the court remark: “And the fact that the purchase was made by the trustee through the intervention of a third person, or that the trustee purchased as the agent for another, makes no difference in the legal effect of the transaction, or in the application of the general rule.” In Conger v. Ring, (11 Barb. 364,) it is said: “ The rule is to be enforced with unrelenting'rigor, and is not to be limited in its application to those cases where the trustee himself sells the estate. The object is to afford the cestui que trust the most ample protection against fraud and injustice, and remove out of the way of the trustee all inducements to profit by his superior knowledge,' and all temptation to speculate upon property which he is under the most binding obligation to manage and sell to the best advantage of others.” In Moore v. Moore, (5 N. Y. 256,) it is said: “ The law does not stop to speculate' upon the probabilities that the agent has resisted temptation; *14it removes the temptation, by proclaiming in advance that he shall not acquire the property.” (Story’s Eq. Jur. § 322.) “Indeed the doctrine may be broadly stated, that executors or administrators will not be permitted, under any circumstances, to derive a personal benefit from the manner in which they transact the business or manage the assets of the estate.” (Willard’s Eq. Jur. 189.) “But it is a rule which applies universally to all who come within the principle, which principle is that no party can be permitted to purchase an interest in property and hold it for his own benefit, when he has a duty to perform in relation to such property whieh is inconsistent with the character of a purchaser on his own account, or for his individual use. And a sub-agent is just as much disqualified as an agent is, to make a purchase in opposition to the rights and interests of his principal.”
I have cited freely from the adjudged cases, for the purpose of showing the extent to which this principle is applied, and the jealousy with which such transactions are viewed by the courts. Brown was procured by Ellis, the executor, to sell the property as auctioneer, and thereby became a sub-agent of Ellis, and upon principle would seem to be within the spirit of the prohibition so firmly established and rigorously enforced by the courts, and therefore should not have been allowed to purchase the premises, even for his own benefit. It is an undisputed fact that Ellis contracted for an undivided half of the property previous to the confirmation of the sale by the surrogate, until which confirmation the sale was incomplete, and no title passed to the purchaser.' (2 R. S. p. 103, §§ 29, 30. Dayton’s Surrogate, p. 611, 3d ed. Rea v. McEachron, 13 Wend. 465.) Previous to the confirmation, Brown was not in such sense the owner of the premises as to enable him to make a valid sale thereof. He had not paid the purchase money, nor had the deed been delivered) at the *15time Ellis bargained for an interest in the property, and henee Ellis contracted for such interest before the title had passed from the estate to Brown, and while he (Ellis,) as such trustee, had control thereof, subject to the action of the surrogate’s court. In every view which can be taken of the transaction, it is quite apparent that neither Brown nor Ellis can be protected, as the purchase was a palpable violation of the statute, and in direct hostility to the well established principle that a trustee shall not be allowed, directly or indirectly, to speculate out of the trust property, or to become a purchaser thereof for his own benefit.
[Albany General Term,
December 5, 1864.
I do not think a fatal error was committed in admitting Isaac Terwilliger as a witness. He was, at the time of his admission, a party to the action. Again; it is obvious from his own testimony, and from the manner it was disposed of by the court, that no possible injury resulted to the defendants from his admission as a witness. (Best v. Starks, 24 How. Pr. 58, 61.)
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
Peckham, Miller and Ingalls, Justices.]