Baxley v. Birmingham Trust Nat'l Bank

334 So. 2d 848
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJuly 9, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 334 So. 2d 848 (Baxley v. Birmingham Trust Nat'l Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baxley v. Birmingham Trust Nat'l Bank, 334 So. 2d 848 (Ala. 1976).

Opinion

334 So.2d 848 (1976)

William J. BAXLEY, etc.
v.
BIRMINGHAM TRUST NATIONAL BANK et al. (two cases).

SC 1217, SC 1218.

Supreme Court of Alabama.

July 9, 1976.

*849 William J. Baxley, Atty. Gen., and James S. Ward, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellants.

Drayton T. Scott and Kirby Sevier, Birmingham, for The American Bible Society.

Gilbert E. Johnston, Sydney Lavender and John D. Quenelle, Birmingham, for Alfred Swedlaw, Administrator ad litem of the Estate of W. L. Allan, deceased.

BLOODWORTH, Justice.

The Attorney General of Alabama, The Honorable William J. Baxley, as the representative of the unknown beneficiaries of a public trust, appeals from a judgment that the allegedly public trust here in question was never effectively created and that, therefore, a bequest left to that trust under the will of Mrs. Elmorene B. Allan must fail.

Mrs. Allan's husband predeceased her by a little more than a year. Under the terms of his will, Mrs. Allan received a life estate in a marital trust with a general testamentary power of appointment over the remainder of the marital trust. The basic issue before the trial court in this case was whether or not Mrs. Allan effectively exercised her power of appointment thereby permitting the remainder of the marital trust property to pass under her will rather than under her husband's. In the event that Mrs. Allan failed to exercise her power effectively, Mr. Allan's will provides that the property subject to his wife's power passes to a family trust set up under his will. (The trust principal remaining at the death of the family beneficiaries is to be distributed to various charities, including the American Bible Society, one of the parties to this appeal.)

Mrs. Allan, in a will dated October 26, 1970, attempted to exercise her power of appointment by means of the following provisions:

"I hereby exercise the power of appointment to direct the disposition of certain property given me under the provisions of the Will of my beloved husband, W. L. Allan, by his Will dated *850 March 20, 1969, and in the specific exercise of said power I give, devise and bequeath the entire estate over which I have said power of appointment to The First National City Bank of New York, New York (and to such successor corporation having trust powers as shall succeed to the business of said Bank by purchase, merger, consolidation or change of charter or name) in trust, nevertheless, for the uses and purposes and upon the terms and conditions and with the powers and duties hereinafter stated:
"I direct that my trustee pay the income from the trust estate in quarterly installments to The Allan-Bryant Educational Foundation, Inc. who shall use said money in accordance with the provisions of the instruments by which said corporation was created. In the event my death occurs prior to the actual formation of said corporation, I direct that my executor do whatsoever is necessary to accomplish the creation of the corporation in accordance with the written terms and conditions which I have given to the law firm of Sadler, Sadler, Sullivan & Sharp."

Although the proposed corporation was never formed, Mrs. Allan did take various steps to set up a trust, the purpose of which was to provide funds for the education of children of Baptist missionaries and members of the Allan-Bryant family. Mrs. Allan engaged attorneys, chose trustees, arranged an initial meeting of proposed trustees, deposited $25,000 in a savings account as the initial fund for the project, and arranged for an application to be filed with the IRS for a ruling as to whether the trust would be tax exampt. An unexecuted draft of the trust instrument was finally submitted to the IRS on March 1, 1971, for a ruling on its tax status. (It was feared that a favorable status might be denied because of the instrument's provision for educational grants to members of Mrs. Allan's family; Mrs. Allan allegedly directed that such provisions be deleted in the event that they prevented a tax exempt status.)

On March 26, 1971, Mrs. Allan republished her will by means of a codicil which included the following provision:

"ITEM TEN: It is my intention that by executing this codicil the items of personal property described in Item Nine, above, shall not be contained in or considered as a part of the `residue and remainder of my estate' as described in Item Six of my said will dated October 26, 1970. All other gifts, devises, bequests, instructions, nominations and appointments in my said will dated October 26, 1970, shall remain unchanged."

Mrs. Allan died less than a month later, on April 15, 1971. The trust instrument was never executed.

The wills of both Mrs. and Mrs. Allan were admitted to probate with Birmingham Trust National Bank [BTNB] named as executor of both estates (as provided under both wills). In the proceeding to probate the will of Mrs. Allan, BTNB alleged that Mrs. Allan exercised her testamentary power of appointment. That allegation was contested by Alfred Swedlaw, the administrator ad litem of Mr. Allan's estate. Mr. Swedlaw insisted that the property subject to Mrs. Allan's power of appointment should be disposed of under the terms of Mr. Allan's will due to Mrs. Allan's alleged failure to exercise her power effectively.

Both estates were then transferred to circuit court where the circuit court determined that Mrs. Allan's power was not effectively exercised and that consequently the property subject thereto remained a part of the estate of Mr. Allan and would pass under his will.

BTNB did not take an appeal. However, the Attorney General did appeal from the ruling of the circuit court, contending that the circuit court erred in failing to *851 find clear evidence of the terms and conditions that Mrs. Allan intended for her "Allan-Bryant Educational Foundation, Inc."

The appellees on this appeal are Mr. Swedlaw, the administrator ad litem of the estate of Mr. Allan and the American Bible Society, a remainderman under the family trust set up under Mr. Allan's will. Both appellees argue that the Attorney General's appeal should be dismissed or else the circuit court's decree should be affirmed.

The basic substantive issue on this appeal is the validity of a gift in trust to a trust entity which the testatrix in her will directed her executor to create after her death where the will failed to specify the purposes or details of the proposed trust corporation.

It is undisputed that the entity referred to in Mrs. Allan's will as "The Allan-Bryant Educational Foundation, Inc." is nonexistent. However, this circumstance alone is not necessarily fatal to Mrs. Allan's attempted gift. The authorities are in agreement that a valid testamentary gift may be made to a corporation to be formed in the future. 4 Scott, The Law of Trusts § 401.8, at 3163-64 (3d ed. 1967); 15 Am. Jur.2d Charities § 44 (1964); 14 C.J.S.Charities § 32 (1939). Courts have been favorably disposed towards such gifts where the gift is in trust to a charitable corporation and the title to the gift property is to vest in the trustees immediately upon the death of the testator, thereby precluding any possibility of a violation of the rule against perpetuities. 1 Bowe-Parker, Page on Wills §17.6, at 817 (rev. ed. 1960). Similarly, in considering a gift to a nonexistent association, this Court has concluded,

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