1. A principal is, in law, affected with notice of all facts, of
which notice can be charged upon his attorney.
2. Parties who deal with an executor, exercising his power of
disposition of the personal assets of the estate in his hands, to
raise money, not for the estate or the settlement of its affairs,
but for the business of a commercial firm, are bound to look into
his authority and are held to a knowledge of all the limitations
which the will, as well as the law, puts thereon.
3. His sale or pledge of assets made for other purposes than the
discharge of his duties as executor will not be sustained where the
purchaser or pledgee takes them with knowledge or notice of the
perversion of them or the intended perversion of their
proceeds.
4. Such assets are held by him in trust to pay the debts of the
testator and then to discharge legacies. Where, therefore, they are
acquired from him by third parties with knowledge of his trust and
of his disregard of its obligations, they can be followed and
recovered.
5. At the time of his death, A. held in his name an interest in
a commercial firm which he had acquired by funds belonging
one-third to himself, one-third to the children of a deceased
brother, and one-third to a sister. In his will, of which B., his
brother, was appointed executor, A. made a request that the whole
of such interest should be retained in the firm under the control
of B. so long as the latter should deem it profitable. His own
interest he bequeathed to B., in trust for the latter and certain
nephews and nieces, in equal proportions, to be held and controlled
by B. so long as he should deem it advisable. One of the members of
the firm having withdrawn therefrom, B. purchased his interest,
whereupon the firm name was changed. Subsequently, to raise funds
wherewith to pay loans made to the firm, B. pledged to C. certain
notes which had come into his possession as executor.
Held:
1. That, assuming the identity of the firm remained after the
change of its members and name, the authority of B., as executor,
to continue a specifically designated existing interest in the firm
did not extend to the use in its business of any other funds or
property of the estate.
2. That his use of the notes to raise funds for the firm was a
misappropriation of them, and that C., having knowledge of the
directions of the testator, cannot hold them against the claim of
his representatives.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 101 U. S. 321
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
These are suits in equity to compel the delivery to the
complainants of two promissory notes, each for $39,250, alleged to
belong to the estate of Renick Huston, deceased, brought by the
administrators
de bonis non of that estate and the
administrator
de bonis non of the estate of Thomas T.
Renick, deceased. They were commenced in a court of the State of
Illinois, and upon application of the defendants, Ayer
et
al., in the first case, and of the First National Bank of
Westboro', Mass., in the second case, were transferred to the
Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern District of
Illinois. That court dismissed the bill in both cases, and from its
decrees they are brought here on appeal.
The facts out of which the suits arise are substantially these:
in February, 1864, one Renick Huston, then a resident of Ohio, died
possessed of a tract of land, about eighty acres in extent, near
Chicago, Ill. The legal title to the land stood in the name of Job
R. Renick, but it is admitted that he held it as trustee for the
estate of Huston, and to reimburse Thomas T. Renick for certain
expenditures incurred on account of the property. The deceased left
a will by which, after making certain bequests, he devised
one-third of the residue of his estate to Thomas T. Renick, whom he
named as his executor and to whom letters testamentary were issued.
The property having been sold at different times for taxes and
being subject to various charges, Renick advanced money to a large
amount, stated to be between twenty and thirty thousand dollars, to
redeem it from the sales and to pay off the claims upon it. He was
authorized under the will to sell the real estate, and accordingly,
in July, 1872, he sold it to one Joel D. Harvey for $157,000,
payable one-fourth in cash and the balance in one, two, and three
years, for which notes were given, secured by a trust deed of the
property executed to one J. Edwards Fay. There were six notes in
all, three being each for $39,250 and the other three for the
installments of interest as they fell
Page 101 U. S. 322
due. They were all made payable to the order of Thomas T. Renick
individually. The cash payment was sufficient to reimburse him for
his outlays, and he held the notes as executor of Huston's
estate.
