Becker v. First Wisconsin Trust Co.

80 N.W.2d 440, 274 Wis. 404, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 440
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 80 N.W.2d 440 (Becker v. First Wisconsin Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. First Wisconsin Trust Co., 80 N.W.2d 440, 274 Wis. 404, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 440 (Wis. 1957).

Opinion

Broadfoot, J.

Prior to the execution of the trust agreement the plaintiff was the sole beneficiary of a testamentary trust under the will of his father. The First Wisconsin Trust Company was trustee of said trust. Under the provisions of the testamentary trust the trustee was authorized to pay the corpus thereof to the plaintiff when he attained the age of twenty-five years, but with discretion to withhold such payment until he attained the age of thirty-five years. The trustee declined to pay the corpus of the trust to plaintiff when he was twenty-five years of age and continued to hold the same as trustee. The plaintiff was twenty-seven years of age at the time the trust agreement, which is the basis of this action, was executed.

As a result of family difficulties, plaintiff’s wife left his home and took the children with her. In an attempt at reconciliation conferences were held between plaintiff and his wife with an officer of the Trust Company. The trust agreement was drawn and executed as a result of those conferences. During the conferences it was agreed that the testamentary trust would be terminated and the plaintiff, as donor in the trust agreement, assigned the property formerly in the testamentary trust to the trustee herein under the terms of the trust agreement. The corpus of the trust was divided into two shares. Share A consisted of 25/40 thereof and Share B consisted of 15/40 thereof. Maude Becker was to receive the net income from Share A. The children, who are named as individual defendants, were to receive the income from Share B. In case of the death of Maude Becker before final distribution of the trust, Share A was to be added to Share B. *408 When and as any of the children attained the age of thirty years her share of the principal of Share B was to be distributed to her. In the event of the death of said Maude Becker and the deaths intestate and without surviving issue of the beneficiaries of Share B, any remainder would go to the plaintiff, his executors, administrators, or assigns under the terms of the agreement.

The trust was administered according to its terms and this action was started on October 30, 1953. Mary Lou Amatucci was thirty years of age on October 31, 1953. A temporary restraining order was issued that prevented the Trust Company from making any payments or disbursements from the assets and property held by it pending the outcome of the trial.

The plaintiff’s first contention is that the trust agreement, properly interpreted, reserved to the donor a power of revocation during his lifetime. Paragraph 4 of the trust agreement reads as follows:

“The assets and securities now and/or from time to time hereafter comprised in said trust fund may be held by the trustee in its discretion, whether or not the same conform to the rules herein or by law prescribed for investments; and shall be so held for and so long as the donor shall survive and shall so direct.”

The plaintiff relies in particular upon the last clause of said paragraph. The trial court held that said clause gave the plaintiff a limited power of direction to the plaintiff as to the investment of the assets originally comprising the trust. The plaintiff directs our attention to paragraphs 6 (a) and 8 of the trust agreement, which read as follows:

“6 (a) In making investments the trustee shall be governed from time to time, as it shall in its discretion determine, by the rules from time to time prescribed by any one or more of the following statutes of Wisconsin, and the amendments from time to time made thereto, to wit:
*409 “Section 201.25, regulating investments of insurance companies.
“Section 206.34, regulating investments of life insurance companies.
“Section 231.32, regulating investments by trustees.”
“8. The trustee shall have full power of sale, assignment, transfer, and conveyance of and over any and all the assets from time to time subsisting in the trust estate. It may in its discretion in respect of any corporate securities subsisting in said trust pay and discharge any liens, debts, or obligations existing on any such assets, approve and participate in and make any dissolution or other transactions; accept substituted, or distributed stocks and securities; and may exercise any rights to subscribe for and purchase additional stock or other securities; all with impeachment only for lack of good faith.”

It is the contention of the plaintiff that under paragraph 4 of the trust agreement the trustee was authorized to hold assets originally in the trust whether or not they were legal investments for trustees; that under paragraph 6 the trustee could, in its discretion, invest in securities denominated as legal investments and as defined by one or more of the statutes therein mentioned; and that under paragraph 8, the trustee was given an absolute and unlimited power of sale. The plaintiff then contends that the only rational and sensible meaning which can be attached to the last clause of paragraph 4 is that the donor reserved the power to revoke the trust instrument during his lifetime; otherwise that clause is meaningless.. The plaintiff concedes that as a general rule a trust validly and voluntarily created is irrevocable in the absence of power of revocation reserved in the trust instrument. Nevertheless, he contends that the power of revocation need not be express but may be implied from the terms of the entire agreement, when properly interpreted.

In Boyle v. Kempkin, 243 Wis. 86, 92, 9 N. W. (2d) 589, this court said, “A power to revoke may be implied from the *410 language of the trust instrument.” The plaintiff also cites the case of Lambdin v. Dantzebecker, 169 Md. 240, 243, 181 Atl. 353, 102 A. L. R. 277, in which a clause “and this is her authority to do so, until otherwise directed” was held to be a reservation by the donor to revoke or modify the trust agreement. Plaintiff contends that the last clause of paragraph 4 is far more clear and certain in its statement of the purpose to reserve the power of revocation than were the words construed by the Maryland court. However, a reading of the Lambdin Case shows that the facts are entirely dissimilar. The trust agreement in the Lambdin Case was held to be ambiguous and parol evidence of all the facts and circumstances surrounding the execution of the trust agreement was before the court. Included in that testimony was the statement of the scrivener as to what was intended. Under the circumstances, the Lambdin Case is not persuasive when applied to the facts revealed by the record in this case. A careful reading of the entire trust agreement convinces us that the trial court was correct in its interpretation. The last clause of paragraph 4 gave the plaintiff the right to direct the T rust Company to hold the original securities comprising the corpus of the trust. The language is clear and unambiguous and it would require a very strained construction to reach the result contended for by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff further calls attention to the case of Trenton Banking Co. v. Howard (N. J.), 187 Atl. 569, 187 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
80 N.W.2d 440, 274 Wis. 404, 1957 Wisc. LEXIS 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-first-wisconsin-trust-co-wis-1957.