Citizens & Southern National Bank Ex Rel. Urquhart v. Auman

191 S.E.2d 511, 259 S.C. 263, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 236
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 11, 1972
Docket19481
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 191 S.E.2d 511 (Citizens & Southern National Bank Ex Rel. Urquhart v. Auman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Citizens & Southern National Bank Ex Rel. Urquhart v. Auman, 191 S.E.2d 511, 259 S.C. 263, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 236 (S.C. 1972).

Opinion

Lewis, Justice.

This matter involves the construction of the terms of a trust created by the late Mrs. Ida B. Urquhart, of Columbia, South Carolina, for the purpose of determining what persons are entitled to the remaining trust assets after the termination of life estates provided for in the trust instrument. Our statement of the material facts, which are undisputed, largely follows that contained in the statement of *266 the case; and our disposition of the legal issues follows, to some extent, the order of the lower court.

On August 15, 1965, Mrs. Urquhart (donor) and The Citizens and Southern National Bank of South Carolina (trustee) entered into a Trust Agreement by which a revocable trust was created. Under its terms, the trustee was to hold, manage, invest and reinvest the trust estate, and collect the income. The income was to be paid to the donor during her lifetime, with the power granted to the trustee, in its sole discretion, to invade the principal of the estate if it became necessary to provide for the donor’s needs.

The trust instrument further provided that, upon the death of the donor, ten (10%) percent of the trust estate would be paid to three designated charities, with the remaining ninety (90%) percent to be held in trust by the trustee and the income therefrom paid to Stanley Auman, the donor’s son, during his lifetime and, after his death, to Margaret Auman, the son’s wife, for her lifetime. The trustee was also given the power, in its sole discretion, to invade the principal of the trust estate on behalf of either of these beneficiaries if it-decided that it was in the best interest of the beneficiary affected.

Under the terms of the trust, the grantor agreed to execute all such instruments as might be necessary “to vest the trustee with full title to the property being transferred to it.” With reference to the disposition of the trust assets after the termination of the mentioned life estates, the trust agreement provided that, after the deaths of the donor, Stanley Auman, and Margaret Auman, the life beneficiaries,

“this trust shall terminate and the trust estate shall be paid over in equal shares to such of the nieces and nephews of the grantor as are listed in Schedule B attached hereto. In the event any such niece or nephew is deceased at that time, his or her share shall be paid over per stirpes to his or her children; if a listed niece or nephew is deceased without leaving a child or children, then his or her share shall *267 go to the surviving listed nieces and nephews in equal shares.” (Emphasis added.)

At the time of the execution of the trust agreement, no Schedule B was attached and, at no time thereafter, did the donor furnish a Schedule B listing any nieces or nephews to whom the trust estate should be paid upon the termination of the life estates and the trust.

On April 12, 1958, the donor executed her Will in which she gave her household furnishings and possessions of a personal nature, such as clothes and jewelry, to her son, Stanley Auman. The remainder of her property, not previously deposited with the trustee, was devised to the trustee to be added to the trust estate and administered under the previous Trust Agreement. This will, executed almost two years after the execution of the Trust Agreement, did not designate any nieces or nephews to receive the estate upon the termination of the trust.

After the execution of her will the donor was declared incompetent. Her competency at the time and preceding the: execution of the will, however, is not questioned. She died on August 25, 1968.

As pointed out, at no time did the donor furnish the Schedule B referred to in the trust instrument, or in any manner designate any nieces or nephews to take the trust estate after the death of the life beneficiaries and the consequent termination of the trust.

After the death of the donor, the trustee brought this action for declaratory judgment against Stanley Auman, his wife, Margaret Auman, and the nieces and nephews of the grantor, seeking a determination of what persons are entitled to share in the remainder of the trust assets after the termination of the life interests, since no nieces and nephews were designated to take; and what restrictions, if any, on the discretion of the trustee in invading the principal of the trust, are necessary and appropriate for the protection of the persons entitled to the remaining interest, if. *268 other than Stanley Auman who was the sole heir at law of the donor at the time of her death.

The trustee takes a position of neutrality and the controversy is, in effect, between Stanley Auman, the sole heir at law of the donor at the time of her death, and her nieces and nephews. The question at issue is basically: Who takes the trust property after the falling in of the life interests — Stanley Auman or the nieces and nephews.

Auman contends that the trust instrument created, after the life interests in him and his wife, a right of reversion in the donor, the reversion subject to being defeated by the donor’s designation of nieces and nephews to take the estate after the termination of the trust; and that, since the reversion was not defeated by such designation of nieces and nephews, it passed at the death of the donor to him as her sole heir at law.

The nieces and nephews take the position, on the other hand, that the trust instrument created a remainder interest in the trust estate, which, under the holding of Blount v. Walker, 31 S. C. 13, 9 S. E. 804, passed by way of resulting trust to the heirs of the donor — nieces and nephews — at the time of the termination of the life estates and the trust.

The issues were referred to the master who held that (1) the donor did not make a gift over to the nieces and nephews, as a class, by reason of her failure to furnish Schedule B designating which of the nieces and nephews she wished to take; but that (2), upon the termination of the life estates, the nieces and nephews should take as beneficiaries of a resulting trust; and (3) the trustee should continue its policy in the administration of the trust.

Upon exceptions to the report of the master, the lower court affirmed the conclusion of the master that there was no gift over to nieces and nephews, but reversed the finding that the nieces and nephews, upon the termination of the life estates, should take the remaining portion of the trust *269 estate as beneficiaries of a resulting trust. Instead, the lower court held that, under the trust instrument, the donor held a reversion in the trust estate, which, at the time of her death, vested in her son, Stanley Auman, as her sole heir at law. From this decision the nieces and nephews have appealed.

Stanley Auman and his wife were beneficiaries of the income from the trust estate for life. The determination of the issue in this appeal turns largely upon the nature of the estate created upon the termination of the life estates. This must be determined from the trust instrument.

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191 S.E.2d 511, 259 S.C. 263, 1972 S.C. LEXIS 236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/citizens-southern-national-bank-ex-rel-urquhart-v-auman-sc-1972.