Commercial National Bank v. Armstrong

250 P.2d 789, 173 Kan. 554, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 237
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 6, 1952
DocketNo. 38,571
StatusPublished

This text of 250 P.2d 789 (Commercial National Bank v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commercial National Bank v. Armstrong, 250 P.2d 789, 173 Kan. 554, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 237 (kan 1952).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Smith, J.:

This appeal arises out of a trustee’s intermediate accounting. The trustee filed its intermediate accounting covering the period from August 31, 1949, to August 31, 1950. It asked that such accounting be allowed and amongst other things that the court fix an amount to be paid Mayme Armstrong and Arthur J. Stanley, for services rendered by them as investment advisers during the same period.

The probate court allowed the trustee’s report. It also allowed the trustee a fee of $1,000 for its services as trustee for the period from August 31,1949, to August 31,1950, and counsel for the trustee $800 for services performed during the same period. The corn! also found that Stanley had waived compensation for services rendered as investment adviser of the trustee under the terms of the will up to and including August 31, 1950, for $1,000. It is significant that while the fees allowed the trustee and counsel were for services rendered during the period of accounting, that is, from August 31, [555]*5551949, to August 31, 1950, there was no time fixed when the probate court found the services of Mayme began. The evidence disclosed she had never asked for a fee before that, for services rendered either the executor or trustee and the executor and trustee and its counsel had asked for and been allowed fees for such services. In due time she appealed from the order of the probate court fixing her fee. The district court fixed the amount of her fee at $5,000, but did not designate any period during which the services were performed. The trustee has appealed.

The specifications of error are, the trial court erred in rendering judgment against the trust estate in the amount of $5,000;, in finding and adjudging that Mayme W. Armstrong had rendered services in behalf of the trust estate which were reasonably worth $5,000; in finding that she was- entitled to recover from the trust estate for services rendered the executor of his estate; in finding that $5,000 was due her from the trust estate for the reason that no evidence was introduced justifying or authorizing such an allowance and the amount was grossly excessive and the trial court erred in overruling the trustee s motion for a new trial.

The trustee states the questions to be — May the district court in an appeal from an order of the probate court in a trust estate, allow compensation for services claimed to have been rendered the executor in the administration of the will? — and second, Was the amount awarded by the district court excessive?

Two probate court cases are involved in this appeal. The will disposed of an estate amounting to considerably over half a million dollars. It consisted of some real estate and stocks and bonds.

The will provided that the Kansas Trust Company, to which the present trustee is a successor, should be named executor of the estate and that immediately upon the closing of the estate the executor should turn over to the Kansas Trust Company as trustee all that remained of the estate, which trustee should handle it under the jurisdiction of the probate court. The estate was finally settled on May 31, 1950. The trust estate began with the filing of a petition and the appointment of the bank trustee on September 16, 1947, at that time the real estate in the estate proper was turned over to the trustee. The personal property remained in the hands of the executor until August 16, 1952, when it was delivered to the trustee. This was due to some difficulties with the federal government over estate taxes.

[556]*556Item 5 of the will was a little peculiar. It provided amongst other things as follows:

“I further direct that in the matter of the investment or reinvestment of any <of the funds coming into die hands of my said Trustee, or in the reinvestment of .any investments I may have heretofore made, that Mayme Armstrong, now ■employed by Stem Brothers & Company, Kansas City, Missouri, and Arthur J. •Stanley of Kansas City, Kansas, shall have equal authority with my said Trustee in the selection of the securities to be purchased for investment or reinvestment in said trust. I further direct that my said Trustee, Mayme Armstrong and Arthur J. Stanley shall have at least annual meetings for the purpose of accounting in this trust and approving investments or reinvestments therein and for the payment of the gifts in the third item of this my Will.”

There was no provision as to what compensation should be paid Mayme Armstrong and Arthur Stanley.

The trustee points out that the intermediate accounting from which this appeal springs was filed by the trustee on October 13, 1952, and that in it, it asked the court to fix a fee to be paid Mayme for services as an investment adviser for the period from August 31, 1949, to August 31, 1950. The trustee points out that the securities had only been in the hands of the trustee from August 14,1949, when' they were delivered by the executor, to the trustee until August 31, 1950. The trustee argues the will provided Mayme should be investment adviser to the trustee only and not to the executor and that she had no right to any compensation for any advice she gave the executor.

It is hardly correct to say that the will provided only for payment to Mayme for advice she gave the trustee. Item 5 of the will provided in the first paragraph for a bequest of his residuary estate to the trust company on certain conditions. The next paragraph of this item provided for payments to be made by the executor of certain amounts to testator’s wife. The next paragraph provided that immediately on the closing of the estate the executor should turn over to the trustee all the residue to be used for the support of testator’s wife. It is clear the testator set up a plan by which the same corporation should act as executor of his estate and as trustee. That is what was done. The testator evidently desired that the trust company should have some outside advice as to the investment and reinvestment of the securities comprising his estate, so he named two people in whom he had confidence to have equal authority with the trustee in that business. He, by the terms of the will, made this authority extend “the investment or reinvestment of any of the funds [557]*557coming into the hands of my said Trustee or in the reinvestment of any investments I may have heretofore made.” The above language just as well applies to investments made by the company while acting as executor as while acting as trustee. The last sentence of this paragraph is entitled to some consideration in this connection. In it the testator provided that the two investment advisers should have at least annual meetings with the trustee for the purpose of accounting in the trust approving investments and reinvestments therein and for the payment of gifts to charitable institutions. These were annual gifts testator wanted made out of his estate. It seems clear he wanted them made while his estate was in process of administration as well as under the trusteeship.

This was a peculiar estate in that it consisted of some thirty-two lots of securities, stocks, municipal bonds, and government bonds in value varying from $69,460 to $1,350. The real estate turned' over to the trustee consisted of some eight parcels of real estate of the value of $105,407. It is worthy of note the probate court allowed fees to the trustee and counsel for the trustee in the amount of $1,000 for the one and $800 for the other for the period for which the accounting was made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
250 P.2d 789, 173 Kan. 554, 1952 Kan. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commercial-national-bank-v-armstrong-kan-1952.