Terry v. Fitzgerald
Terry v. Fitzgerald
Opinion of the Court
This ease comes up on a motion to dissolve an injuntion on bill and answer. The injunction was to enjoin the sale of a tract of eleven hundred and seventeen acres of land in the county of Pittsylvania, by a substituted trustee, under a deed of trust, to satisfy a debt of $4,000, and the interest which had accrued on it, and five per cent, commissions to the trustee.
One of the grounds of the injunction was, that the trustee as alleged by the bill was insolvent, and otherwise unfit for the execution of such a trust, and ought at least to be required to give security before he should be allowed to proceed with the execution of the trust. Another ground is that the land is a large and valuable tract, and ought to be divided and sold in separate parcels. That there are now four settlements on it, and two others have been commenced, and that it might be divided into six convenient and valuable farms. The plaintiff alleges that he knew persons who would bid for and pay a fair price for the different parcels, if sold separately, but knew of no one who would bid against the creditor, William R. Fitzgerald, if the land was sold in one body.
He alleges that the said Fitzgerald positively refused to allow the trustee to sell in any other way than for cash and the land in one body, his object being to bid it off for himself at a great sacrifice.
He also alleges that he went to the said Fitzgerald, and desired him to sell the land in separate lots and parcels, and proposed to advertise and sell himself, notifying the purchaser to.- pay the purchase money to the said Fitzgerald, but he positively refused to allow him to sell at all; and he then insisted that he should direct the trustee,
Insolvency does not disqualify a person to act as a trustee, though it has not been uniformly so held. Mr. Hill says: For the removal of an insolvent trustee, and the appointment of a new trustee in his place, a bill must be filed in a court of chancery; and the insolvency would unquestionably be sufficient foundation for such an application. Hill on Trustees, top p. 832, side 534. But in 1 Perry on Trusts, 2 ed. p. 353, § 279, it is said that generally the insolvency or bankruptcy of a trustee does not disqualify him for the trust. Yet he says that in the United States trustees are or may be required, in the great majority of cases, to give bonds or security for the safety of the trust fund. In McCullough & al. v. Sommerville, 8 Leigh, 415, both the trustees were wholly irresponsible individuals, owning no property of any description, and this court held that the circuit court acted with entire propriety in relieving the trustees from the execution of the trust, aud in taking a control of the funds for the purpose of distribution. P„ 439-40.
There were other grounds urged also in the lower court for the removal of the trustees, but this court does not appear to have sustained the removal upon them.
We think that where money of the trust fund is to pass through the hands of an insolvent trustee, upon the appli
The answer does not deny the insolvency of the trustee. The trustee has not answered at all; and the creditor, in his answer, says, although the said Tredway might be utterly solvent, (which the defendant does not admit), yet such insolvency could entail no loss on the complainant, &c. On a motion to .dissolve an injunction, the allegations of the bill which are not denied must be taken to be true, although they are not admitted. The allegation of insolvency, not being denied, must be taken to be true, although it is not admitted by the answer. Although the said Tredway was substituted as trustee by an order of the court, on motion of which the debtor had notice, we are of opinion that he is not thereby precluded from applying to a court of equity to require of him bond and
A trustee, who is to act as the agent of both parties, should have no bias or partiality which would disqualify him fairly to discharge his duty, and to do justice to both parties. Where the parties agree that • their respective counsel may act as trustees, it may be done. But where there is but one trustee, he ought not to be the counsel of one of the parties, especially where, as in this case, he may have to decide questions which may be of vital interest to the adverse party.
The answer does not deny the allegations before recited, that the plaintiff applied to the creditor, and also to the trustee, to have the land laid off and divided into different tracts, and sold separately, and that they both refused to comply with that request. He denies only that he ordered the trustee to advertise the whole of said tract of land for sale, or that the trustee so advertised it, but affirms that he advertised strictly in conformity with the provisions of the deed so much of said land as might be necessary to pay the debt, and refers to the advertisement, which is made an exhibit. The advertisement is that he will sell, by way of public auction, so much as may be necessary to pay the debt, &c. He and Fitzgerald both refused, as is alleged, the request of the grantor to divide the tract, laying it off into four, five or six different farms, for which it was well adapted, and selling them separately, or so many of them as was necessary to pay the debt, &c. And this allegation, not being denied on a motion to dissolve, must be taken to be true. The plaintiff had a right, therefore, to conclude that they had no other purpose, from the ad
It is true, that the deed directs the trustee to “sell the said land, or enough thereof, to pay the debt and interest then due, and the costs of sale.” The trustee being the agent of both parties, it was his duty to sell the land as a whole, or in separate parcels, as would be conducive to its bringing the most money. It was his duty to sell it so as to get the best price for it. And the deed does not prescribe any particular mode of selling it. He is only limited not to sell more than enough to pay the debt, &e. It does not provide that be shall sell it in one tract, nor does it prohibit him to sell it in parcels. We hold that it was the duty of the trustee to sell it in parcels, if by that mode it would bring the best price. And although he has a discretion, it is a legal discretion, which is subject to the control of a court of equity. And if the land will bring a better price by dividing it and selling it in separate lots, and the owner desires and requests it, and the trustee refuses, the owner thereby invokes the intervention and assistance of a court of equity, in a proper cause to control him in the exercise of his discretion. In Crenshaw v. Seigfried, 24 Gratt. Judge Moncure, speak
The court having possession of this case ought, instead of dissolving the injunction, to have retained it, and directed the execution of the trust. It had authority to appoint commissioners to view the land and take testimony, ¡and to report whether it was susceptible of division into -different tracts, and in what way, with power to employ a ¡surveyor to lay it off into as many different tracts as would promote an advantageous sale. And if upon the coming In of the report, the court was satisfied, from it and the •¡testimony, that it would be conducive to an advantageous sale to have it so divided and sold in separate parcels, it •would have authority to direct that it should be advertised ¡and sold in such lots or parcels, and the order in which ¡they should be sold, until enough were sold to pay the ■debt, interest, and expenses. And there is nothing in the -deed which is restrictive of the power of the court to so •••direct.
That such a mode of procedure would in this case conduce to an advantageous sale we must conclude from what is before us. The bill so alleges, and that allegation is not
That was all he was entitled to require; and the grantor had a right to require the trustee to proceed, in a way to effect that object, by the sale of as little of the land as practicable. And the creditor does not now seem to object to it. Why, then, should it not be done ?
The court is of opinion, therefore, that the circuit court, instead of dissolving the injunction, should have continued it, retained the cause, and had the sale made under its supervision and direction, as indicated by its own commissioner ; and might have appointed the substituted trustee such commissioner, upon his giving' bond, with security, conditioned for the faithful execution of the trust, if not deemed otherwise unfit and disqualified for the discharge of the trust.
Staples and Burks, J’s, concurred in the opinion of Anderson, J.
Moncure, P., and Christian, J., dissented.
The decree ivas as follows:
The court is of opinion, for reasons stated in writing and filed with the record, that the decree of the circuit court dissolving the injunction is erroneous. It is therefore ordered and decreed that the said decree be reversed and annulled, and that the appellees pay to the appellant his costs expended in the prosecution of his appeal here. And the cause is remanded to the circuit court of Pittsylvania-county, with instructions to reinstate the injunction, and for further proceedings to be had therein in conformity with the principles declared in the opinion filed in the record.
Decree reversed.
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