Fleischmann v. Northwestern National Bank & Trust Co.

260 N.W. 310, 194 Minn. 227, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 962
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 5, 1935
DocketNo. 30,205.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 260 N.W. 310 (Fleischmann v. Northwestern National Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleischmann v. Northwestern National Bank & Trust Co., 260 N.W. 310, 194 Minn. 227, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 962 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

Julius J. Olson, Justice.

This is an appeal from an order refusing “to reopen, vacate and set aside” two certain orders, previously made, “allowing and confirming” certain annual accounts rendered by respondent as trustee, “so that the beneficiary [appellant] might make such objection to said accounts as to the court may seem just and proper.”

The facts are that one Gardner, a resident of Illinois, in .1918, entered into a trust agreement with respondent’s predecessors (the Minnesota Loan and Trust Company, later consolidated with and taken over by respondent) whereby certain securities, transferred by Gardner to the trust company, should be held as a trust fund for a period of ten years, the income from the fund to accumulate and to be added to the principal. At the end of the accumulation period the principal sum with accumulations ivas to be kept by the trust company and invested, the income to be paid to Mr. Gardner’s daughter, the present appellant, for life, and upon her death to be paid to her lineal descendants; also providing that when these children arrived at a stated age there should be distribution of the principal to them. There is a provision in the trust agreement that:

“In the investment and reinvestment of said fund, said Trustee may, in its discretion, purchase securities through its own Bond or Mortgage Department at prices at which like securities are then being offered and sold to the public.”

In paragraph 12 of the trust agreement it is provided:

“Said Trustee shall have the right, as it deems it to the best interests of the trust hereby created, to invest the funds of said trust in farm loans or other investments made by said party of the second part, on a basis that will give to said party of the *229 second part a reasonable compensation for the making of such farm loans or investments.” -

And paragraph 11 provides:

“Said Trustee, or its successor or successors in trust, shall render to all beneficiaries then interested in the income or body of the trust hereby created, in the month of August of each year, an itemized report of all transactions in this trust, including inventory and description of all securities and property belonging to the estate or that part thereof in which such beneficiaries may be interested.” -

After the trust agreement was executed Mr. Gardner informed the trustee that he preferred that the annual reports to be submitted during the ten-year period should come only to him but that thereafter such reports should go to the beneficiaries. In conformity therewith, the trustee during the entire ten-year period submitted to Mr. Gardner the annual accounts, but no accounting was made to the appellant because Mr. Gardner desired that the arrangement be kept secret. He construed the provision relating to fuimishing of annual- accounts to “all beneficiaries then interested” as meaning only those persons actually entitled to receive income or principal as and when the accounts were rendered. In this construction he acquiesced during the entire ten-year accumulation period. In August, 1928, the trustee sent to appellant, she having become entitled to the net income from the trust after that time, the annual account. This account showed that the principal sum then amounted to $118,576.51, having increased to that sum from the original investment of $70,000. A complete inventory showing just what the investments consisted of was furnished. A similar account with inventory was again furnished her in August, 1929. The trustee’s letter sent with each account informed her that the account would be filed with the court, and she was requested, if she approved of the account, to consent to its allowance and to the purchase and continued holding of the securities then in the trust. A form of consent- was inclosed. This she signed and returned. The instrument reads: -

*230 “State of Minnesota District Court
“County of Hennepin Fourth Judicial District
“In the Matter of the Trusteeship under written Agreement with J. Willis Gardner for the benefit of Buth Gardner Fleischmann..

“Consent to Allowance oe Trustee’s Account.

“I, the undersigned, sole present beneficiary of the above trust, certify that I have examined the account of The Minnesota Loan and Trust Company, as Trustee in said matter, dated August 1, 1929, and hereby consent to the allowance of said account, waive notice of hearing thereon, and approve, ratify and confirm all acts of said Trustee in the management of said trust and in the purchase of, holding and further holding of the securities and properties held in said trust, as shown by said account.”

The same procedure was followed in 1930, and the same form of consent and approval was signed and returned by her. Upon these consents and waivers being filed with the court, including the original account and inventory, in each instance the court entered an order allowing and confirming “in all respects” the reports, accounts of receipts and disbursements, and the fees of the trustee. These are the orders appellant sought to “reopen, vacate and set aside.”

On January 8, 1923, pursuant to a written agreement entered into between' Mr. Gardner and the trustee, Judge Molyneaux of the district court of Hennepin county signed an order reading as follows:

“It Is Ordered, That said trustee, its successor or successors in trust shall have and it is hereby granted full power and authority in its discretion to sell, transfer, convey, assign and set-over, any of the stocks belonging to said trust fund described in said Trust Agreement, at such prices and upon such terms as may seem to said trustee, to be for the best interest of said trust fund.”

On November 14, 1927, appellant petitioned the court for an order “construing the aforesaid Trust Agreement as authorizing the Minnesota Loan and Trust Company, the Trustee therein named, *231 to invest the funds belonging to said Trust Estate in any securities which it deems to be for the best interests of the Trust Estate, whether such securities be stocks, bonds, debentures, notes and/or other income-producing or interest-earning securities and whether or not such securities are authorized by the laws of the State of Minnesota for the investment of trust funds.”

In conformity therewith, Judge Nordbye “Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that the Trustee thereunder is empowered to and does have full power and authority to invest any trust funds, at any time belonging to said Trust Estate, in any bonds, debentures, notes and/or anjr other interest-bearing securities which it, in its sole discretion, deems to be good investments, but that the trustee is not authorized to invest said trust funds in the capital stocks of any corporation.”

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Related

Dillon v. Gunderson
50 N.W.2d 275 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1951)
In Re Trust Created by Will of Enger
30 N.W.2d 694 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1948)
Leraan v. Aftenro Society
30 N.W.2d 694 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1948)
Fleischmann v. Northwestern National Bank & Trust Co.
260 N.W. 313 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1935)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 N.W. 310, 194 Minn. 227, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleischmann-v-northwestern-national-bank-trust-co-minn-1935.