Graddick v. First Farmers & Merchants Nat.

453 So. 2d 1305
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 1, 1984
Docket82-108, 82-109 and 82-383
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 453 So. 2d 1305 (Graddick v. First Farmers & Merchants Nat.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graddick v. First Farmers & Merchants Nat., 453 So. 2d 1305 (Ala. 1984).

Opinion

These appeals are from the judgment of the Circuit Court of Pike County awarding an attorney's fee to the firm of Orme and Faulk in the amount of $27,000.00, for services allegedly inuring to the benefit of the beneficiaries of a trust established by the will of Robert Murphree, deceased, and awarding the trustee of that trust a fee for its services in the amount of $29,643.13. The trial court also ordered that First Farmers and Merchants National Bank, the trustee, which was about to merge with First Alabama Bank of Troy, and no longer exist, would be allowed to continue as a successor-trustee in its new identity. It further ordered that in the future the trustee would be allowed to withdraw 5% of the trust income annually as a trustee fee without having to file a petition with the court to collect that fee. The income of the trust being insufficient to pay these fees, the court gave the trustee permission to sell approximately 3,600 shares of the stock of the corpus of the trust to satisfy these awards.

This case arises out of the following facts:

Robert Murphree died, leaving a substantial estate in trust for Bess Bradley, Dan Walls (deceased at the time of the litigation), and Huntsville Hospital as beneficiaries. Robert Murphree was formerly a resident of Troy, Alabama, but migrated to Huntsville, Alabama, where he was one of the original owners of the Henderson National Bank of Huntsville, Alabama. The trust consisted of only one asset, stock in the Henderson National Bank. The first trustee was Dean Murphree, a nephew of the settlor, who administered the trust without claiming a fee until he died in July 1970. Thereafter, the First Farmers National Bank began to administer the estate. The trust instrument, apparently drafted by Robert Murphree, made no provision for *Page 1307 a trustee's fee. The pertinent provisions of the trust instrument are as follows:

The said Dean Murphree, as trustee, after my death, is to stand seized and possessed of said 158 shares of stock [in Henderson National Bank], during the existence of this trust estate and during the existence of this trust he is to have the right to vote said stock. The said Dean Murphree, as such Trustee, is to collect and pay over the dividends derived from 30 shares of this stock to Dan Walls, for and during the term of his natural life; he is also to collect and pay over the dividends from 50 shares of this stock to Mrs. Bess Bradley, for and during the term of her natural life. The said Dean Murphree, as such trustee, is to collect and pay over the dividends from 78 shares of this stock to the Huntsville Hospital, Inc., during the existence of this trust. This trust is to terminate upon the death of the survivor of Dan Walls and Mrs. Bess Bradley, it being my intention that this trust shall continue and remain in existence until both the said Dan Walls and Mrs. Bess Bradley have died. Upon the death of either of said Dan Walls or Mrs. Bess Bradley, then and in that event, the said trustee, or his successor in office, is to pay over the dividends, which were being paid to said decedent, during his or her lifetime, to the Huntsville Hospital, incorporated until the death of the survivor of the said Dan Walls and Mrs. Bess Bradley. Upon the termination of this trust, which is to end upon the death of the survivor of the said Dan Walls and Mrs. Bess Bradley, I give, devise and bequeath the 158 shares of stock of the Henderson National Bank, comprising the trust estate, to the Huntsville Hospital, Inc. absolutely and in fee simple. It is my wish and desire that the dividends paid to said Huntsville Hospital, Inc. be used by it in defraying expenses of indigent and charitable patients, who may hereafter enter said Hospital for treatment. . . .

In the event of the death of the said Dean Murphree, who is mentioned above as trustee, before the expiration date of this trust, as hereinbefore set forth, I hereby nominate and appoint the First Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Troy, Alabama, as succeeding trustee, during the remaining period of this trust, with all the powers, duties and obligations imposed upon the said Dean Murphree, as trustee, and I do hereby exempt both the said Dean Murphree as well as the succeeding trustee, the said First Farmers and Merchants National Bank of Troy, Alabama, from the necessity of giving any bond, whatsoever, in the execution of this trust.

During the trusteeship of First Farmers and Merchants National Bank, $592,682.79 was received and $592,616.84 was disbursed. At the time the trustee filed a petition for instructions, it had on hand 69,732 shares of stock in First Bancgroup-Alabama, Inc., worth $1,150,578.00. During that same period, the Henderson National Bank had merged with the First National Bank of Mobile and the stock became stock of First Bancgroup-Alabama, Inc. The only function performed by First Farmers, other than being custodian for the stock, was the receiving of dividend checks from the stock and, in turn, drawing two checks four times a year on the trust estate and mailing these checks to the co-beneficiaries. On one occasion, however, First Farmers deducted a fee from its quarterly disbursement, which was promptly objected to by the beneficiary, Bess H. Bradley. Her attorney took the position that the trustee fee should be paid at Bess Bradley's death. The bank then, in December 1978, wrote:

We do hereby concur with your decision as to the way the trustee's fee should be collected. In accordance with this decision, a copy of this letter and checks for the amount that has been deducted are being sent to Mrs. Bradley and the Huntsville Hospital. The amount of the checks were determined in the same manner as the original deductions. Thus, Mrs. Bradley's check was $949.50 *Page 1308 and the Huntsville Hospital's check was $2,050.50.

In the future, no trustee fee will be deducted and we will petition the court to establish a trustee fee at the termination of this trust.

At the time of the hearing on the bank's petition for instruction and request for trustee's fees, it is undisputed that Mrs. Bradley was 90 years old and resided in the Parkview Village Nursing Home in Huntsville. Although she was alert, she was confined to a wheel chair. It is also undisputed that in reliance on the letter from the bank, Mrs. Bradley sold her home for $58,000.00 and gave her nephews and niece the proceeds therefrom, as well as the furnishings from the home. Although she had willed the same nephews and niece the property before this time, she decided to give the cash to them prior to her death because, if she could receive the income from the trust unencumbered by fees, it would almost exactly equal the quarterly cost for her to stay in the Parkview Village Nursing Home. Although Mrs. Bradley has other assets, it is undisputed that the sale of her property was predicated on the assurance of the bank that no trustee fee would be deducted from her quarterly checks.

It is significant to note here that the other appellant in this case, Huntsville Hospital, has made no objection to the fee awarded to the bank. It is an income beneficiary, as well as the remainderman after the trust terminates at Mrs. Bradley's death. According to the terms of the trust, it is to receive the entire trust estate after the trust terminates on the death of Mrs. Bradley, to be used "for the purpose of defraying the expenses of charity patients and equipping the charity ward of the hospital." Both Mrs. Bradley and the Huntsville Hospital challenge the entitlement to, as well as the reasonableness of, the fee awarded to the law firm of Orme and Faulk.

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Bluebook (online)
453 So. 2d 1305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graddick-v-first-farmers-merchants-nat-ala-1984.