David B.T. Myrick, Jr. v. Moody National Bank

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 10, 2011
Docket01-09-00510-CV
StatusPublished

This text of David B.T. Myrick, Jr. v. Moody National Bank (David B.T. Myrick, Jr. v. Moody National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David B.T. Myrick, Jr. v. Moody National Bank, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued February 10, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-09-00510-CV

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David B.T. Myrick, Jr., Appellant

V.

Moody National Bank, Trustee, Appellee

On Appeal from the 10th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 07CV0323

O P I N I O N

Appellant David B.T. Myrick, Jr. appeals from a declaratory judgment granted in favor of appellee Moody National Bank.  The bank is the trustee and Myrick is a beneficiary of a trust created in 1934.  Myrick sued the trustee, seeking a declaratory judgment that it did not have the authority to enter into a lease with terms extending beyond the termination date of the trust.  The trustee countersued, seeking, among other things, a declaration of its right to enter into the proposed lease and its authority to borrow against the trust estate.  Both parties moved for summary judgment, and the trial court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the trustee, declaring that it had authority to enter into a lease extending 180 days beyond the expiration of the trust and to borrow funds and encumber the trust property.  The remaining issues were tried before the court, and the summary-judgment rulings merged into the final judgment.

On appeal Myrick argues that the trustee did not establish its authority to enter into the proposed lease and the trial court lacked jurisdiction to declare the trustee’s authority to borrow because the controversy was not ripe.  In the event we grant relief to Myrick on either issue, both parties request a remand on the subject of attorney’s fees.  Finding no error, we affirm.

Background

          During the 1930s, William L. Moody, III (Moody III) and his family owned and lived on the Rio Bonito Ranch, which consists of approximately 15,000 acres near Junction, Texas.  Moody III encountered financial difficulties in 1934, and a creditor foreclosed on the property.  Through an agent, W.L. Moody, Jr. (Moody Jr.), the father of Moody III, purchased the ranch at the foreclosure sale and conveyed it to Rio Bonito Ranch, Inc., a corporation created and owned by Moody Jr.

The trust agreement.  On December 31, 1934, Moody Jr. executed a trust agreement creating an irrevocable trust.  Pursuant to the agreement, he conveyed all capital stock of Rio Bonito Ranch, Inc. in trust to City National Bank of Galveston, Texas.  City National Bank of Galveston is the former corporate name of the current trustee, Moody National Bank of Galveston.  The trust agreement gives the trustee the power to “possess, hold and vote” the Rio Bonito Ranch stock and to “receive, collect and recover all dividends, income and profits therefrom, as if [it] were the absolute owner.”  The trustee is expressly prohibited from selling “said stock or any part thereof, except as hereinafter provided for” in the trust agreement.  The agreement also provides that the trustee may “liquidate said corporation and accept the corporate assets in lieu of the stock, in which latter event such assets shall be possessed, held and managed in lieu of the stock for the accomplishment of the uses and purposes herein set forth and subject to the terms, conditions and powers herein specified.”

The settlor specified that the beneficial interest was to be vested in his offspring, including his son, Moody III; his grandchildren, Edna Haden Moody, Virginia Moody, and William Lewis Moody, IV (Moody IV); and his great-grandchildren.  The trust agreement requires the trustee to pay the taxes, expenses, and fees chargeable to the estate out of the income of the trust, and then to pay the net income from the trust estate to Moody III on a semi-annual basis until his death.  After Moody III’s death, payments are to be made in equal shares to his children, or if his children are deceased or die before the termination of the trust, to their descendants per stirpes.  The agreement specifies several events that would cause the trust to terminate, but the likely terminating event, and the only one that is relevant for purposes of this appeal, is the death of Moody IV, the last survivor of Moody III’s children who were living at the time the trust was created.  Upon termination, the trustee must distribute the trust estate in equal shares per stirpes to the then-living grandchildren of Moody III and the surviving descendants of his deceased grandchildren.

          The trust gives the trustee broad authority and discretion to make decisions concerning the construction and administration of the trust.  Paragraph IX provides:

If any question should arise concerning the construction and administration of this Trust, the Trustee, acting either on its own judgment or under direction or advice, upon such evidence as it shall think fit, may determine such question, and such determination or determinations shall be final and binding on all persons.  It is agreed that the Trustee shall have power to determine all matters as to which any doubt, difficulty or question may arise under or in relation to the execution of the Trust.

Following the execution of the trust agreement, Moody III lived on the ranch for a number of years.  He died in 1992, survived by all three of his children.  His two daughters are now deceased.  Moody IV, who was 84 years old at the time of trial, is the last surviving child of Moody III.  Unless some other terminating event occurs, the trust will terminate upon his death, and the trustee will then be required to distribute the trust estate in accordance with the terms of the trust agreement.

Administration of the trust.  Although Moody III lived on the ranch for many years, it was leased in 1966 to a third party. 

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David B.T. Myrick, Jr. v. Moody National Bank, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-bt-myrick-jr-v-moody-national-bank-texapp-2011.