First Kentucky Trust Co. v. Christian

849 S.W.2d 534, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 58, 1993 WL 75970
CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1993
DocketNo. 92-SC-276-DG
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 849 S.W.2d 534 (First Kentucky Trust Co. v. Christian) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Kentucky Trust Co. v. Christian, 849 S.W.2d 534, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 58, 1993 WL 75970 (Ky. 1993).

Opinions

OPINION OF THE COURT

WINTERSHEIMER, Justice.

This appeal is from a decision of the Court of Appeals which reversed a circuit court order granting summary judgment dismissing the claim against the trust company filed by trust beneficiaries for an alleged breach of fiduciary duty. The circuit court dismissed the action because it believed the suit was barred by the statute of limitations.

We have granted discretionary review because there appears to be genuine confusion as to the appropriate statute of limitations for an action against a trustee for breach of a fiduciary duty. The principal issue is the appropriate statute of limitations.

The circuit court summarily dismissed the suit against the trustee because it held that an action must be brought within five years of the alleged breach pursuant to K.R.S. 413.120(5). A majority of the Court of Appeals reversed the circuit court holding that pursuant to K.R.S. 386.735 and K.R.S. 413.340, a suit could be brought any time during the existence of the trust as long as the trustee had not repudiated the trust. A dissenting Court of Appeals opinion asserted that the opinion of the majority was in contravention of Potter v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance Company, Ky., 361 S.W.2d 515 (1962).

In this case, the express inter vivos trust was created in 1969 by Nora Iasigi Bullitt. The original corpus of the trust consisted of 70 shares of Beargrass Corporation common stock and had grown to 1500 shares by the time of Mrs. Bullitt’s death. The Beargrass Corporation holds the leases on the land in Jefferson County on which the Oxmoor Shopping Mall is located. The trust directed that upon Nora’s death, her son Thomas Bullitt would receive one-third of the trust assets, which was 500 shares, outright, with the remaining two-thirds of the trust, being 1,000 shares, to be held in trust by the First Kentucky Trust Company for the benefit of her two daughters, Barbara Bullitt Christian and Nora Bullitt Leake, with the remainder to their children and grandchildren.

[536]*536In 1977, the Board of Directors of the Beargrass Corporation authorized the offer of convertible debentures to shareholders. The contractual subscription offer provided that, at the option of the holder, any time prior to November 1, 1982, the debentures were convertible into common stock at $150 per share. In 1977, a trust officer at First Kentucky discussed the subscription offer with Barbara Bullitt Christian because the trust had no cash or other liquid assets with which to purchase the debentures. She stated that her family had no money to lend to the trust for such a purchase. Thomas Bullitt purchased a total of $150,-000 in convertible debentures which he subsequently converted in 1979 to Beargrass stock. The additional stock gave Thomas Bullitt 60 percent of the corporate stock and reduced the interest held by the trust to 40 percent.

The other trust beneficiaries believed they had been damaged. This consolidated action, instituted separately by two beneficiaries and later joined by the remaining trust beneficiaries, was filed in 1989 claiming that First Kentucky breached its fiduciary duty by failing to properly disclose to them the consequences of the purchase of the debentures by Thomas Bullitt, by failing to advise them of the available options to block his majority takeover, and by otherwise mismanaging trust assets. The circuit court dismissed the complaint on the grounds that it was not filed within the five year statute of limitations contained in K.R.S. 413.120(5). The Court of Appeals reversed and held that K.R.S. 386.735, not K.R.S. 413.120(5) was the applicable statute of limitations.

The legal question of this case involves the application of Potter, supra, which said by way of dicta that K.R.S. 413.340 has little, if any, significance as applied to trusts. The majority Court of Appeals opinion declined to follow Potter on the grounds that it is distinguishable.

K.R.S. 413.340 states “The provisions of this chapter shall not apply to a continuing or subsisting trust, nor to an action by a vendee of real estate in possession to obtain a conveyance.” Potter contains the following language:

Insofar as it applies to trusts, KRS 413.-340 has little if any significance. It says and means merely that limitations will not run until there is a cause of action. A “subsisting trust” against which limitations do not run is neither more nor less than a trust in which the trustee is acting within his powers and the cestui que trust has no cause of action against him. See Bogert, Trusts and Trustees (2d ed.) Sec. 951. “The trusts intended to be embraced by the statute, and to be excepted out of the limitation, are those of an exclusively equitable character, where the trustee has a right to hold the estate, and the cestui que trust has no right to sue for it. Where, however, the latter has a right of action, and forbears to exercise it, the letter of our statute, as well as the policy of our law, gives the opposing party the right to rely upon the lapse of time.” Robinson’s Committee v. Elam’s Ex’x, 1890, 90 Ky. 300, 14 S.W. 84. Since KRS 413.120 defines the period of limitation by reference to the accrual of the cause of action, KRS 413.340 merely gilds the lily.

The dissenting opinion in the Court of Appeals acknowledges that the Potter case is not factually similar to this case, and that some of the language in Potter was unnecessary to the decision of that court. However, the dissent maintains that because courts of this state have followed the decision as the definitive ruling on the question of the statute of limitations, the Court of Appeals could not refuse to follow it. Cf. Salyers v. Allied Corporation, 642 F.Supp. 442 (1986).

First Kentucky argues that the Potter decision reflects general trust law from other jurisdictions and legal treatises and should be followed. First Kentucky interprets the initial clause of K.R.S. 386.735 as limiting the application of the statute to claims not already barred by K.R.S. 413.-120. The suing beneficiaries claim that it is absurd to believe that a trust which continues to operate is not “continuing and subsisting” and that they did not realize the extent of their damage until 1989, at which time they filed suit.

[537]*537The facts of Potter were that the husband died and through a testamentary trust left his estate to his widow “for and during her natural life, she to use the income therefrom, and so much of the principal thereof as necessary for her comfort” with the remainder on her death to their two children. Thereafter, the widow, using funds from the estate, purchased endowment policies, the proceeds of which her two children would receive as interest income for life, and at her death, with the remainder to her grandchildren in fee simple. The insurance company executed a declaration of trust at the time of the widow’s death in 1941. At various times in the next three years, two children of the widow demanded that the insurance company pay the face value of the policies to them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
849 S.W.2d 534, 1993 Ky. LEXIS 58, 1993 WL 75970, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-kentucky-trust-co-v-christian-ky-1993.