Court Opinion

ID: 5548551
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-10 21:23:30.855815+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:34:59.575100
License: Public Domain

The Chancellor.
After reading the very able and lucid opinion of the vice chancellor, upon the main question which arises on this appeal, very little remains to be said in reference to the appellant’s claim to the bond and mortgage, under the assignment to him by Van Beuren, one of the mortgagees. I concur in opinion with the vice chancellor that this attempt of Van Beuren to sell the bond and mortgage, which had been taken upon the sale of the real estate, without the consent of his co-trustee and when money was not wanted for the purposes of distribution according to the directions of the will, was a palpable breach *57of trust. Although one of the daughters had then died, the share of her children in the proceeds of the sale of the Broadway lots was but one third of the $22,500 for which those lots were sold; and the executors had already received more than that third of the proceeds of the sale exclusive of this bond and mortgage. And the will having directed the funds belonging to the estate to be put out upon areal security, until they were wanted for the purposes of distribution, it was also a gross breach of trust to loan such funds upon the marine securities mentioned in Yan Beuren’s answer.
The appellant undoubtedly advanced his money without being aware of the fact that Yan Beuren was selling the bond and mortgage without the knowledge and consent of his co-executor and trustee ; and if it had been a bond and mortgage given to the testator in his lifetime, the assignee would, unquestionably, have acquired the legal title to'these securities under the assignment of one of the executors alone. Executor’s, as such, are regarded in law ,as one person ; and therefore if one of them sell the goods or the securities of the testator to a bona fide purchaser, who has no reason to suspect that such executor is committing a breach of trust, such purchaser will have a right to hold the same not only against the executors but also as against creditors and legatees. This is founded upon the general principle that, where the equities of the parties are equal, and one of them has obtained the legal title without notice of the prior equity of the other, this court will not interfere to deprive the party who has equal equity of the legal advantage he has gained, as a bona fide purchaser or assignee. If a promissory note is given to the testator, or a bond and mortgage are given to him in his lifetime, the endorsement of the note by one executor, or the assignment of the bond and mortgage by him, would be sufficient to transfer the legal title to such security to a purchaser thereof. And if the purchase, in such a case, was made in good faith, a court of equity would not interfere. The appellant’s counsel, however, is under a mistake in sup*58posing that a security given to two or more executors jointly, stands upon the same footing ; so as to authorize one of the executors to transfer the legal title to the security without the concurrence of his co=executors. For in such a ease the legal title to the security is in all the executors jointly, in the same manner as if it had been given to them as trustees under an' ordinary trust; and the concurrence of all the executors is necessary to transfer the legal title of the security, to the purchaser thereof. (Smith v. Whiting, 9 Mass, Rep. 334.) The appellant, or his counsel, under whose superintendence the purchase of this bond and mortgage was made, had therefore no right to presume that Van Beuren could sell and convey a good title to this bond and mortgage without the concurrence of his co-executor; even if he had supposed it was a security for monies belonging to the estate arising from the testator’s personal property merely. There is a manifest distinction between the right of one of two joint payees of a note or of a bond and mortgage, to receive the monies due thereon, and the right of. one without the consent of the other to sell or assign the security to a third person. In the first case the payment of the debt to one of the obligees is a legal discharge of the liability of the debtor. And if it has been paid in good faith, without notice of any equity in favor of a third person which should have induced the debtor to withhold such payment, the legal discharge of the debt will protect him, in chancery as well as at law, against parties whose equities are only equal to his. But in the second case, as the sale, or assignment, by one of two or more joint obligees, who are not copartners, cannot have the effect to give to the purchaser of the security the legal title to the same, the equity of the cestui que trust must prevail; upon the principle that he who is prior in time is strongest in right where the equities of the parties are equal in other respects. (Lepard v. Vernon, 2 Vesey & Beame. 51. Tourville v. NHiash, 3 Peer Wms. Rep. 308.) The decision of Chancellor Kent in Sutherland v. Brush, (7 John. Chan. Rep. 17,) appears to be inconsistent with *59this view of the case, so far at least as his decree went to maintain the assignment of the bond and mortgage given to Palmer and Crosby jointly, upon the supposition that Palmer had not consented to that assignment, which was in fact made by Crosby only. It is evident, however, that my learned predecessor in that case overlooked the distinction between the sale by one executor of a security given to the testator, and the sale by him of a security given to him and his co-executor jointly without the consent of such co-executor. There is another substantial objection to that decision, which is, that Brush was not a bona fide purchaser so as to entitle him to protection as to any of the securities as against the complainants, although he had not notice of the fact that they belonged to the estate at the time of such assignment. Brush paid nothing upon the assignment to him ; nor did he assume any responsibility or discharge any available security upon the faith of that assignment. But the assignment was made as a mere security to indemnify against a responsibility previously assumed. The decision, therefore, was directly in conflict with the principle which the learned chancellor had himself distinctly recognized and acted upon in the ease of Coddington v. Bay, (5 John. Ch. Rep. 54,) and which had received the sanction of the court of dernier resort a few days before the case of Sutherland v. Brush was decided. (See 20 John. Rep. 637.)