In August, 1873, Thomas T. Renick died in Ohio, leaving a will
and appointing his brother Benjamin executor of his estate. Letters
testamentary were accordingly issued to Benjamin, and the notes of
Harvey subsequently came into his possession as executor. At the
time of his death, the deceased held in his name an interest in a
commercial firm known as Tower, Classen, & Co., engaged in the
manufacture and sale of chromatic printing presses at Canton, Ohio,
which he had acquired by funds belonging one-third to himself,
one-third to the children of a deceased brother, and one-third to a
sister. In his will he made a request that the whole interest
should be retained in the company, under the control of his brother
so long as the latter should deem it profitable. His own interest
he bequeathed to his brother in trust for himself and certain
nephews and nieces mentioned, in equal proportions, to be held and
controlled by him so long as he should deem it advisable. Several
other bequests were made by the testator to different parties, and
the payment of an annuity to one of his brothers was directed. Soon
afterwards, Benjamin purchased the interest of Tower in the
company, and then the firm name was changed to that of B. T. Renick
& Co.
In September, 1873, the complainants, Palmer C. Smith and Job R.
Renick, were appointed administrators
de bonis non with
the will annexed of the estate of Huston. And when the second note
of Harvey was about maturing, application was made to Smith, as
such administrator, to consent to extend the time of its payment
and that of the third note. After some negotiation and the maturity
of one of the notes, Smith signed an agreement in which, after
reciting that the notes were the property of the estate of Renick
Huston, deceased, that a suit was pending in Ohio affecting the
property of the estate, and that until its termination it was
desirable that the money should be invested, and that other parties
-- the West Chicago Land Company, to which portions of the real
property had been sold -- had assumed the payment of the notes and
interest, he stipulated
Page 101 U. S. 323
not to press the payment of the notes until such time as he
should require the money by reason of the termination of the suit,
the extension in no event to exceed two years. This agreement bears
date Sept. 12, 1874. The parties who had assumed the obligation to
pay the notes were not content with the agreement without the
signature of Benjamin Renick, executor of the estate of Thomas
Renick, as the notes were in his possession and were payable to the
order of his testator. After a good deal of negotiation, his
signature as executor of the estate of Thomas Renick was obtained
to a similar agreement for an extension of time, stipulating that
he also would not press the payment of the notes unless he should
require the money to make a settlement of that estate. It does not,
however, contain the recital of the one signed by Smith, that the
notes were the property of the estate of Huston. This agreement was
not executed until the 19th of February, 1875, though it was dated
back to the date of the one signed by Smith, and both agreements
were placed in the hands of one James R. Goodman. On the same day,
the following endorsement was made on each of the notes:
"FEB. 19, 1879"
"Payment of the within notes extended, as per contract of Sept.
12, 1874, now in the hands of James R. Goodman, Esq., for a period
not exceeding two years from July 15, 1874."
"J. EDWARDS FAY, Trustee, &c."
"B. T. RENICK"
"
Executor and Trustee of Thomas T. Renick,
deceased"
In May following, the firm of B. T. Renick & Co., the
successors, as mentioned, of Tower, Classen, & Co., applied,
through a broker in New York, to the defendants, J. C. Ayer &
Co., of Lowell, Mass., for a loan of $39,250, and offered to pledge
as collateral security for the money one of the notes of Joel A.
Harvey, given upon the purchase of the land near Chicago, and
secured by a trust deed of the property. Ayer & Co. agreed to
make the loan if the security was approved by their attorney, to
whom it was referred to examine and report as to its sufficiency.
The attorney made the examination. He testifies that he examined
the two notes of Harvey and the deed of trust securing them, an
abstract of title to the land, and a copy of the
Page 101 U. S. 324
will of Thomas T. Renick; that he talked with the trustee under
the trust deed, and with Benjamin Renick, the executor of Thomas T.
