Estate of McLellan

63 P.2d 1120, 8 Cal. 2d 49, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 723
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1936
DocketS. F. 15633
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 63 P.2d 1120 (Estate of McLellan) 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 McLellan, 63 P.2d 1120, 8 Cal. 2d 49, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 723 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

EDMONDS, J.

By this appeal, there is presented the question of the right of the beneficiary of a testamentarjr trust to receive interest on the trust fund from the date of the death of the testatrix; also, the duties of the trustees of such a trust.

Mary Belle McLellan died January 15, 1927, leaving a will which was admitted to probate. By her will, she bequeathed $7,000 to the appellants as trustees “with instructions to invest and re-invest the same in good safe loans or securities and pay the income thereof together with such portion of the principal as they deem necessary or advisable for the support of my sister Mary Grace DeGear”. She also named the same persons as executors. At the conclusion of the probate proceeding, the executors presented their account and report with a petition for allowance and distribution. This report was settled and distribution of the estate ordered by a decree providing in part as follows: “That the persons to whom, and the share or proportions in which said persons are en *51 titled to distribution of the Estate according to law and the terms of the Will of said Decedent, are as follows, to-wit: . . . Edward [Edgar] W. McLellan, Frank L. McLellan and Asa D. McLellan, as Trustees $7,000.00.” This decree also approved the payment of $105 for the inheritance tax on the bequest.

The first account of the trustees under the trust was filed in 1935. It recites that the trustees are chargeable as follows: Jan. 19, 1928, Distributed to said trustees by Decree of Distribution duly made and rendered in the above entitled Court $6,895.00.” The account further states: “That at the time of distribution, a part of the property of the estate consisted of an interest in contract of sale of real property entered into by decedent during her life by the terms of which, interest on deferred payments was payable at the rate of 7 per cent per annum and which said interest was being regularly collected; said interest in said contract of sale was appraised in the course of administration at the sum of $104,915.99. That said trustees considered said contract of sale of real estate made by said decedent during her life, to be good, safe security and they set apart an interest in said contract of sale of real property as the trust fund for Mary Grace DeGear during her life with remainder on her death to the then living children of Charles D. McLellan, deceased, in the sum of $6,895.00. That interest on said sum of $6,895.00 at the rate of 7 per cent per annum, was collected until June 20, 1930, all of which has been disbursed and accounted for by the trustees as shown by the foregoing account.”

The beneficiary of the trust filed objections and exceptions to this account on several grounds; first, because the account failed to charge the trustees with interest on $6,895 from the date of the death of the testatrix; second, because the account failed to charge the trustees with interest at 7 per cent from January 15,1930, to the date of the account; and finally, because the trustees took credit for miscellaneous items aggregating $37.67; an item of $16.35, being a pro rata amount of the costs of certain litigation; and for $50 paid for attorney’s fees in connection with the management of the trust. After a hearing on the objections the trial court gave judgment against the trustees for interest on the sum of $6,895 at the rate of 7 per cent from the date of the death of the testatrix *52 to August 25, 1935, compounded annually, less the amounts which they had paid to her, and decreed “that the account of said trustees be, and the same is hereby disapproved and disallowed”. However, the court allowed the trustees credit for $21.17 of the miscellaneous items and also for the $50 attorney’s fee paid. They were also allowed a further credit of $50 for attorneys’ fees and $100 for their own services.

The contentions of the respondent which were upheld by the trial court below are, first, that the trustees should have collected interest on the amount of the bequest from the date of the death of the testatrix, and, second, that the trustees used the trust fund in their own business and are chargeable with interest thereon at the statutory rate.

Concerning the first contention, the record shows that the trustees, as executors under the will of Mary Belle Mc-Lellan, petitioned for distribution of her estate but made no request for interest upon the legacy. The decree of distribution allowed no interest, and the trustees paid no interest to the beneficiary of the trust for the period prior to the date of the decree. More than seven years after that decree became final, respondent for the first time claimed interest for this period. This she cannot do. Having become final the decree of distribution was not subject to collateral attack in this proceeding for the settlement of the account of the trustees. (See In re Estate of Mary Belle McLellan, 14 Cal. App. (2d) 271 [57 Pac. (2d) 1338], an appeal from an order disallowing an account of the appellants here as trustees of another testamentary trust under the same will.)

The judgment allowing the respondent interest on the trust fund at the statutory rate from the date of the decree of distribution presents another question. The trial court found that the trustees borrowed the trust fund from themselves and used it in their own business, giving their own note therefor. The trustees, on the other hand, assert that the trust fund is in substantially the same form as when received by them under the decree of distribution, and that they only continued the same investment which had been distributed to them as trustees from the decedent’s estate.

It appears that the deceased in her lifetime was the owner with others, including the three persons whom she named as executors and trustees under her will, of certain real *53 estate which they conveyed to a trust company for the purpose of subdivision and sale. This was to be accomplished through Poinsettia Land Company, a corporation which, as selling agent, entered into a contract with the trust company providing that the land should be sold and the proceeds divided in certain proportions. This contract also fixed the amount to be received by the owners for the property and required the selling agent to pay interest at 7 per cent on the amount to be received by the owners or the unpaid balance thereof. The interest of Mrs. McLellan in this contract at the time of her death was appraised at approximately $104,000. Upon distribution of the estate, the trustees set apart an interest in the contract to the amount of $6,895 as the trust fund for respondent, and the proportionate amount of interest earned .thereon was credited to respondent and paid to her by the trustees until June 20, 1930. On that date the land company defaulted and thereafter, in proceedings to determine title to the property, a decree was made directing the trust company to reconvey the property to George B. McLellan, 5/24th; Edgar W. McLellan, Frank L. McLellan and Asa Danforth McLellan as successors in interest of Mary Belle McLellan, 4/24th; Asa Danforth Mc-Lellan, 5/24th, Frank L. McLellan, 5/24th, and Edgar W. McLellan, 5/24th. Some time later, Asa Danforth McLellan, George B. McLellan and Frank L.

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.2d 1120, 8 Cal. 2d 49, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-mclellan-cal-1936.