Dunn v. Dunn Trust

258 N.W. 695, 219 Iowa 349
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1935
DocketNo. 42912.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 695 (Dunn v. Dunn Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. Dunn Trust, 258 N.W. 695, 219 Iowa 349 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Anderson, C. J.

On the 22d of January, 1929, Le Roy C. Dunn, together with his wife, Isabelle M. Dunn, the plaintiff-appellant herein, made, executed, and filed for record a certain trust conveyance and convention. The beneficiaries named therein were Isabelle M. Dunn, his wife, and Virginia, Isabelle, and Martha Dunn, daughters of the trustor, Le Roy C. Dunn. Le Roy C. Dunn was nominated as trustee during his lifetime, and Isabelle M. Dunn and A. J. Huglin were designated as successors in trust. The article of trust provides that the trust period shall commence at the date of its execution and continue during the lives of the trustor, Le Roy C. Dunn, and his wife, Isabelle M. Dunn, and for a period of twenty-one years thereafter. The trust conveyance also provides that the trustor, Le Roy C. Dunn, sells, assigns, transfers, and conveys unto the trustee named, and his successors in trust, all of the title and interest, including the gains, profits, and income from all of the property listed in a schedule attached to and made a part of the *351 trust conveyance, and all other property, either real or personal, which the trustor thereafter sells and conveys or causes to he sold and conveyed to the trustee or trustees, together with all rents, issues, gains, and profits therefrom and all other rights appendant and appurtenant in and to said property so conveyed. The property so conveyed and listed in the schedule consisted of life insurance, slocks, real estate, and the trustor’s business known as the Dunn Funeral Home in Des Moines, Iowa. The trust was administered by Le Roy C. Dunn, the trustee named in the conveyance, until his death on December ■ 7, 1932, since which time it has been administered by his successors in trust, Andrew J. Huglin and Isabella M. Dunn.

The trust conveyance or convention covers fourteen pages of the abstract of record and is too long to warrant its inclusion in this opinion. We will therefore only refer to certain articles and provisions thereof which we deem necessary for a disposition and determination of the questions at issue on this appeal.

Under article 4 of the trust conveyance the property therein conveyed was to be disposed of at the termination of the trust as follows: One-third each to the trustor’s daughters, heretofore named, or to their respective heirs.

After the death of the trustor and during the period prior to the termination of the trust, the income and proceeds of the trust property were directed to be distributed as provided in article 7 of the trust conveyance. Article 7 is as follows:

“Upon the death of the trustor named herein there shall be allowed and paid my wife, Isabelle M. Dunn, she surviving and unmarried, the sum of $500.00 per calendar month, or fraction thereof during the whole of the remaining trust period herein named. There shall also be allowed and paid such sum or sums from time to time as may be necessary for the proper support and education of my three daughters, Virginia Dunn, Isabelle Dunn and Martha Dunn; including expenses incident to attending institutions of higher education, after which, during the whole of the trust period aforesaid, the net earning and profits of and from the property of the trust aforesaid shall be paid or credited upon the hooks of the trust, subject to their demands, by said trustee and or his successors in trust, annually, as may be deemed best, by said trustee or trustees, as follows:

*352 “(1) One-third (1/3) to my wife, Isabelle Dunn.

“(2) Two-ninths (2/9) to my daughter, Virginia Dunn, and or to her heirs.

“(3) Two-ninths (2/9) to my daughter, Isabelle Dunn, and or to her heirs.

“(4) Two-ninths (2/9) to my daughter, Martha Dunn, and or to her heirs.

“In event the net rents, issues, gains, profits, and or income from the trust property is insufficient to pay the sum of $500.00 per month to my said wife, Isabelle M. Dunn, and or my said children, namely, Virginia, Isabelle and Martha Dunn, as in this Article provided, then there shall be taken from the trust property such sum or sums as in the judgment of the said trustee or trustees may seem necessary for the purpose herein named.

“Should any of said children of the trustor, viz.: Virginia Dunn, Isabelle Dunn and Martha Dunn, die without leaving heirs her surviving, the fractional part belonging to such child so dying without leaving heirs, shall thereafter be annually paid or credited, by said trustee or trustees, to the surviving sister or sisters, and or to their respective heirs, and or their lineal descendants, and no one else shall take, enjoy or have the remaining income of the trust herein created and such lineal descendants shall take per stirpes.

“In case of the death of my wife, Isabelle M. Dunn, prior to the expiration of the trust period, the income herein set aside for her shall be paid or credited, equally, between Virginia Dunn, Isabelle Dunn and Martha Dunn and or their heir or heirs and no one else.

“Where the word heir or heirs is employed in this instrument it shall be taken to mean the natural issue of the body or any legally adopted child.”

The trial courl held that the trust created by the conveyance was irrevocable and also held in construing article 7 thereof that it was the intent of the trustor to pay first Isabelle M. Dunn the sum of $500, exclusive of all other distributions, and then to pay such amounts as necessary for the education of the trustor’s three daughters, exclusive of the distribution thereafter provided for in said article; and the trial court further held that such amounts as were necessary to expend for the education of the daughters of the trustor were not intended to be equal and were not to be charged against *353 the respective distributive shares of said three beneficiaries. From such finding and decree of the trial court, the plaintiff has appealed.

The appellant contends first that the court erred in finding that the trust indenture created an absolute and irrevocable trust. This error, however, is not urged very strenuously by the appellant. We find the statement in the appellant’s brief and argument that “the trustor, Le Roy C. Dunn, completely and irrevocably divested himself of all his right, title and interest, gains, profit and income from all the Trust property, described in Schedule A thereof.” The appellant contends that the fact that the trustor and the trustee named in the trust conveyance being one and the same person and having reserved unto himself as sole trustee all rights of control over the property included in the trust, that he in fact retained ownership and control over the trust property, and that such fact should lead to a construction finding that the trust created was a revocable one. With this contention we cannot agree and it is our conclusion that the trial court was right in its finding and decree in which it used the following language:

“The court further finds that said trust indenture was an absolute and irrevocable trust and could not under any condition or circumstance be revoked at any time by the makers of said trust indenture, to-wit: Le Roy C. Dunn and Isabelle M. Dunn, and could not be revoked by any other person.”

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 695, 219 Iowa 349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-dunn-trust-iowa-1935.