Hanson v. First State Bank & Trust Co.

385 S.E.2d 266, 259 Ga. 710, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 427
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 19, 1989
Docket46715, 46728
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 385 S.E.2d 266 (Hanson v. First State Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. First State Bank & Trust Co., 385 S.E.2d 266, 259 Ga. 710, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 427 (Ga. 1989).

Opinion

Weltner, Justice.

This case concerns a longstanding dispute between the beneficiaries under a trust and the trustee bank.

Factual Background

1. (a) Under the will of Marjorie Haley Scherberger, the First State Bank & Trust Company was appointed executor and trustee of trusts created for each of her four children. At the time of her death in 1971, her father’s estate had been distributed. Her brother, Herbert Haley, managed a partnership formed for the operation of several family farms and was active in other family businesses. Haley was also chairman of the board of directors of the First State Bank & Trust Company, and chairman of its executive and finance committees. He controlled a substantial percentage of the bank’s shares. 1

(b) Becoming dissatisfied with the management of their trusts, the beneficiaries sought to remove the bank as trustee, to recover *711 damages, and to obtain other relief.

2. Except for a single transaction, the trial court concluded that the beneficiaries failed to carry the burden of proving that the bank had committed any breach of trust. However, the court ordered the removal of the trustee; awarded the beneficiaries damages of $2,775; refused termination fees to the bank; and ordered an accounting for certain such fees already paid. Both parties appeal. 2

3. (a) The beneficiaries’ principal contention is that the trustee bank breached its fiduciary duty to them because Haley’s duality of functions created on the part of the trustee bank a series of conflicts of interest.

(b) The bank’s principal contention is that the trial court erred in removing it as trustee, insisting that in order to remove a trustee there must be a legal cause; that the court specified no such cause; and that the findings of fact do not support the judgment.

Removal of Trustee

4. The parties acknowledge the precepts enunciated in Clark v. Clark, 167 Ga. 1, 4-5 (144 SE 787) (1928). They disagree as to their application to the circumstances of this case.

Clark holds:

A testamentary trustee must act, not only for the benefit of the trust estate, but also in such a way as not to gain any advantage, directly or indirectly, except such as the law specifically gives him; and he owes an undivided duty to the beneficiary, and must not place himself in a position where his personal interest will conflict with the interest of the beneficiary. . . . The purpose of this rule is to require a trustee to maintain a position where his every act is above suspicion, and the trust estate, and it alone, can receive, not only his best services, but his unbiased and uninfluenced judgment. Whenever he acts otherwise, or when he has placed himself in a position that his personal interest has or may come in conflict with his duties as trustee, or the interests of the beneficiaries whom he represents, a court of equity never hesitates to remove him. In such circumstances the court does not stop to inquire whether the transactions complained of were fair or unfair; the inquiry stops when such relation is disclosed.

*712 5. (a) The bank insists that if any conflict between Haley and the trusts exists, it cannot be attributed to the bank because it is the bank, and not Haley, that is the trustee.

(b) To reiterate, Haley was chairman and major shareholder of the bank, and at the same time was managing partner in the family enterprises that the trustee bank held on behalf of the beneficiaries. 3 As a corporate entity, the trustee bank of necessity must be controlled by the human agents who act on its behalf. In this contention, see OCGA § 23-2-59, as follows:

Where, by the act or consent of parties or the act of a third person or of the law, one person is placed in such relation to another that he becomes interested for him or with him in any subject or property, he is prohibited from acquiring rights in that subject or property which are antagonistic to the person with whose interest he has become associated.

(c) Here, the conduct of the corporate trustee is dominated so totally by Haley that, by the fact of that domination, the trustee bank was precluded from maintaining a “position where . . . every act is above suspicion” {Clark, supra). In such a case, the conflicts of interest between the bank’s human agent and the trusts of which it is trustee must be attributed to the bank itself. 4 *Were it not so, the clever manipulation of corporate structure could result in the validation of a myriad of transactions that otherwise would be proscribed. 5

*713 (d) Under the principles of Lovett v. Peavy, 253 Ga. 79, 81 (316 SE2d 754) (1984), the trial court did not err in removing the bank as trustee. 6 That removal results not from Haley’s relationship with the beneficiaries of the trusts or with the settlor of the trusts, but rather as a result of his dealings with the trustee. The same result would have been reached had Haley been a total stranger to the trusts (as distinguished from the trustee of the trusts), its settlor or its beneficiaries. The conflict of interest arises from the control of the bank by Haley, when conjoined with his dealings on his own account with the bank as trustee. In simplest terms, this is a case of prohibited “self-dealing” by Haley, who, because of his control over the bank, is the virtual or de facto trustee, and, at the same time, has engaged in extensive dealings on his own account with the trust.

Remedies

6. The beneficiaries contend that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law for the total amount of trustee fees, for interest paid to the bank on loans made by the bank to the trust, for the amount of rent paid by the bank to itself under a lease, and for recovery of all fees and profits that certain companies have realized from their dealings that affect the trusts.

7. The following authorities govern these contentions:

*714 (a) A trustee shall not use trust funds to his own profit. He shall be liable to account for all such profits made. [OCGA § 53-13-84.]
(b) The agent shall not make a personal profit from his principal’s property; for all such he is bound to account. [OCGA § 10-6-25.]

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Bluebook (online)
385 S.E.2d 266, 259 Ga. 710, 1989 Ga. LEXIS 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-first-state-bank-trust-co-ga-1989.