Opinion
November, 1909.
White Stanley, for plaintiff.
August Becker, for defendants.
This is an action to compel the determination of a claim to nine separate parcels of real property, situate in Niagara county, made under a written instrument executed by the plaintiff and the defendants, parties of the first and second parts, which purports to convey said lands to the defendant Edward C. Payne, as trustee for the purposes hereinafter enumerated, party of the third part. The deed is dated April 6, 1908, and duly recorded in Niagara county clerk's office. The grantors in the deed are the owners in common of the lands conveyed.
Plaintiff attacks the validity of the instrument on the ground that it creates no valid trust nor power in trust under the Real Property Law (now Laws of 1909, chap. 52, arts. 4, 5), but creates only a revocable agency for the management of the property of the parties thereto.
The portions of the deed which call for judicial interpretation read as follows: "The party of the third part shall hold the said lands and premises in trust, and convert the same into money, at such times, and in such manner, as he shall deem advisable. He shall collect, receive and receipt for the rents, income, issues and profits derived therefrom, and out of the proceeds derived from the conversion of such lands and premises, or out of the income derived therefrom, the party of the third part shall pay the taxes, assessments and insurance, together with the cost of such necessary repairs and charges as shall be incident to the management, maintenance and the protection of said lands and premises.
"The said party of the third part shall have the right and power, and it shall be legal for him, to contract for the sale of, and to sell, dispose of, and convey such parts and portions of said lands and premises, as and when he may deem it necessary so to do, and to execute, acknowledge and deliver such deeds and instruments of conveyance or transfer, as may be necessary or proper to pass title of the lands and premises so sold or disposed of, and likewise the party of the third part shall have the right and power, and it shall be lawful for him, in case of such sale or conveyance, to accept in part payment thereof a mortgage or other lien on the property so sold and conveyed, and to extend such terms of credit as he may deem advisable.
"The party of the third part shall have the right and power, and it shall be legal for him to lease any of such lands and premises, to improve the whole or any part thereof by the erection of buildings thereon, or otherwise, and generally to manage the same as in his judgment will tend to produce the best results therefrom. * * *.
" The proceeds of said lands and premises, whether derived from conversion or whether derived from rent, income or profits, shall be commingled until in the judgment of the party of the third part the separation thereof can be conveniently made. * * *.
" The net income derived from said lands and premises, and the net proceeds derived from the conversion of the same, or of any part thereof, shall, in January and July of each year, be distributed and paid over by the party of the third part to the parties entitled to the same, and in accordance with their respective title, interest and ownership in and to said lands and premises, as such title, interest and ownership existed immediately before the execution and delivery of this indenture. * * *.
"The party of the third part shall be entitled to receive as his compensation as trustee, five per cent. (5%) of the gross income and of the gross proceeds derived from said trust estate.
"The trust hereby created shall continue for the period of ten (10) years from this date, and shall terminate at the end of said ten (10) years. * * *.
"In case any part or portion of the lands and premises constituting the said trust estate remains unsold or undisposed of at the time of the termination of said trust, then the lands and premises so remaining, and all title and ownership thereto, shall revert to the parties hereto, their heirs and assigns, in conformity with their title, interest and ownership as the same existed immediately before the execution and delivery of this indenture."
The intention of the co-owners clearly is to vest, by this instrument, in one of their number, as trustee, title to the real property and sole discretionary and irrevocable authority to manage the same and its proceeds, for them, for the term of ten years. The trustee is to sell, but only at such times and in such manner and on such terms as to credit, security and the like, as he may deem advisable. He shall collect the rents and profits and pay all charges on said property. He may improve the premises by the erection of buildings thereon or otherwise. The proceeds, whether from sales or rentals, are commingled until in his judgment it is convenient to separate the same. The net income and proceeds of sales he is to divide among the co-owners semi-annually. If lands remain unsold at the termination of the trust they revert to the co-owners. Large powers are given by the grantors to the trustee, but solely for their own benefit as beneficiaries of the attempted trust. The trustee, by accepting the trust, agrees to manage and sell the property in accordance with the terms thereof.
The question is, can such a trust or power in trust, irrevocable, be validly created? However convenient and sensible this method of management of estates held in common may seem, it cannot be resorted to except in conformity with our statutes of trusts and powers.
"An express trust may be created for one or more of the following purposes:
"1. To sell real property for the benefit of creditors;
"2. To sell, mortgage or lease real property for the benefit of annuitants or other legatees, or for the purpose of satisfying any charge thereon;
"3. To receive the rents and profits of real property, and apply them to the use of any person, during the life of that person, or for any shorter term, subject to the provisions of law relating thereto;
"4. To receive the rents and profits of real property, and to accumulate the same for the purposes, and within the limits, prescribed by law." Real Property Law, § 96.
"Where an express trust relating to real property is created for any purpose not specified in the preceding sections of this article, no estate shall vest in the trustees." Real Property Law, § 99.
With us, a trust to sell is valid only where the sale is to be made for the benefit of creditors or legatees or for the purposes of satisfying a charge upon the lands. That such is not the purpose of the attempted trust to sell herein created is clear. To this extent, the trust fails. Heermans v. Burt, 78 N.Y. 259.
It is sought to uphold the deed as creating a trust to receive and apply the rents and profits of the land under subdivision 3 of section 96 of the Real Property Law, supra.