Renick, in whose possession the notes were at the time; that
Benjamin informed him that he wished to use the money borrowed in
the business of B. T. Renick & Co., manufacturers of chromatic
printing presses; that the establishment was the one designated in
the will as that of Tower, Classen, & Co.; and that the notes
had each the endorsement of the extension mentioned. The attorney
reported to Ayer & Co. that the security was valid and
sufficient to pay the notes, and advised them to take the note
first maturing. Immediately afterwards he was directed to complete
the loan. He accordingly took the note of B. T. Renick & Co.
for $39,250, dated May 26, 1875, payable to Ayer & Co., at
their office in Lowell, Mass., and, as collateral security,
received the note first falling due of Harvey for the same amount,
both of which he transmitted to Ayer & Co. It is to compel a
surrender of this note to the complainants that the first of the
above-named suits is brought.
In June following this transaction, the firm of B. T. Renick
& Co. desired a further loan of $30,000, and employed J.
Edwards Fay to obtain it on the security of the third note of
Harvey for $39,250. Fay applied to the First National Bank of
Westboro', Mass., for the loan. He showed to its officers the note
of Harvey, having the endorsement extending the time of payment for
a period not exceeding two years, pursuant to the agreement
deposited with Goodman, and informed them of the trust deed
executed to him to secure its payment. The endorsement, as already
seen, showed that the note was held by B. T. Renick as executor. He
also told them of the loan made by Ayer & Co. upon the security
of the second note, the examination then made by their attorney
into the sufficiency of the security and his favorable report. He
also mentioned the relation which Benjamin Renick, as executor of
Thomas T. Renick, deceased, bore to the firm of B. T. Renick &
Co., and that he made the application for the loan at the request
of that firm. The bank thereupon agreed to make the loan. A note of
B. T. Renick & Co., for $30,000, dated June 1, 1875, payable on
the 15th of July, 1876, was accordingly executed and delivered to
it, with the note of Harvey as collateral security, and the
money
Page 101 U. S. 325
received. It is to compel a surrender to the complainants of the
note thus pledged as collateral that the second of the above suits
is brought. Soon after the bills were filed, Benjamin Renick
resigned his position as executor of the estate of Thomas T.
Renick, and Edward J. Van Meter was appointed in his place as
administrator
de bonis non with the will annexed, and by
leave of the court a supplemental bill was filed in both cases, and
he was allowed to appear in each as a co-complainant and join in
the prayer for relief.
There is no question as to the actual ownership of the notes of
Harvey taken by Ayer & Co. and the First National Bank of
Westboro'. They belong to the estate of Renick Huston. The only
interest which Thomas T. Renick had in them grew out of his
relations to that estate for advances and services and as a
residuary legatee. The question for determination is whether Ayer
& Co. and the bank took the notes under such circumstances as
to be able to hold them or either of them against the demand of
Huston's estate, or of that of the estate of Thomas T. Renick, from
whose executor they were received. So far as the present suits are
concerned, it is of no consequence to the defendants whether the
notes be regarded ultimately as the property of the estate of
Huston or of the estate of Thomas T. Renick. They can only insist
that, as in their negotiations they knew nothing of the claims of
Huston's estate, and dealt with the notes as the property of
Renick's estate, they shall be entitled to all the protection which
that fact may confer. We shall so treat the cases and consider
their rights. There is no doubt that Ayer & Co. relied entirely
upon the judgment of their attorney as to the power of the executor
of the estate of Thomas T. Renick to pledge the note for moneys
borrowed to be used in the business of the firm of B. T. Renick
& Co. Still they must be held to know the law, and the
limitations which it prescribes to the powers of executors in the
disposition of property coming into their hands as such officers;
and however free from intentional wrong, they must bear the
responsibility of a mistaken judgment with respect to those
limitations. The facts brought to the knowledge of their attorney
in his inquiries respecting the note and the authority of Benjamin
T. Renick to pledge it are considered in law as brought to their
knowledge
Page 101 U. S. 326
Information to him of all essential matters affecting the
subject he was investigating was in law information to them, and
their action must be adjudged accordingly. The law, indeed, goes
much further than this: it considers the principal as affected with
notice of all facts, notice of which can be charged upon the
attorney. Here the attorney examined the will of Thomas T. Renick;
he knew that the note in question was held by Benjamin T. Renick in
his character as executor of Thomas' estate, and not in his own
right; the agreement referred to in its endorsement of extension of
time of payment made him acquainted with that fact. It stipulated
not to press for payment of the note until the money was required
for the settlement of that estate; and he was informed beforehand
that the money to be borrowed on the pledge of the note in question
as security was to be used in the business of B. T. Renick &
Co.
