Estate of Bixby v. Security First National Bank

362 P.2d 43, 55 Cal. 2d 819, 13 Cal. Rptr. 411, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 607, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 261
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 22, 1961
DocketL. A. 25724
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 362 P.2d 43 (Estate of Bixby v. Security First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Bixby v. Security First National Bank, 362 P.2d 43, 55 Cal. 2d 819, 13 Cal. Rptr. 411, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 607, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 261 (Cal. 1961).

Opinion

WHITE, J.

— Fred H. Bixby, Jr., the life income beneficiary of a testamentary trust, appeals from those provisions of the Order Settling the First Account Current and Report of Administration of Security First National Bank, Trustee, and which he designates as follows: “ 1. From the order overruling the objections and further objections of Fred H. Bixby, Jr.; 2. From the order settling, approving and confirming the Trustee’s First Account current and Report of Administration in regard to the following: (a) The allocation to principal by the Trustee of 27% per cent of the oil royalties received by the Trustee; (b) The retention by the Trustee of 3590 shares of Fred H. Bixby Ranch Co. stock and the Trustee’s failure to sell said shares of stock and invest the proceeds from said sale in assets that will yield reasonable income. 3. The failure of the court to remove Security First National Bank as Trustee.”

Fred H. Bixby, Sr., died on May 17, 1952, leaving a will dated April 19, 1949. The main asset of his estate consisted of stock in the Fred H. Bixby Company. The major assets of this company were stock in the Bixby Ranch Company and oil royalty interests. After a provision for the widow, the will set up four identical residuary trusts, each for the benefit of one of the testator’s four children. Appellant’s three sisters were named cotrustees of their trusts. The instant litigation involves only the trust of which Fred H. Bixby, Jr. (hereinafter referred to as the appellant) is the sole income beneficiary during his life. The will provides that upon the death of a life beneficiary of any of the trusts, the corpus will go 1o augment the trust funds of those other testamentary trusts wherein there is a surviving life beneficiary; upon the death of the testator’s last surviving child, the corpus of the trust in which that child was the beneficiary will be distributed to the then living grandchildren of the testator.

During probate the Fred H. Bixby Company was dissolved and the assets were distributed in kind to the trustees. The principal assets of the corpus of each trust are oil royalty interests and stock in the Bixby Ranch Company.

Appellant’s trustee, and the trustees of the other trusts, have treated the oil royalty interest as it is treated under the *822 comm on-law rule: as a wasting asset, and have allocated 27% per cent of oil royalty receipts to principal, with the balance going to appellant as income. Section 730.12 of the Civil Code (Principal and Income Law) provides that property subject to depletion, which includes oil royalties (Estate of Broome, 166 Cal.App.2d 488 [333 P.2d 273]), shall be treated as income and paid to the life beneficiary.

The trustee contends that Estate of Bixby (158 Cal.App. 2d 351 [322 P.2d 956]) is “the law of the ease,” and that the trial court’s order was therefore proper. However, in Estate of Bixby, the issue litigated was whether the executor of Mr. Bixby, Sr.’s estate should be ordered to determine what was principal and what was income before distributing the estate to the trustees. The court there properly held merely that it was not necessary for the executor to make this determination since the will gave the trustees power to determine what was principal and what was income. There was no discussion whatsoever of the exercise of the discretion granted the trustee, which is the crucial question in the case at bar. The court there concluded by stating, “If the trustee should abuse his discretion [the beneficiary] has a ready and effective remedy.” (158 Cal.App.2d 351, 366.)

Appellant contends that his trustee did abuse its discretion in making the aforesaid allocation •. that the trustee acted arbitrarily, not in accordance with the testator’s intent and did not exercise reasonable judgment.

The will with which we are here concerned gave the trustee power “To determine what is principal and what is income of the Trust Estate and what items should be charged or credited to either. ...”

Appellant relies on Estate of Heard, 107 Cal.App.2d 225 [236 P.2d 810, 27 A.L.R.2d 1313], wherein the court held that the identical language gave the trustee general rather than absolute discretion which could be exercised only as to those receipts about which there was honest and reasonable doubt as to their character. The trustee was there held to have acted arbitrarily and to have abused his discretion in allocating stock dividends to principal since the rule prevailing in California at that time classified them as income.

The trust in the Heard case was established before the enactment of the Principal and Income Law (Civ. Code, §§730-730.15), while Mr. Bixby’s will was executed and the trusts established after that statute was enacted. It is necessary, therefore, to determine whether the rule in the Heard *823 case has been affected by the enactment of the Principal and Income Law.

Civil Code, section 730.04, of the Principal and Income Law provides: “This chapter shall govern the ascertainment of income and principal, and the apportionment of receipts and expenses between tenants and remaindermen, in all cases where a principal has been established with . . . the interposition of a trust; except that in the establishment of the principal provision may be made touching all matters covered by this chapter, and the person establishing the principal may himself direct the manner of ascertainment of income and principal and the apportionment of receipts and expenses or grant discretion to the trustee or other person to do so, and such provision and direction, where not otherwise contrary to law, shall control notwithstanding this chapter. . . .” (Emphasis added.)

The Principal and Income Law governs the ascertainment of income and principal then, unless the trust instrument contains a provision differing from a matter covered by this chapter, or the trustor directs the “manner of ascertainment of income and principal” or grants “discretion” to the trustee to do so.

The testator is thus now able to empower his trustee to malte determinations contrary to “existing law” — i.e., the provisions of the Principal and Income Law characterizing the nature of trust receipts, and the rule of Estate of Heard, supra, 107 Cal.App.2d 225, is no longer controlling. When the provisions of the will and trust agreement in the litigation now engaging our attention are considered in their entirety, it is manifest that the testator so empowered his trustee by investing it with “power to determine what is principal and what is income.”

Section 730.04 of the Civil Code, supra, further provides: “The exercise by the trustee or other designated person, of such discretionary power if in good faith and according to his best judgment, shall be conclusive, irrespective of whether it may be in accordance with the determination which the court having jurisdiction would have made.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
362 P.2d 43, 55 Cal. 2d 819, 13 Cal. Rptr. 411, 15 Oil & Gas Rep. 607, 1961 Cal. LEXIS 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-bixby-v-security-first-national-bank-cal-1961.