Collins v. Citizens & Southern Trust Co.

373 S.E.2d 612, 258 Ga. 665, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 498
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 10, 1988
Docket45575
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 373 S.E.2d 612 (Collins v. Citizens & Southern Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Citizens & Southern Trust Co., 373 S.E.2d 612, 258 Ga. 665, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 498 (Ga. 1988).

Opinions

Marshall, Chief Justice.

Appellee, C & S Trust Company, filed a petition in the Cobb Superior Court, seeking to qualify as an appointed co-executor and co-trustee in the will of O. C. Hubert. In the petition, C & S also sought relief in the way of declaratory judgment and equitable direction.1 In this regard, C & S states that it needs direction as to whether it is legally authorized to distribute and administer assets of the estate in accordance with an agreement of the heirs of the testator, and beneficiaries under the will, modifying the terms of the will.

Under the will, the residuary estate is composed of a trust valued at approximately $25,000,000. The remaindermen of the trust are charitable organizations engaged in the fulfillment of certain de[666]*666scribed purposes. Pursuant to statutory provisions2 authorizing him to act as the legal representative of the rights of beneficiaries under a charitable trust, the district attorney for the Cobb Judicial Circuit was presented with the modification agreement in this case, and he consented thereto, finding it to be in the best interests of the charitable beneficiaries. The state revenue commissioner was also presented with the agreement, but he refused to consent.

Facts

The testator died on June 2, 1986, owning approximately 200 parcels of improved and unimproved, income producing and non-income producing, real estate. Approximately 150 of these parcels are located in Cobb County.

The testator’s heirs are composed of his widow — appellee Ruth S. Hubert, to whom the testator had been married since 1933 — and the four children of the Hubert marriage: appellees Richard N. Hubert, Marilyn H. Hubert, Judith H. Manning, and Deborah H. Jones. The testator’s nephew, Robert H. Owen, was the scrivener of the will and was appointed as co-executor and successor co-trustee therein. He and the district attorney are the remaining appellees herein.

The testator’s gross estate was valued for federal estate-tax purposes at $30,254,219. Under the will executed by the testator in 1982, there are several specific bequests with an aggregate value of $633,000; $3,118,162 is allocated in the will for payment of certain debts and administration expenses, leaving a residuary estate valued at $26,503,057.

It is Item VIII of the 1982 will, and codicils, which create a charitable - remainder trust in the testator’s residuary estate. The widow is named as sole life-income beneficiary of the residuary-estate trust. C & S and the widow are named as co-trustees under the will; and the testator’s son, Richard N. Hubert, as well as his nephew, Robert Owen, are named as the widow’s successor co-trustees. Under the will, the income from the principal of the residuary estate is to be paid at least annually to the testator’s widow for her life. Upon her death, the Hubert children are each to receive in fee simple a designated parcel of property with a current aggregate valuation of approximately $3,984,028.

The remaining assets of the residuary estate, which are valued under the will at $22,519,209, are to remain therein as a charitable - remainder trust, to be used for the purpose of “feeding starving people in the world, treating the sick who are poor and starving, and giving Bibles to those who need to know Jesus Christ.”

[667]*667Under Item X of the will, the trustees are to distribute the accumulated income and principal of the residuary trust to Christian organizations exempt from federal income taxes and designated by the trustees “in their sole and unfettered discretion” to accomplish the foregoing purposes. It is stated in the will that such distributions are required to take place within 21 years from the widow’s death.

On July 18, 1986, appellee Robert H. Owen submitted the 1982 will for probate in common form in the Probate Court of Cobb County, and he filed an application for letters testamentary. On August 5, 1986, he submitted the will for probate in solemn form. On August 22, 1986, appellee Deborah H. Jones filed a caveat to probate of the will. On August 29, 1986, appellees Judith H. Manning and Marilyn H. Kemper also filed caveats to the will.3 Settlement negotiations among the family then began. During this time, the widow filed an action in Cobb Superior Court to have appellee Robert H. Owen declared unqualified to serve as co-trustee and co-executor.

The modification agreement was negotiated among the family. Neither the district attorney nor the revenue commissioner participated in the negotiations. As previously stated, the district attorney consented to the agreement; the revenue commissioner refused to consent.

Under Paragraph 13 of the modification agreement, the Item VIII residuary trust is deleted from the testator’s estate plan. Under Paragraph 14, a residuary estate valued at $26,085,310 is to be distributed as follows: The widow is to be given the sum of $1,080,000, as well as 50 percent of the remaining assets of the residuary estate in fee simple. The four parcels of property designated for the Hubert children under the will are to be placed in four separate trusts, with the net income to be distributed annually to the widow for her life and upon her death the four parcels to be distributed to the children in fee simple. Paragraph 14 further provides for the immediate creation of a charitable trust to be funded with the remaining residue, which is valued under the modification agreement at $12,502,655. However, prior to funding this charitable trust, there is to be deducted from the foregoing sum any extraordinary administrative compensation payable to C & S as temporary administrator.

Paragraph 9 of the modification agreement deletes Item X of the will and substitutes therefor a provision which contains, among other things, the following modifications and additions to the will: Charitable distributions are to be made in accordance with the directions of an Advisory Committee, which is composed of the four Hubert children and the widow. And, a right given to the individual co-trustees [668]*668under the will to remove C & S “at any time and from time to time,” through the appointment of another bank as successor co-trustee, is stricken. Robert H. Owen is eliminated as successor co-trustee, and Dr. I. B. Hall is appointed in his place. Richard N. Hubert’s successor co-trustee is required to be a lineal descendant of the testator, and this trustee is to be elected by majority vote of the Advisory Committee.

Under the agreement, the Hubert Realty Company, which is owned by the Hubert children, is granted the right to an exclusive listing with regard to the management and sale of Georgia income-producing property, during the administration of the estate and the existence of the charitable trust; and Hubert Realty is also granted an exclusive listing with respect to the sale of any Georgia property during the existence of the charitable trust. Hubert Realty is further granted the right to receive brokerage commissions and management fees for its services, as well as the right to act as sales agent in the sales or management of any trust property not covered by the exclusive listing. Hubert Realty, Dehco, Inc. (which is also owned by the Hubert family), and one of the Hubert daughters, are given a right of first refusal to purchase certain designated property from the charitable trust.

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Related

Collins v. Citizens & Southern Trust Co.
373 S.E.2d 612 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
373 S.E.2d 612, 258 Ga. 665, 1988 Ga. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-citizens-southern-trust-co-ga-1988.