Opinion
(December Term, 1854.)
Where the right of a cestui qui trust to a trust estate is immediate and absolute, there being no ulterior limitation, and no continuing duty to be performed with it by the trustee, the Court will decree the legal estate to be conveyed to those entitled.
The Court will not allow a trustee to charge five per cent for receiving and paying over dividends on bank stock.
CAUSE removed from the Court of Equity of PITT County.
Rodman for the plaintiffs.
Attorney General for the defendant.
Benjamin Briley among other things bequeathed as follows:
Item 6. All my bank stock I give in trust to my friend Charles Greene, for the use and benefit of my several heirs, namely, Martha Turnage, etc., (naming them) making in all ten shares. It is my will and desire that my said trustee shall only (64) receive the dividends accruing from said banks for the space of twenty years, and not to touch, sell or dispose of, in any way, the original amount in said banks invested, during that time, unless the bank or banks should sooner wind up its concerns: in that event, I wish him to receive both principle and the dividends and pay them over to my several heirs, as above directed. I wish my trustee to distribute the dividends as soon as he receives them, as directed above, to each of my children, one tenth part, and to the children of Bennet Briley one tenth part, and to the children of Jesse Briley by his first wife, one tenth."
The administrator, with the will annexed, assigned the bank stock, owned by the testator, to the defendant, who is the trustee mentioned in the will, which has stood in his name ever since. He has received the dividends arising on the stock, and has offered to pay the same to the plaintiffs, who are the legatees mentioned in the above extract, deducting five per cent on such payments.
The plaintiffs in their bill, object to the commission charged, and pray that the defendant shall be decreed to assign the bank stock directly to them, and that he account and pay over to them such sum as may be in his hands, in the way of dividends.
The defendant answering, admitted the facts above stated, but insisted that he was entitled to five per cent commissions.
The cause was set for hearing upon the bill, answer and exhibit, and removed to this Court.
The question presented by the pleadings is fully answered by the case of Jasper v. Maxwell, 16 N.C. 357, which, in several respects, is very much like the present. In that case, one Stephen Outerbridge, bequeathed as follows: "Whereas, I leave fifty shares in the bank of the State of North Carolina, (naming twenty-six shares in other banks) it is my will that my daughter, Sarah M. Fenner, shall have the profits arising therefrom during her natural life, or until the charters of the said banks may (65) expire. I do, therefore, by these presents, leave the said seventy-six shares, in trust with my executors, and I do hereby authorize them to take charge of the said bank stock, and draw the dividends as they shall become due and payable, and the dividends when drawn by my executors, shall be paid over to my daughter, the said Sarah M. Fenner, for her use and comfort. Whenever the charters of the said banks shall expire, (if they shall not again be renewed), I do then give and bequeath the said seventy-six shares to my said daughter, to her and her heir forever."
Sarah M. Fenner, the daughter, was then a widow, but afterwards married and died; and her husband took out letters of administration upon her estate, and filed a bill against the executors to have the bank stock transferred to himself. The Court said: "The bank stock is bequeathed to the executors in trust to receive the dividends as declared, and pay them over to the testator's daughter during her life, or until the charters expire, and upon that event, (unless the charters should be renewed), the stock itself, is given to the daughter. In her, then, are united the present right to the whole profits, and the absolute, ultimate dominion, which gives as perfect a property as is known to the law. The cestui qui trust can call for the legal estate at her will. It is not like the case of a bequest, in trust for the maintenance of another. There, the trustee must retain the property in order to provide out of the profits for the support of the object of the testator's bounty. He must keep the fund in his own hands lest it be wasted. But here, the fund is to go (eventually) directly to the daughter, and in the mean while, the whole profits, not as a maintenance to be provided by the executor, but as a general pecuniary legacy." These remarks are directly applicable to the case before us, where a present right to the whole profits, as well as the absolute, ultimate dominion of the bank stock are given to the legatees, and they are therefore entitled to have a transfer of the stock made to them. The rule would be different, and the cestui qui trust would not be entitled to call for the legal estate, if from the nature of the trust, their ownership were (66) not immediate and absolute, and it would defeat or put it into their power to defeat or endanger a legitimate, ultimate limitation of the trust property. Dick v. Pitchford, 21 N.C. 480; Battle v. Petway, 27 N.C. 576. See also, Hill on Trustees 278; 1 Cru. Dig. Tit. 12, ch. 4, sec. 6.
The result is, that all the plaintiffs, except the infants, are entitled to a decree that the defendant shall transfer to them the shares of the Bank Stock given to them under the will of the Testator. The defendant must still retain the shares belonging to the infants upon the trust declared for them in the will.
It is proper that this Court should declare that it would not sanction a charge by the trustee of five per cent commissions for simply receiving and paying over the dividends of the Stock.
Per curiam.
Decree accordingly.
Cited: Johnson v. Prairie, 91 N.C. 162; McKenzie v. Sumner, 114 N.C. 428; Hardware Co. v. Lewis, 173 N.C. 298; Bank v. Sternberger, 207 N.C. 818.