Estate of Tretheway

89 P.2d 679, 32 Cal. App. 2d 287, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1939
DocketCiv. 6164
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 89 P.2d 679 (Estate of Tretheway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Tretheway, 89 P.2d 679, 32 Cal. App. 2d 287, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

*289 PULLEN, P. J.

George P. Tretheway died testate on May 9, 1925, leaving surviving his wife, Mary A. Tretheway, his children, George W. Tretheway, Emma Tretheway Winning, Fred H. Tretheway and Harry B. Tretheway, and five grandchildren, Dean Berger, Arthur Berger, June Berger King, Ernest Berger and Frances Berger, the children of a predeceased daughter, Anna T. Berger, all of whom are over the age of twenty-one years.

The will of George P. Tretheway provided that all of his estate should go in trust to his wife Mary A. Tretheway, and that during her lifetime she should have the entire income from the property. The will provided:

“I further order and direct that in the event that the income from my estate should not be sufficient in the opinion of my wife, Mary A. Tretheway, to properly support and maintain her in the way and manner in which she has been accustomed to live, there shall be paid to her out of the principal of my estate for her support and maintenance such sums as in her discretion may be necessary, the same not to exceed the sum of Two Thousand ($2000.00) Dollars per annum, and I direct that the same be paid to my said wife upon her request and her receipt to be accepted as a full and complete voucher therefor.”

It is upon the construction of this paragraph that the principal objections urged by appellants are based.

By the decree of distribution, one-half of the income and one-half of the principal of the estate being community property, was distributed to Mary A. Tretheway, the widow, absolutely. The other one-half of the property and the income was distributed in trust for her support and maintenance during her lifetime as provided in the paragraph quoted above, with the remainder over to her children and grandchildren after her death. The trustees named in the will were George W. Tretheway, a son; Mary A. Tretheway, the widow, and N. Nelson French, an attorney. Mr. French declined the appointment, and distribution was made to the two remaining trustees. George W. Tretheway cooperated for about two years, but thereafter became practically inactive, leaving Mary A. Tretheway as the only active trustee, and she carried on thereafter largely through her son, Harry *290 B. Tretheway, who conducted most of the business of the trust for her.

Mary A. Tretheway died April 6,1936, and Fred H. Tretheway and Harry B. Tretheway were appointed executors of her will. In her will she omitted the grandchildren and divided her estate among her children. The result of this distribution was that the trust property passed to the children and the grandchildren, and the separate property of Mary A. Tretheway by the provisions of her will went to her children only.

After the death of Mary A. Tretheway, Harry B. Tretheway, as executor of her estate, filed an account on behalf of Mary A. Tretheway as trustee of the trust. George W. Tretheway, the cotrustee, did not join in that account, nor did Fred H. Tretheway, the coexecutor with Harry B. Tretheway of the estate of Mary A. Tretheway.

The trust estate consisted of an undivided one-half interest in certain real and personal property. The accounting of the trust estate as filed by Harry B. Tretheway as executor upon behalf of Mary A. Tretheway, the deceased trustee, showed as having been paid out of the trust fund to Mary A. Tretheway from the principal, the sum of $15,315, which is alleged to have been paid to Mary A. Tretheway under the provisions of the will granting her the income from the trust and an annual amount not to exceed $2,000 from the principal of the trust. The income of the trust property for the years from 1929 to 1935, inclusive, averaged approximately $520 a year, gross.

In these withdrawals Mary A. Tretheway appears to be within her rights. The will provided that if the income from the estate was not sufficient, in the opinion of the widow, to properly support and maintain her, she was to be paid out of the principal of the trust a sum not to exceed $2,000 a year. The income from the trust during its existence amounted to $3,600, and as over eight years elapsed between the decree of distribution and the death of Mary A. Tretheway, a sum in excess of that actually withdrawn from the principal of the trust was permissible.

To this report of the trusteeship the grandchildren filed objections, which were decided contrary to their contentions, and from the order settling the report and account of the trustee, they appeal.

*291 Appellants claim that the court erred in the first instance in distributing to Mary A. Tretheway one-half of the estate to her, and one-half to the trust, claiming that by the will all of the property should have been set aside in trust. The property of which George P. Tretheway died testate having been community property of himself and wife, clearly there was no error in the court distributing the property as it did. This, however, is a matter not before us, as the decree of distribution making this division has long since become final and is not at this time in issue.

Appellants also object to various payments by the trustee, claiming that such payments were not supported by vouchers, and that there was no evidence of such payments to the beneficiary. It is true that the records are very meager, and the rendering of such accounts are not to be encouraged, but there is sufficient in the record to warrant approval of the account.

Mary A. Tretheway was, by the will of her husband, created sole beneficiary as to the income, and practically so as to the principal up to $2,000 a year. The trust clause provided that if the income was not sufficient, in the opinion of the wife, to properly support her, she should have out of the principal, such sums as in her discretion she might require, to be paid to her at her request. When she withdrew these sums no accounting was required from her as to the use of these moneys; they belonged to her absolutely. The actual withdrawal of these funds by her seems to have been quite clearly established. As to the need, she frequently told her children she required additional amounts from the principal, and the amounts as withdrawn from the principal average less than the annual limitation fixed in the will. It does not appear that she was compelled to withdraw in any one year the entire amount of $2,000, but could accumulate the fund if necessary to her support, provided that she did not withdraw from the principal more than $2,000 for each year. The amounts withdrawn balance the cash received, which was less than the total amount she would have withdrawn if she had taken therefrom the full amount allotted to her each year over the eight years the trust was in existence. In other words the actual cash income was something over $1,5,000 and the will would have justified a withdrawal of $16,000. It must also be remembered that a portion of the *292 trust estate consisted of farming property which required the expenditure of moneys for taxes, upkeep, etc.

The testimony of a son as to the necessary expenses of Mary A. Tretheway showed that she required approximately $2,700 a year for her personal maintenance, which also approximates the amount actually withdrawn.

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Bluebook (online)
89 P.2d 679, 32 Cal. App. 2d 287, 1939 Cal. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-tretheway-calctapp-1939.