Deutsch v. Wolff

994 S.W.2d 561, 1999 Mo. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 504812
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 29, 1999
Docket81296
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 994 S.W.2d 561 (Deutsch v. Wolff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deutsch v. Wolff, 994 S.W.2d 561, 1999 Mo. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 504812 (Mo. 1999).

Opinion

HOLSTEIN, J.

The beneficiaries of three trusts established by the will of Marvin Deutsch sued the trustee, Eugene Wolff, and the accountant for the trusts, Alan Wolff. In an extended bench-tried case, the Circuit Court of St. Louis County removed the trustee, disqualified the successor trustee, ordered an accounting, and awarded several money judgments. The trustee and accountant appeal only the money judg *564 ments, which relate to two of the trusts created by the Deutsch will. This Court granted transfer after an opinion by the court of appeals. Mo. Const art. V, sec. 10. The judgment is affirmed.

I.

Marvin Deutsch (Settlor) and Eugene Wolff (Trustee) were close personal friends from 1948 until the Settlor’s death-in May 1972, and were partners in several ventures at the time of the Settlor’s death. The Trustee was also a certified public accountant (CPA) and acted as the accountant for the Settlor. In May 1972, the Settlor died unexpectedly. His will created the two testamentary trusts involved in this appeal. It established a marital deduction trust, the Living Trust, for his wife, Geraldine, and the Family Trust for Geraldine and the three children. The Settlor appointed Geraldine and the Trustee as trustees of the Living Trust and the Trustee as sole trustee of the Family Trust. Geraldine Deutsch elected to delegate her responsibilities to the Trustee. The will provided for successor trustees who were attorneys of the law firm that prepared the will. In the event those persons were unwilling or unable to serve, it named Tower Grove Bank & Trust Co.

The will directed the Trustee to distribute income and authorized the Trustee, in his sole and uncontrolled discretion, to encroach upon the principal for the “need, comfort, or welfare of Geraldine” and the “education, need, comfort, welfare, maintenance and support” of the Family Trust beneficiaries. The will authorized the Trustee to “assist a beneficiary in establishing a business, household, or profession.” Additionally, the will provided, “Whenever the Trustee shall be required or authorized by the terms of this instrument to make any decision, the Trustee’s decision in the absence of fraud shall be final, binding and conclusive on all parties and interests and shall not be subject to review or challenge by any court of equity or law.”

The primary original assets of the Living Trust were the Beau Jardín Apartments and the Willowbrook Shopping Center. The primary original assets- of the Family Trust were four projects that the Settlor was developing through four partnerships, one for each project. Prior to his death, the Settlor was the managing general partner of each of the four partnerships, and the Trustee owned or claimed ownership in each of the partnerships. The four projects were Whispering Lakes Apartments, Oxford Hill Apartments, Sierra Vista Apartments and Village Green Apartments. Three of the four projects were still in various stages of development at the time of the Settlor’s death. The trust owned 70% of Whispering Lakes, and the Trustee personally owned a 5% partnership interest in Whispering Lakes. The trust owned approximately 63% of the Oxford Hill apartments, and the Trustee personally owned at least a 7% interest. The trust owned 48% of the Sierra Vista Apartments, and the Trustee also claimed an ownership interest, but that claim was rejected by the trial court. The trust owned 48% of the Village Green Apartments, and the Trustee claimed an ownership interest, but that claim also was rejected by the trial court. The trial court found that the trust owned additional equitable- interests in all but Whispering Lakes.

The Trustee elected to complete the construction of the projects that were incomplete at the time of the Settlor’s death. The Trustee used Marvin Deutsch Enterprises (MDE) to complete the projects. MDE was wholly owned and operated by the Family Trust, and the Trustee directed MDE’s activities. The Trustee also assumed the Settlor’s role as the managing general partner of the apartment partnerships. By 1977, all of the apartment projects were completed. During the remainder of the trust’s ownership of the apartments, the Family Trust, directed by the Trustee, oversaw the management of the apartment projects. The *565 trial court found that the Trustee spent “substantial time and effort overseeing the development and management of the apartment partnerships,” and that Trustee “deserved substantial credit for the completion, management and ultimate sale of the apartment projects following the [Set-tlor’s] death, which produced the foregoing benefits for the Family Trust.”

In 1984, the partnerships sold two of the apartment projects and, in 1985, the remaining two projects were sold for an aggregate of $71,000,000. The Family Trust’s share for this interest was at least $28,000,000. For the Living Trust, the Trustee converted 98 of the 182 Beau Jar-din Apartment units into condominiums. He gave one unit to an employee of MDE and sold the rest.

The will provided for the compensation of the Trustee. “Any acting Trustee shall be entitled to compensation for his, her, or its services in accordance with such published schedule of fees as shall have been adopted by Tower Grove Bank and Trust Company and in effect at time such services are rendered.” There is no dispute that Tower Grove Bank & Trust Co. subsequently became part of Commerce Bank and that the fee schedules of the bank relevant to the determination of the Trustee’s fees were published in 1959, revised in 1976,1988,1985,1988 and 1991.

The bank’s fee schedule in effect in 1972 provided compensation for: (1) a percentage of principal under management; (2) management or sale of real estate; (3) an additional amount for unusual or special services. The 1976 version permitted: (1) 2% of “gross income collected”; (2) a percentage of principal; (3) “5 % of gross rentals collected (in lieu of percentages of principal and income)”; (4) an additional payment for “unusual, special, or extraordinary services.” The 1983 version provided: (1) 4% of income; (2) a percent of principal; (3) 7% of gross rentals; and (4) payment for “unusual, special or extraordinary services.” There is no objective standard in any of the schedules by which to measure compensation for unusual, special or extraordinary services. The fee schedules do not expressly mention compensation for a development of assets.

The sums paid or received by the Trustee for the twenty-two years between 1972 and 1993 were for fees, commissions, salary and proceeds of sale as follows:

1. Total Trustee’s Fees
Family Trust— $2,344,447 * 22=$106,566/year
Living Trust— $1,274,594-7-22=$ 57,939/year
$3,802,085 $164,502/year
2. Salary paid by MDE
$823,200
3. Proceeds of sales of Trustee’s interests in partnerships
$2,288,500
4. Commissions paid by Family Trust on sale of partnership tax losses
$200,000
5. Trustee’s personal share of rents the Family Trusts paid a partnership in which Trustee was a partner

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
994 S.W.2d 561, 1999 Mo. LEXIS 39, 1999 WL 504812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deutsch-v-wolff-mo-1999.