Cogswell v. Weston

Rugg, C. J.

This is a bill by the trustee under a will for instructions as to the apportionment between capital and income of certain expenses incurred in the administration of his trust. Henry E. Weston, who formerly administered this trust, was removed and judgment was recovered on May 1, 1905, against him and the American Surety Company of New York as his surety, for the penal sum of his bond as such trustee. Execution thereon issued for the amount found to be the deficit in the principal of the trust fund for which Henry E. Weston was liable .by *222reason of his misappropriations, with interest thereon from the date of judgment, and costs. The pertinent facts and the grounds .of decision in that case are reported in Harmon v. Weston, 215 Mass. 242. The amount of the execution has been paid to the present trustee by the American Surety Company. That company has proved the amount so paid as a debt against the insolvent estate of William H. Weston, who died in May, 1905, and who had been a co-trustee of the estate with Henry E. Weston. The facts and grounds for that proof are set forth in American Surety Co. of New York v. Vinton, 224 Mass. 337.

The expenses which are the subject of the present bill may be grouped under three heads: 1., General expenses of investigation of the trust estate and of the doings of former trustees resulting in the disclosure of extensive misappropriations by Henry E. Weston. 2. Expenses incident to the recovery of real estate in Chicago arising from an attempted sequestration respecting which it appears from the facts in the report that Henry E. Weston was actively fraudulent. 3. Expenses in connection with litigation against Henry E. Weston and the American Surety Company on the probate bond.

We consider the first two classes of expenses together. The regular annual or periodically recurring expenses arising in the administration of a productive trust commonly are paid out of the income, while extraordinary and unusual expenses are chargeable against the capital. The costs of litigation generally fall in the ■latter class. These rules apply in cases -where the question concerns life tenants and remaindermen, both guiltless of any wrong against the trust and where the point of incidence of proper expenses must be determined as between innocent persons. But these rules are not necessarily applicable to cases where the question arises between a life tenant, whose wrongful conduct amounting to an active and intentional breach of trust directly has caused the expense, and a remainderman whose conduct is free from blame. In the case at bar, under the will Henry E. Weston is entitled for life to the income of one half of the remainder of the estate, or to the whole of the remainder after the other half has been paid to the administrator of the estate of William H. Weston, as is required by the decision reported in Harmon v. Weston, 215 Mass. 242, 248. Henry E. Weston misapplied and misappropriated funds *223of the estate and these expenses have followed as the natural result of his intentional wrongdoing. While William H. Weston was not guilty of any misappropriation in his administration of the trust estate, it is manifest from the facts stated in the report that it was through his negligence and culpable inattention that Henry E. Weston was enabled to misapply so much of the estate. The net income of the estate in the hands of the plaintiff must go under the will to these former trustees as beneficiaries, whose active and culpable neglect of duty and intentional misfeasance in their trust have caused these expenses, or to those claiming by or under them. The latter stand in no better posture than the beneficiaries in this aspect of the case. As is pointed out in Harmon v. Weston, 215 Mass. 242, the ultimate beneficiaries of the principal of half of the trust fund, of which Henry L. Weston is entitled to the income during his life, cannot now be determined. They may be persons in no sense answerable directly or indirectly for his conduct as trustee.

All rules for the apportionment of expenses between life tenant and remainderman have been worked out in order to accomplish in general equitable results. They ought not to be followed when they lead to manifestly contrary results. It seems inequitable to cast upon innocent third persons an expense which can be borne by those whose reprehensible conduct has caused it. The immediate occasion of all expenses of the trust in the case at bar has been culpable want of fidelity in the administration of the trust. by the beneficiaries for life. So far as Henry E. Weston is concerned, it must be taken on this record that these expenses have resulted in considerable degree, if not entirely, not from unsound judgment or misplaced confidence, but from a more blameworthy intentional misappropriation of the funds of the trust. Under these circumstances, equitable distribution of the financial burdens which are the subject of the first and second inquiries seems to require that they rest upon the income.

It is urged that, since by the payment of the execution issued in consequence of the decision in Harmon v. Weston, 215 Mass. 242, the capital of the trust has been restored fully by the surety upon the probate bond of Henry E. Weston, there are no equities in favor of the remaindermen entitled to consideration. It is true that thus the amount actually misappropriated by the trustee *224has been returned to the trust. But this by no means makes the trust whole and intact for his wrongdoing. The estate still is depleted to the extent of the amounts here in controversy as the direct result of faithlessness in administering the trust. It has been necessary to incur them all by reason of maladministration by the life beneficiaries acting as trustees.' If it had not been for such maladministration, there would have been no such expenses. It is inequitable that beneficiaries or their representatives or assignees should hold the annual income free from charge in this respect at the expense of the capital of the trust.

The third class of expenses relates to the prosecution of the action on the probate bond in Harmon v. Weston. These cannot be charged against income. It was held in McIntire v. Mower, 204 Mass. 233, that such expenses, because of the terms of the statute law, constituted no liability on the part of the defaulting trustee. That decision is decisive against their charge against the income payable to the defaulting trustee in the case at bar. That expense falls within the general rule. That general rule was stated in Parsons v. Winslow, 16 Mass. 361, and need not be repeated. It rightly was followed by the Probate Court in framing its decree.

Cases like the present do not often arise. But see in this connection, In re Ungrich, 201 N. Y. 415; Cattley v. West, [1904] 2 Ch. 785; Raby v. Ridehalgh, 7 DeG., M. & G. 104; Blake v. Pegram, 109 Mass. 541; and Belknap v. Belknap, 5 Allen, 468.

In view of what has been said, it is unnecessary to consider the fourth request as amended, because that is based upon the supposition that the income is exonerated. Any discussion of the relative rights of Pratt as the assignee of the life tenants, and the American Surety Company as the surety which has paid its obligation, becomes irrelevant, because, whatever may be their rights as to each other, they both must yield to the controlling principle which has been stated. But it is not intended hereby to narrow or qualify in any respect what was decided in Harmon v. Weston, 215 Mass. 242, and in American Surety Co. of New York v. Vinton, 224 Mass. 337. Both those cases stand in full force and are in harmony with the conclusions here reached.

There is no difference in the governing principle, even if the plaintiff found the trust estate so depleted that he was obliged at the start to use some of its capital in meeting these expenses. The *225capital should be made whole out of the income payable to those as beneficiaries whose active and culpable fault as trustee or trustees has caused the expense, according to the principles here stated. The fifth question should be answered accordingly.

The fourth question need not be answered. The decree of the Probate Court as to the third question was right. The answers to the first and second questions are that the expenses there referred to should be paid from the income. Decree is to be entered in conformity to these conclusions.

So ordered.