In the present case the appellant was chargeable with notice, or rather he had actual notice, that the mortgage was held by the two exeutors in the character of trustees for the sale of the real estate under the will. On the face of the mortgage it only appeared that it was money due to them as executors. But CL Bogert, who was entrusted by the .appellant to make the arrangement for the purchase of the bond and mortgage, unquestionably must have inquired into the title to the mortgaged premises. And if so, he necessarily ascertained that the mortgage was taken for the purchase money on a sale under the trust power in the will. In addition to this, he was examined as a witness for the *60appellant and proves that he also had notice that it was a mortgage taken by the executors upon a sale of real estate. He states that a short time before the assignment the appellant informed him that Dr. Van Beuren had spoken to him respecting the purchase of a bond and mortgage taken by Van Beuren and Wyckoff as the executors of Dover, for the balance of the consideration money on the sale of the Broadioay property, &c. The principal, therefore, as well as his attorney, must have known the real character in which this bond and mortgage were taken and held, under the will of the testator ; and that, in point of law, it was impossible for one of the trustees to transfer a valid title to this bond and mortgage without the consent of his co-trustee, even if one of the executors alone could transfer a bond and mortgage which had been given to them jointly for a part of the personal assets of the decedent. (Lewin's Law of Trustees, 265.)
It is unquestionably hard that the appellant, who has advanced his money under such circumstances, should lose it; but it is equally so that the complainants should sustain the loss. In addition to that, the equitable maxim qui prior esi in tempore potior est in jure, is sufficient to turn the scale in their favor. There is also another equitable principle which shows that they have the better right. That principle is, that when one of two innocent persons must suffer by the wrongful act of a third party, the one who by his negligence has enabled such third person to do the injury must himself bear the loss occasioned-thereby. Here, the negligence of the appellant, in advancing his money and taking an assignment from one trustee alone, has enabled Van Beuren to commit this breach of trust. For if the attorney had not mistaken the law as to the right of Van Beuren alone to sell and assign the bond and mortgage, the result would have been that no breach of trust would have been committed. Or at least, if the co-trustee had joined in the assignment of the bond and mortgage, when the money was not wanted for distribution, he would have made himself personally liable to the complainants *61for the loss. The decree therefore, in its main features, is right and should be affirmed with costs.
A slight modification of the decree may be necessary, in a point not suggested to the vice chancellor, to enable him to make affinal decree protecting the rights of all parties on the coming in and confirmation of the master’s report. The appellant, who advanced his money upon this assignment, is entitled to protection so far as the money advanced by him was actually applied to the purposes of the trust; and so far as that money or the proceeds thereof can be traced and identified as now existing in available securities, or as being in the hands of the officers of this court so that it can be thus applied. The decree is probably broad enough now to make it the duty of the master to allow the appellant for any part of the money actually applied for the purposes of the trust, as an offset against the amount received by Bogert on the bond and mortgage. But it may not be broad enough to include any part of the fund paid to the receiver in the former suit, as testified by Walker ; and which fund may be the avails of the money received from the appellant at the time of the assignment of the bond and mortgage to him. This modification the counsel for the respondents was understood as assenting to upon the argument; and it must be made accordingly. And the amount and present situation of that fund must also be stated in the master’s report; and such fund must be transferred to the credit of this cause, so that it may be disposed of under the final decree made therein.
Decree accordingly.