Getty v. Getty

28 Cal. App. 3d 996, 105 Cal. Rptr. 259, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 814
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 27, 1972
DocketCiv. 29688
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 28 Cal. App. 3d 996 (Getty v. Getty) 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
Getty v. Getty, 28 Cal. App. 3d 996, 105 Cal. Rptr. 259, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 814 (Cal. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinion

Opinion

TAYLOR, P. J.

This is an appeal by Gordon Peter Getty (Gordon), one of the beneficiaries of an inter vivos spendthrift trust created in 1934, from a judgment in favor of his father, J. Paul Getty, the sole trustee and major income beneficiary of the trust, and the other beneficiaries. 1 The case presents a question of first impression as to whether certain stock dividends 2 were properly allocated to the trust corpus; Gordon also asserts that the ratio of trust assets to which J. Paul Getty’s waiver of income applies 3 was 36 percent of the stock in the corpus of the trust rather than the 20.70776 percent decreed by the court in the settlement of the trustee’s accounts.

We shall set forth the facts relating to each question separately so that the judgment and our basis for affirming it may be more easily understood.

Gordon’s first contention on appeal is that the stock dividends should have been allocated to income. He asserts that: 1) J. Paul was not a trustor; 2) J. Paul’s waiver of the “entire net income” included the stock dividends; and 3) under the Pennsylvania rule in effect in this state at the time of the creation of the trust, stock dividends were to be treated as income.

The record, however, reveals the following pertinent facts supportive of the judgment: George F. Getty, the husband of Sarah and father of J. Paul, *999 died in 1930 after 50 years of building his oil business. He left his estate valued at $10,000,000-$ 15,000,000 to Sarah in the form of the controlling interest in the family corporation, George F. Getty, Incorporated. Thus, J. Paul was a minority shareholder and constrained in his efforts to expand the corporation by purchasing equities in other oil companies. As a result of his activities, the corporation was heavily in debt and Sarah unhappily viewed J. Paul’s conduct as imprudent and reckless as her late husband had been frugal and conservative in the conduct of the business. 4

In 1933, J. Paul persuaded Sarah to give up the worries of the business and sell him her stock in the corporation for his promissory notes. He then expected to have a free hand for his plans of expanding the business, but the notes affected the company’s credit and further handicapped his plans for expansion. After Sarah refused to make a gift of the notes to him, she offered to put them in trust if he would also contribute to the corpus. J. Paul agreed to waive the income from his contribution to the trust to make the value of his contribution more than nominal. Sarah felt that the fiduciary responsibilities as a trustee would restrain J. Paul and cause him to act more conservatively in the operation of the business. Sarah wanted to preserve the business that her late husband had built up for the benefit of her great-grandchildren; J. Paul wanted the financial freedom to expand the business while retaining control of it.

Thus, the court found the pertinent facts substantially as follows: In 1934, Sarah desired to give a part of her wealth to her son, J. Paul, to treat and handle in all respects as if he were the absolute owner with absolute and uncontrolled power and discretion as to control and disposition, but only under an arrangement whereby there would be impressed on his conscience a cautious and conservative attitude, in contrast to the manner in which she believed he handled his other assets. The purpose of the arrangement was primarily to preserve and enhance a capital and corpus for distribution to his descendants and also to provide some cash income to J. Paul during his lifetime. Her gift was conditioned on J. Paul adding to the fund a part of his own assets to be handled in the same cautious and conservative manner and for the same purposes.

*1000 Sarah’s purpose in agreeing to create the trust and in contributing to it was to place upon J. Paul constraints of prudence and caution in the handling of the oil business originally built up by her late husband to hold the business together by putting her son under fiduciary responsibilities. J, Paul’s purpose was to obtain control of the notes of George F. Getty, Incorporated, held by his mother, since that outstanding debt of that corporation weakened its credit position and was a hindrance to his plans for expansion of the oil business. The purpose and intention of both J. Paul and Sarah was to preserve the business and always to build up, consolidate and hold control of it as a growth enterprise and never by any means to dissipate that control or any part of it.

In 1934, J. Paul owned all the capital stock of a corporation then named George F. Getty, Incorporated, and Sarah owned five promissory notes, each for $500,000, made by the corporation and payable to her, totalling $2,500,000. On Christmas Day 1934, in Los Angeles, Sarah and J. Paul entered into an oral agreement for the joint establishment of an irrevocable" 5 inter vivos spendthrift trust to which each, as a trustor, would contribute assets. Sarah agreed to contribute the $2,500,000 of promissory notes; J. Paul, to contribute about $1,000,000 of his stock in George F. Getty, Incorporated. They further agreed that the income from the trust corpus contributed by Sarah would go to J. Paul for life and that he would irrevocably waive the income from the assets that he was to contribute to the trust corpus.

On December 31, 1934, pursuant to the oral agreement, J. Paul received from his mother, irrevocably transferred to him, the five promissory notes. He concurrently executed a written document entitled “Declaration of Trust,” stating that he received the notes in trust under the terms of the declaration. Sarah appended to the document her written consent and ratification.

Articles IV, VI and VII of the declaration provided that J. Paul was the sole income beneficiary during his lifetime, and that after his death, the income should go in certain proportions to his children and to the offspring of his children per stirpes. The trust was to cease when J. Paul and his sons *1001 were all dead and the trust corpus then distributed among J. Paul’s grandchildren.

On the same day, December 31, 1934, J. Paul (pursuant to the powers to sell or contribute property to the trust) had one of the five notes for $500,000 reissued as two notes (one for $350,000 and one for $150,000) and sold to the trust 1,005.4 shares of stock of George F. Getty, Incorporated, in consideration of the transfer to him of the $350,000 note. Concurrently, J. Paul, as a trustor, also contributed to the trust 2,494.6 shares of stock of George F. Getty, Incorporated. The sale and contribution to the trust were effected by J. Paul’s transferring to himself as trustee by a written instrument 3,500 shares of stock of George F. Getty, Incorporated. At this time, the fair market value of the 2,494.6 shares of stock contributed to the trust by J. Paul as trustor was $868,420; J. Paul subsequently paid the United States government a gift tax thereon.

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Related

Whittier Trust Co. v. Getty
179 P.3d 562 (Nevada Supreme Court, 2008)
Heggstad v. Heggstad
16 Cal. App. 4th 943 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
Getty v. Getty
187 Cal. App. 3d 1159 (California Court of Appeal, 1986)

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Bluebook (online)
28 Cal. App. 3d 996, 105 Cal. Rptr. 259, 1972 Cal. App. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/getty-v-getty-calctapp-1972.