Heard v. March
Heard v. March
Opinion of the Court
Demurrer overruled.
The demurrer to the original bill before stated, was on the ground that it did not make out a case for the equitable interposition of the court; that the allegations in it were so indefinite, vague, and ambiguous, that no case could be made out which would require the respondents to answer thereto, and that Binney was a necessary party to the said bill, and that it did not appear that he was ever served with process as appeared to said suit.
The hearing on the demurrer to the original bill took place at the March term, 1850.
Under the second indenture reducing the nuns
The authority of the trustees is not a mere naked power to do a ministerial act, as to seal a deed, or make livery of seisin. They were owners in fee of the land as joint tenants. But where the power is to deliberate and examine, and discretion and judgment are required there, although a majority may ultimately decide, yet all must deliberate and advise, or at least have full notice and opportunity to do so. The company, whose trustees they are, are entitled to the full benefit of the knowledge and discretion of them all.
As to the power to appoint an attorney, the power of the trustees was not a delegated power. They had the estate. They had duties to perform and these might be delegated. But if it were supposed to be a power delegated by the associates, they have all, by the second indenture, agreed that each
It is a case where the complainants can have no adequate remedy at law, and is within the jurisdiction of this court as a court of equity. Demurrer overruled.
At a subsequent term, the respondents filed their answers. The answer of March averred that a majority of the trustees could act under the second as well as under the first indenture, and that no trustee could delegate his trust to an attorney. It denied any contract with Otis in the summer or fall of
1845, but admitted a negotiation with Otis and Binney on or after December 1, 1845, which resulted in a contract. It also admitted knowledge of the power of attorney to Lord, but denied knowledge of its redelivery. It admitted knowledge that Lord claimed to act as attorney, but denied knowledge of power to G. W. Heard. It also averred a meeting of the trustees January 5,1846, at which said Oliver and Lord were present, when the contract with Otis was produced, discussed and approved on a formal vote of March and Binney against Lord: the latter voting against it on the ground that the land was worth more, and that he wanted further time to consider of it.
The case was heard on the bill and answer, and on an agreed statement of facts, from which it appeared that Heard left the country in 1845, and returned the same year, that he left again in November, 1845, and did not return until April, 1846. The power of attorney to Lord was dated February
Under the
The second indenture, under which this suit was brought, contained the following clause: “ There shall be three trustees of said association only, instead of five, as provided in said first-mentioned indenture, whose estates, duties, powers, rights, privileges, and liabilities, and those of their successors, in these trusts, shall be the same as are herein contained, and such others as are in said first-mentioned indenture contained and are not hereby revoked or annulled. The present surviving and remaining trustees, viz: Augustine Heard, Andrew S. March, and Amos Binney, shall be the said three trustees; and each trustee and his successors shall have the right to act by attorney, duly authorized by deed. Upon the death of either of the trustees, the said association shall cease and be determined. It also appeared that at the time of the second indenture, Binney and March together owned more than four fifths of all the shares in the company. The case was argued at the March term, 1852.
The opinion was delivered at the March term, 1853, by
1. On the case as it now stands, it appears that the power of attorney given by Heard to Lord was limited by the recital of his intended absence. It was, therefore, at an end on his return to this country. And we think it was not renewed by the mere act of a redelivery, betbie his second absence, without any change of terms or date. By its date, it referred to the absence of the author then in prospect, and not to another and subsequent, and so upon its face, would apparently be exhausted by the first return to xnis country. Therefore, in December and January, when the contract was made, Heard had no attorney here competent to act in this trust. The power of attorney given to G. W. Heard three years before, to act in Augustine Heard’s private affairs, dio not extend to this special and peculiar authority and trust.
The two instruments are to be construed together, in ascertaining the rights, powers, and duties of those associates, ana their trustees and agents, although to a considerable extent, the former has been modified by the latter. We may, there
2. The provision in the first indenture was, that three fourths, in amount, of the stockholders, should have power to direct the trustees to dispose of the property of the association, and the trustees were bound to conform to the directions thus given, by three fourths of the stockholders, that is, of stockholders having three fourths of the amount of the-whole stock. This provision was renewed by the second indenture. Under this arrangement, the trustees stood in a double capacity, both as stockholders and trustees. They had the power, therefore, as proprietors of more than three fourths of the whole stock in their own right, to make a requisition upon the trustees, to make the proposed contract of sale, and they made it in due form, before the deed was given; and it was the duty of the complainant, Heard, pursuant to the trust reposed in him to comply with it, and he has no right in equity to deny the validity of the deed made by the other two.
3. The general equity is in favor of the respondent Otis, who, for aught that appears, acted without notice of any defect in the authority, or of any want of harmony and unity in the wishes and views of the trustees. Besides; as these two trustees owned a large majority of the stock of the company, they must be presumed to have acted, in making this sale, according to their best judgment of the interests of the company, because, in promoting the interests of the company, they to so great an extent promoted their own.
Bill dismissed with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Augustine Heard & others v. Andrew S. March & others
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- 1 case
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- Published