It was held in Heermans v. Burt, 78 N.Y. 259, that, where the main object of the trust is to sell and the power to rent is merely incidental, the conveyance can not be upheld as creating a trust to receive rents and profits. The purpose of this deed seems to be to empower the trustee to lease the trust estate and receive rentals as well as to sell; and, to that extent, the trust might be sustained if it did not conflict with some other restriction imposed by the statute.
It is urged that this trust is void as suspending the power of alienation for a longer period than during the continuance of not more than two lives in being. Real Property Law, § 42.
The rule is generally stated that trusts to receive rents and profits "cannot be measured by a definitive space of time, no part of a life in being" (Fowler on Real Property [2d ed.], 372, 381), and that all such trusts "necessarily suspend the power of alienation" (Chapl. Susp. Alien., § 146), because neither the trustee, nor the cestui que trust, nor both, can convey title during the term. Real Property Law, § 103.
But it seems that such a trust for a term of years does not, unless the proceeds of the sale are impressed with the trust, necessarily suspend the power of alienation; as, for example, where the trustees are vested with a power of sale whereby they may, at any time, convey an absolute fee in possession and the trust is thereby terminated and the fund released from its fetters. Robert v. Corning, 89 N.Y. 225.
In this case, however, an exercise of the power of sale would not, ipso facto, terminate the trust. The trustee is authorized to turn the proceeds of sales back into the improvement of the real estate in his discretion. It is only the net proceeds, remaining after the trustee has exercised his discretionary power as to improvement of lands, sale on mortgage or other security, and the like, which the trustee distributes to the co-owners during the term. Allen v. Allen, 149 N.Y. 280, 286; Hagemeyer v. Saulpaugh, 97 A.D. 535.
It is, therefore, a trust for a term of years and invalid under subdivision 3 of section 96, Real Property Law, supra.
It remains to be considered whether, the deed having failed to create any trust estate, a valid, irrevocable power in trust to sell is vested in the trustee.
"A power is an authority to do an act in relation to real property, or to the creation or revocation of an estate therein, or a charge thereon, which the owner, granting or reserving the power, might himself lawfully perform." Real Property Law, § 131.
It is a right to dispose of the legal estate by virtue of the statute, but it does not confer on the grantee, as such, any estate.
"A power, whether beneficial or in trust, is irrevocable, unless an authority to revoke it is granted or reserved in the instrument creating the power." Real Property Law, § 148.
A power in trust, in its essential nature, places upon the grantee thereof a duty to execute it in favor of some person or persons other than himself. It involves a form of express fiduciary obligation similar to that of an express trust and it therein differs from a mere agency, revocable at pleasure, which imposes no duty but merely grants an authority to act.
An unsuccessful attempt to create an express trust for a purpose specified in section 96 of the Real Property Law does not create a power in trust. Murray v. Miller, 178 N.Y. 316.
An express trust for a purpose not specified in said section vests no estate in the trustees; but such a trust, if it directs or authorizes the performance of any act which may be lawfully performed under a power, shall be valid as a power in trust. The real property to which the trust relates shall remain in or descend to the persons otherwise entitled, subject to the execution of the trust as a power. Real Property Law, § 99.
A trust to sell for the benefit of co-owners is not a trust specified in section 96. Can such sale be lawfully performed under a power? If so, the instrument must be upheld to that extent.
It is urged that, in order to have a valid power in trust, the beneficiary must be some person other than the grantor; that these grantors cannot create a power in trust for their own benefit and that the purpose of the attempted trust is therefore unlawful.
In the case of Fellows v. Heermans, 4 Lans. 230, it was held, Miller, J., dissenting, that a conveyance of lands in trust to sell and pay over to the grantor during his life all moneys received created a valid, irrevocable power in trust.
When the deed under consideration in the case last cited came before the Court of Appeals, that court (Heermans v. Robertson, 64 N.Y. 346, and Heermans v. Burt, 78 id. 267), while holding, contra to the General Term in the Fellows case, supra, that no valid trust had been created, declined to consider the question whether a valid power in trust was created by the instrument.
"The principle on which judges are called to act in regard to all contracts and assurances is ut res magis valeat quam pereat; that is to say, the instrument in question should rather be made available than suffered to fail." Cowen, J., in Darling v. Rogers, 22 Wend. 483.
At common law, trusts to sell for the benefit of the grantor were lawful. The Revised Statutes have, since January 1, 1830, prohibited all express trusts, except the four above specified in section 96 of the present Real Property Law and latterly, perhaps, certain trusts for charitable purposes. Reeves, Real Prop. 493-503. All other forms of express trusts, which were otherwise valid and active, were then changed into powers in trust. It follows that this instrument creates a valid general power in trust to sell, under the statute, but that the title to the real estate and to the proceeds thereof is in the grantors, who may resume, at any time, the collection of rents and profits or compel the distribution of the proceeds of any sale, or otherwise manage the property subject to the power of sale.
It is argued that Edward C. Payne cannot be both trustee and beneficiary. Doubtless the same person cannot be at the same time both sole trustee and sole beneficiary. Woodward v. James, 115 N.Y. 357. But it does not follow that one tenant in common cannot exercise a power of sale in trust for co-owners.
The deed must be upheld as vesting in the trustee a power of sale in trust, as above stated.
Ordered accordingly.