Burgum v. Myra Foundation

112 N.W.2d 552, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 108
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1961
Docket7959
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 N.W.2d 552 (Burgum v. Myra Foundation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burgum v. Myra Foundation, 112 N.W.2d 552, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 108 (N.D. 1961).

Opinion

*553 TEIGEN, Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the district court denying appellant’s petition for district court supervision of the administration of an alleged trust. The proceeding is premised on Chapter 59-04, NDCC, entitled “Administration Of Trusts.” The proceeding was initiated by the Attorney General of the State with the State’s Attorney of Grand Forks County joining as persons interested in an alleged trust estate, as authorized by Section 59-04-02, NDCC. The statute employed provides the procedure shall be by special proceeding. Section 59-04-01, NDCC. Chapter 59-04, NDCC, is a special group of statutes designed to provide a method for the supervision of trusts by the district courts. The Rules of Civil Procedure, as set forth in the North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure, effective July 1, 1957, specifically exempt therefrom special proceedings. See Rule 81 and Table A of the Rules. The proceeding is not of an adversary nature but, nevertheless, is directed to certain parties in interest. A. W. Stokes and Murray Allen were designated in the notice hearing the petition as such parties. After hearing, the court also designated Myra Foundation, a corporation, as another party in interest and it too was served. All three parties appeared by written motion to dismiss, premised on Rule 12(b), and for a summary judgment of dismissal, premised on Rule 56 of said North Dakota Rules of Civil Procedure. In other words, the motions filed were specifically premised upon rules of practice not applicable to a special proceeding. However, there has been no objection to this method of procedure and the district court, it appears, considered the appearances to be in resistance to the petition filed and we, for the purposes of this opinion, shall consider the appearances to be general and in resistance to the petition.

There is no question of jurisdiction over parties. The question confronting the court is whether or not it had jurisdiction of the subject matter and, if it finds the evidence and proof sufficient for this purpose, it shall then enter its order that all further proceedings for the supervision of the administration of the trust shall be had in that court. Section 59-04-09, NDCC.

There is no issue of fact. The salient evidence consists of portions of John E. Myra’s last will and testament, a portion of the articles of incorporation of the Myra Foundation, a corporation, and two decrees of partial distribution issued by the county court of Grand Forks County, which had jurisdiction of the probate of the estate of the testator.

John E. Myra executed a last will and testament on December 24, 1937. He later died and his will was admitted to probate in the county court of Grand Forks County, North Dakota, on August 23, 1939. The will provided for certain special bequests, the establishment of a trust of the residue and the establishment of a nonprofit charitable corporation to be formed for the purposes provided in the will. The corporation was formed while the estate was in the process of probate and before the court had distributed any of the corpus of the estate. It was named Myra Foundation. It was organized on April 28, 1941. The special bequests were paid and the residue was transferred directly to the corporation by two decrees of partial distribution made by the county court. The first decree of partial distribution was entered on June 27, 1941. It ordered the payment of the special bequests and the transfer of the real estate, a part of the corpus of the estate, to the Myra Foundation, a corporation. A second partial decree of distribution was entered on February 4, 1942, and it transferred to the said corporation the remaining personal property. The special bequests paid to nine legatees named in the will equalled $38,250. The estate was inventoried at $366,627.34 and the residue, after expenses, taxes and the special bequests, was distributed directly to the Myra Foundation, a corporation, absolutely. No property was conveyed or transferred to the trustee named in the will.

*554 'The respondents in this appeal, A. W. Stokes and Murray Allen, are trustees of the named corporation. The Myra Foundation is. a nonprofit benevolent or charitable corporation.

The Attorney General argues that the said A. W. Stokes and Murray Allen are trustees of the Myra Foundation, a charitable trust created by the will of John E. Myra and organized as a domestic nonprofit corporation; that, therefore, the administration.thereof is subject to supervision by the district court under the provisions of Chapter 59-04, NDCC. This chapter provides for district court supervision of the administration of trusts. The respondents, A. W. Stokes and Murray Allen, and Myra Foundation, a corpora- ■ tion, made a party to the proceeding at the designation of the court, argue that the Myra Foundation, a charitable corporation, recéived its original property or capital directly from the estate of John E. Myra, deceased, as a gift to be used for the purposes for which it was formed; that it is not a trust and, therefore, not subject to supervision under the provisions of the said chapter. The respondents, argue the , corporation is administering its property in accordance with its articles of incorporation and bylaws, that it is subject to the '.visitation of the Attorney General as any .other charitable corporation, that by resisting this proceeding it is not attempting to hide or conceal any of its transactions and that, if it is determined to be a trust, the result would subject every other charitable corporation similar in nature located in this State to court supervision under this statute.

We will now set forth the important parts of the various instruments, heretofore referred to, necessary to a decision in this case.

Paragraph 2 of the will explains the intent and purpose of the testator as follows:

“Except for certain specific bequests hereinafter provided for, it is my will that all of my property, real, personal and mixed, where ever the same may be situated shall go to establish what shall be known as the MYRA FOUNDATION which shall be a permanent institution hereby established for charitable, character building, and educational purposes. The intent and purpose being that the principal derived from the sale of any part of my estate shall forever remain intact to be invested and re-invested so that only the interest or the net income from such investments and from all of the property in my estate shall be expended for such charitable, character building, and edrtcational purposes.”

Paragraph 3 of the will provides for a trust but empowers the trustees named to form a corporation to carry out a part of the duties designated to the trustee and provides that, if the corporation is formed, all of the property, except for the specific bequests, shall go directly to the corporation. Its salient parts read as follows:

“I therefore, hereby give, devise, and bequeath all of my property, real, personal, and mixed, where ever the same may be situated (except such property as may be necessary to provide for the specific bequests hereinafter mentioned) unto Amelia Unumb and her successors forever, as Trustee for the uses and purposes hereinafter provided for with full power to sell, mortgage, invest and re-invest all or any part of said property.

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112 N.W.2d 552, 1961 N.D. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burgum-v-myra-foundation-nd-1961.