The Bank of Westboro' had no attorney of its own in the
transaction. It relied upon the representations of the attorney of
B. T. Renick & Co., employed to negotiate the loan. He informed
the bank, however, of all facts essential to its knowledge, or
acquainted it with such matters as upon inquiry would have given
the information. It knew that the note was held by B. T. Renick as
assets of Thomas T. Renick's estate, and not in his own right; it
was so informed by the attorney; the endorsement on the note
declared the fact also; and the agreement to which the endorsement
referred, and to which its attention was called, would have removed
all doubt on the subject, if any could have existed. It must be
presumed to have known what it could thus easily have ascertained;
and, dealing with an executor exercising his power of disposition
of the personal assets of an estate in his hands, ostensibly to
raise money, not for the estate or the settlement of its affairs,
but for the business of a commercial firm, it was bound to look
into his authority to make such a disposition of them, and is held
to a knowledge of all the limitations which the will as well as the
law put upon his power.
There is no doubt that unless restrained by statute, an executor
can dispose of the personal assets of his testator by sale or
pledge for all purposes connected with the discharge of his duties
under the will. And even where the sale or pledge is
Page 101 U. S. 327
made for other purposes, of which the purchaser or pledgee has
no knowledge or notice, but takes the property in good faith, the
transaction will be sustained, for the purchaser or pledgee is not
bound to see to the disposition of the proceeds received. But the
case is otherwise where the purchaser or pledgee has knowledge of
the perversion of the property to other purposes than those of the
estate, or the intended perversion of the proceeds. The executor,
though holding the title to the personal assets, is not absolute
owner of them. They are not liable for his debts, nor can he
dispose of them by will. He holds them in trust to pay the debts of
the deceased and then to discharge his legacies, and as in all
other cases of trust, he is personally responsible for any breach
of duty. And property thus held, acquired from him by third parties
with knowledge of his trust and his disregard of its obligations,
can be followed and recovered. The law exacts the most perfect good
faith from all parties dealing with a trustee respecting trust
property. Whoever takes it for an object other than the general
purposes of the trust, or such as may reasonably be supposed to be
within its scope, must look to the authority of the trustee, or he
will act at his peril.
The adjudications in support of this doctrine are very numerous.
The doctrine pervades the whole law of trusts. In
Colt v.
Lasnier, reported in 9th Cowen, Chief Justice Savage of the
supreme court of New York, after reviewing the cases, concludes
that the correct rule both in England and in that state is
"That any person receiving from an executor the assets of his
testator, knowing that this disposition of them is a violation of
his duty, is to be adjudged as conniving with the executor, and
that such person is responsible for the property thus received,
either as purchaser or pledgee."
And so in many cases it has been held that the payment by the
executor of his own private debt with the assets of the testator is
a
devastavit -- that is, a wasting of the estate. There
are indeed some exceptions to this, as where the executor has paid
debts of the testator with his own money to the value of the assets
used. But beyond a few exceptions of this kind, such a use of the
assets is considered entirely indefensible, and the party receiving
them will not be permitted to retain them on the ground that
the
Page 101 U. S. 328
transaction itself gives him notice of their misapplication, and
thus necessarily involves him as a participator in the fraud. And
the doctrine is supported by many authorities that where a party
has reasonable grounds for believing that an executor intends to
misapply them or is in the very transaction converting them to
private uses, such party can take no advantage from the
transaction. In the case of
Miller v. Williamson, the
Court of Appeals of Maryland held that the fact that the executor
made an assignment of such assets to secure a debt owing to parties
by a mercantile firm of which he was a member was sufficient in
contemplation of law to notify them that he was about to commit a
devastavit. 5 Md. 219. And where an administrator had
assigned promissory notes of the estate in his hands for goods for
his own use, the Supreme Court of Indiana held that it was a waste
of the assets and that if the assignee had knowledge even from the
nature of the transaction, that the administrator was thus acting
in violation of his trust, the right of property in the notes was
not divested, and he could not hold the notes or profit by such
assignment as against those rightfully entitled to them.
