Cogbill v. Boyd
Cogbill v. Boyd
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the former appeal in this case it was held that the investments made by the appellee, as trustee, in the purchase of a portion of the Sydnor debt, to the amount of twenty-five hundred dollars, and in the purchase of the Pope debt, amounting to the sum of twelve hundred and fifty dollars, were injudicious and improper, and that the loss occasioned thereby must be borne by the trustee out of his own estate, including the sums, expended by him for counsel and commissioners’ fees on account, of the said investments. 77 Va. 450.
After the case went back to the circuit court, it was referred to a commissioner to resettle the trustee’s accounts, and in the decree of reference, the commissioner was instructed to charge
These two debts were evidenced by the bonds of the respective obligors, and bore interest at the rate o.f ten per cent, per annum; and the appellant insists that interest at the latter rate should be charged against the trustee.
The circumstances attending the investments in question were elaborately reviewed by Judge Fauntleroy in delivering the opinion of the court on the former appeal; and while the court held that the investments were improper, and that the trustee must be held accountable out of his own estate for the sums invested, the exact measure of his accountability was not fixed by the decree, but was left to he determined in the court below. The appellant insists that the decree of the circuit court, instructing its commissioner to charge the trustee with interest at the rate of six per cent, only, was arbitrary, and in other respects erroneous.
In referring the case to a commissioner for a resettlement of the accounts, it was competent for the court, and was in accordance with the established practice, to instruct the commissioner as to the principles upon which the accounts should be made up. 2 Barton’s Chancery Practice, 634. All the facts in relation to the transactions in question were already in the record, and neither party was asking or desiring to take further testimony. Indeed, under the terms of the decree of this court, there was in fact no necessity for a reference to a commissioner at all. The restatement of the accounts might as well have been made at the bar of the court as by a commissioner in his office with the parties before him. The only question for consideration by the commissioner or by the court was as to the rate of interest with which the trustee ought to he charged, and that question the court was as competent to determine before as after the return of the commissioner’s report. The rate of
The decree is affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Cogbill v. Boyd, Trustee
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Practice in Chancery—Masters.—It is well established practice for the court to instruct the master as to the principles upon which accounts should be restated. 2. Idem—Restatement of accounts at bar.—Where this court fixes trustee’s liability for an ascertained amount, but remands the case without fixing the rate of interest, it is competent for the court below to fix the rate of interest and restate the accounts at bar, or by the aid of a master commissioner. 3. Trustees—Liability—Rate of interest.—-Where trustee invests trust funds at ten per cent., but c. q. t. repudiates the investment, and the same is held to have been improper, and the trustee is held bound for the amount invested, six per cent, is the rate of interest with which he is properly chargeable.