Blumenstiel v. Morris

180 S.W.2d 107, 207 Ark. 244, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 650
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 8, 1944
Docket4-7360
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 107 (Blumenstiel v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blumenstiel v. Morris, 180 S.W.2d 107, 207 Ark. 244, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 650 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

McFaddin, J.

This is an attempt by the beneficiaries to remove a testamentary trustee on the grounds of (1) absence of the trustee, and (2) hostility between trustee and beneficiaries. From a decree of the chancery court refusing the petition there is this appeal by the beneficiaries.

Simon Blumenstiel departed this life May, 1939; and in June, 1939, there was admitted to probate in Garland county, Arkansas, his last will and testament (dated May 18, 1936) and the codicil thereto (dated April 14, 1938). By these instruments John H. Morris, (appellee), was appointed executor and trustee. All of the property of the deceased was devised and bequeathed to the said trustee, and a trust established for 20 years from the death of the testator. The trustee was directed, inter alia, to (a) hold all securities until maturity, (b) rent the buildings, (c) keep on hand not in excess of $5,000 cash, (d) pay $200 per month to each of the two beneficiaries, Buth Blumenstiel and Alfred Blumenstiel (children of the testator), (e) render semi-annual reports to the two beneficiaries, and (f) render any annual net income of the trust, after paying taxes, insurance premiums, legacies, and other expenses, to the said two beneficiaries, Buth Blumenstiel and Alfred Blumenstiel. The sale of any corpus of the estate could be accomplished only on the concurrence of the trustee, and the two beneficiaries, and the order of the probate court. The will, as contained in the transcript before us, consists of several printed pages and most all of the will, except the first few lines, is concerned with detailed instructions to tlie trustee. The will recites: “John H. Morris and I have agreed that for his services as trustee under this will, and as executor of the will, he shall receive and be paid the sum of $200' per year . , .” The will further recites that in the event of the death or incapacity of John H. Morris then Alfred Blumenstiel .(one of the beneficiaries) should serve as trustee.

The Blumenstiel estate and trust consists of stocks, securities, government bonds, and certain real estate which is business property in the city of Hot Springs, Arkansas, and leased on a long term monthly rental basis. John H. Morris served as executor from the death of the deceased, and served as trustee from the closing of the administration; and there is not the slightest intimation of anything except the utmost integrity and fidelity on his part. In the case of Murphy v. Morris, Trustee, 200 Ark. 932, 141 S. W. 2d 518, another part of the same Simon Blumenstiel will was before this court. Other facts appear hereinafter.

As previously stated only two grounds are urged by appellants for removal of the trustee; and we discuss these.

I. Absence of the Trustee. J. IT. Morris was an officer in the United States Army in World War I; and on January 20, 1943, he again entered the military service of the United States. At the time of the trial below (June 24,1943), when he was back in Arkansas on leave, he testified that he was then stationed at Camp Hood, Texas, serving in an administrative capacity in the Insurance Section of the United States Army. He is still a citizen and resident of Arkansas, but since January 20, 1943, he has been in the United States Army stationed in Texas; and this military service is seized upon by the appellants as a cause for the removal of Morris as trustee. Act 21 of 1943 has no application here because Morris is a resident.

Our search discloses four Arkansas cases involving the removal of a trustee; but none of these cases involved either of the particular grounds here urged. In Mandel v. Peay, 20 Ark. 325, concerning trustees in a deed of trust, Chief Justice English stated that if trustees should waste the property of the trust they could be removed. In Williams v. Nichol, 47 Ark. 254, 1 S. W. 243, Mr. Justice Battle recognized that the acts or omissions of a trustee must he such as to endanger the trust property before a trustee should be removed. In Williamson v. Grider, 97 Ark. 588, 135 S. W. 361, Mr. Justice Wood stated that where a trustee had proceeded in accordance with the directions of a lower court the trustee should not be removed even if on appeal it should he held that the directions of the lower court were erroneous. In Harr v. Fordyce, 88 Ark. 192, 113 S. W. 1033, Mr. Justice Battle listed four causes for removing a trustee being, the endangering of a trust property, dishonesty, incapacity, and infidelity. The grounds for removal urged in the case at bar are different from any recognized in any of our previous cases, so wo turn to text writers and general authorities.

In 65 C. J. 618 the rule is stated: “Absence or Removal from Jurisdiction. In the absence of contrary statute, a trustee’s departure from the jurisdiction does not ipso facto operate to deprive him of office, nor compel the court to remove him upon application, although absence in a foreign country may create a prima facie case for removal on petition of the cestui. As a general rule, removal of a trustee on the ground of non-residence or absence from the jurisdiction is discretionary with the court, which will ordinarily not regard the hare fact of absence or non-residence as ground for removal, but will remove an absent trustee where his absence endangers the trust estate, as where the absence is of a prolonged or permanent character precluding proper attention to the trust, or where, in addition to absence, there is also neglect of duty.”

The above is the most favorable for the appellants that we have been able to find concerning absence or non-residence as a ground for removal. Many of the standard authorities on Trusts either fail to discuss non-residence as a ground for removal or, else, give it scant consideration. In Scott on “Trusts,” Yol. 1, p. 556, ff, absence from the jurisdiction is not even considered. In Bogert on “Trusts and Trustees,” Vol. 3, p. 1665, it is stated that absence is not necessarily a ground for removal. In Lewin on “Trusts,” 14th. Ed., p. 431 (an English publication), it is stated that only by virtue of a statute of England of 1925 is absence considered as grounds for removal. In 26 B. C. L. 1276 absence is not even mentioned as grounds for removal.

The cases from other jurisdictions, as cited by appellants, do not sustain appellants’ contentions. In Letcher v. German National Bank, 134 Ky. 24, 119 S. W. 236, 20 Ann. Cas. 815, the Kentucky court held that non-residence of the trustee must be coupled with the endangering of the trust estate before removal of the trustee would be ordered. In the note to this case in 20 Ann. Cas. 816 there is a list of other cases sustaining the Kentucky court. In Welch v. Welch, 235 Wis. 282, 290 N. W. 758, 293 N. W. 150, the Supreme Court of Wisconsin refused to remove trustees on the bare fact of absence or non-residence. And in Brocker v. Ware (Delaware, 1942), 29 Atl. 2d 521, the court of chancery of Delaware recognized that mere non-residence of the trustee was not in itself a sufficient cause for removal. In all of these cases it was stated that there must be the endangering of the trust fund or some other matter coupled with the absence before there was a proper case for removal.

Even under the rule stated in Corpus Juris, supra, the appellants have made no case for removal of the trustee for at least two reasons: In the first place, the removal is in the sound discretion of the trial court.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 S.W.2d 107, 207 Ark. 244, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 650, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blumenstiel-v-morris-ark-1944.