Thomasson v. Brown, 43 Ind. 203.
See also Field v.
Schieffelin, 7 Johns. (N.Y.) Ch. 150, and
Petrie v.
Clark, 11 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 377.
In the cases at bar, the defendants Ayer & Co. and the
directors of the bank knew that the pledging of the assets of the
estate, of which Benjamin T. Renick was executor, to secure a loan
for the business of a commercial house, was a misuse of them unless
indeed the will of his testator authorized it. The law imputed such
knowledge to them. They could not say that such assets could be
rightfully used as collateral security for loans to be employed in
the business of a commercial house. It would be attributing to them
the lack of ordinary good sense to suppose they entertained any
such notion. The question then arises whether the will of Thomas T.
Renick authorized the assets of his estate, or the moneys to be
raised upon them, to be used in the business of B. T. Renick &
Co.
In that will the testator mentions a certain interest in the
firm of Tower, Classen, & Co., acquired by funds belonging to
him, a sister, and the children of a deceased brother, and he
desired that such interest should be continued in the firm,
under
Page 101 U. S. 329
the control of his brother, so long as the latter should deem it
profitable, and that his own share should be retained in like
manner for certain parties so long as he should deem it advisable,
and he bequeathed it to him as trustee for that purpose. It did not
authorize the use of any of the general assets of the testator in
that business or the borrowing of money on its account. It may
indeed be doubted whether the new firm of B. T. Renick & Co.
can be considered as the same firm as Tower, Classen, & Co. The
change of the old firm by Tower's withdrawal may have taken from it
the person upon whose judgment alone the testator relied for a wise
management of its business. We cannot say that a confidence reposed
in the firm which existed when the will was made would have been
extended to another firm consisting of different associates. But,
assuming that its identity remained after the change of members and
name, it is perfectly clear that the authority of the executor to
continue a specifically designated existing interest in the firm
did not extend to the use in its business of any other funds of the
estate, or to the use of any property which he received in his
official character, to raise funds for that purpose. In
Burwell
v. Mandeville's Executors, reported in 2d Howard, this
doctrine is stated by this Court with great distinctness. There,
the testator and one Cawood had been partners, and in his will the
testator desired that his interest in the partnership should be
continued until the expiration of the term limited by the articles
between them, the business to be continued by his partner, and the
profit and loss to be distributed in the manner there provided.
After his death, his partner carried on the business of the
partnership, but failed before the expiration of the stipulated
term, and the object of the suit was to reach the general assets of
the estate of the testator to pay certain debts of the firm
contracted after his decease. It was held that the general assets
were not thus liable. The Court observed that it was competent for
partners to provide by agreement for the continuance of the
partnership after the death of one of them, or for one partner by
his will to provide for the continuance of the partnership after
his death, and if it was consented to by the surviving partner, it
would become obligatory. "But then," continues the Court,
Page 101 U. S. 330
speaking through Mr. Justice Story,
"in each case, the agreement or authority must be clearly made
out, and third persons having notice of the death are bound to
inquire how far the agreement or authority to continue it extends
and what funds it binds, and if they trust the surviving party
beyond the reach of such agreement or authority or fund, it is
their own fault, and they have no right to complain that the law
does not afford them any satisfactory redress. A testator, too,
directing the continuance of a partnership may, if he so choose,
bind his general assets for all the debts of the partnership
contracted after his death. But he may also limit his
responsibility either to the funds already embarked in the trade or
to any specific amount to be invested therein for that purpose, and
then the creditors can resort to that fund or amount only, and not
to the general assets of the testator's estate, although the
partner or executor or other persons carrying on the trade may be
personally responsible for all the debts contracted."
And after citing several authorities from the English reports in
support of these positions, the learned justice remarks,
"That nothing but the most clear and unambiguous language,
demonstrating in the most positive manner that the testator intends
to make his general assets liable for all debts contracted in the
continued trade after his death, and not merely to limit it to the
funds embarked in that trade, would justify the court in arriving
at such a conclusion from the manifest inconvenience thereof, and
the utter impossibility of paying off the legacies bequeathed by
the testator's will, or distributing the residue of his estate,
without in effect saying at the same time that the payments may all
be recalled if the trade should become unsuccessful or
ruinous."
Ex parte Garland, 10 Ves.Jr. 109;
Ex parte
Richardson, 3 Madd. 79;
Pitkin v. Pitkin, 7 Conn.
306;
Lucht v. Behrens, 28 Ohio St. 231.
According to the doctrine of this case -- and many others to the
same purport might be cited -- there is no authority in the will of
Thomas T. Renick justifying the use of the general assets of his
estate in the business of B. T. Renick & Co., even if this firm
be identical with that of Tower, Classen, & Co. Applying the
notes of Harvey held by his executor, or using them to obtain money
for that purpose, was a misappropriation
Page 101 U. S. 331
of them, as much so as if they had been used for any other
private business. The parties receiving them, knowing of the
directions of the testator, cannot hold them against the claim of
his representatives. The resignation of the executor who connived
at this misappropriation having been accepted, and the
administrator
de bonis non with the will annexed having
been appointed in his place, there is no objection to the
prosecution of the suits in the latter's name, in conjunction with
the representatives of Huston's estate, to compel the restoration
of the notes. And as the notes in fact belong to the estate of
Huston, the administrators
de bonis non of that estate may
insist that, when they are returned by Ayer & Co. and the
National Bank of Westboro', they shall be delivered over to
them.
In what we have thus said of the misappropriation of the notes,
we have assumed that they belonged to the estate of Thomas T.
Renick, for the defendants Ayer & Co. and the Bank of Westboro'
contend that they had a right to so treat them, as they were in the
possession of his executor, claiming them as part of the assets of
his testator. But the want of authority on the part of the executor
to pledge them is only the more marked from the fact that his
testator only held them as executor for another estate, although
that fact has not been allowed to affect the defense.
The decree in each case must therefore be reversed and the court
below directed to enter a decree in the first case that the
defendants, Ayer & Co., surrender the note of Harvey taken by
them to the complainants, the administrators
de bonis non
of the estate of Renick Huston, and that a like decree be entered
in the second case against the First National Bank of Westboro' to
surrender to the same complainants the other note of Harvey held by
it, and that all other parties be enjoined from interfering with
their collection of the said notes; and it is
So ordered.
NOTE -- A petition for a rehearing in the first case, and for a
modification of the decree in the second case, having been filed at
a subsequent day of the term,
MR. JUSTICE FIELD delivered the opinion of the Court.
The petition for a rehearing in the first case, and the petition
for a modification of the decree in the second case, are both
denied. The pledging of the notes
Page 101 U. S. 332
of Harvey, belonging to the estate of Renick Huston, or to the
estate of Thomas T. Renick -- and for the purposes of these suits
it matters not to which, as the representatives of both estates are
parties complainant -- as security for moneys borrowed for the use
of a mercantile firm, was a plain misappropriation of the property
of one of the estates. Our decree was that each of the notes should
be returned to the representative of the estate from which it was
taken. The defendants retain their claims against the firm of B. T.
Renick & Co. on its notes, and can prosecute them before the
ordinary tribunals, and if any members of the firm have interests
in the estate of Renick Huston or of other deceased parties, they
can seek to subject those interests to the payment of the claims
without prejudice from our decree in these cases.
Petitions denied.