Herrington v. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis

235 Cal. App. 2d 174, 44 Cal. Rptr. 804, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 918
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 21, 1965
DocketCiv. No. 10897
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 235 Cal. App. 2d 174 (Herrington v. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis) 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
Herrington v. National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, 235 Cal. App. 2d 174, 44 Cal. Rptr. 804, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 918 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

PIERCE, P. J.

— This is an opinion after rehearing granted from the opinion filed April 5, 1965.

Edythe Ward Nicely by her will left substantially all of her estate in trust, $250 per month to be paid by the trustee to her daughter, Aubrey Nicely Herrington (also her sole heir at law), for life, the residue upon her death to go to five charities, four of which were nonexempt under Probate Code section 41. That section provides that if more than one-third of a total estate is left to nonexempt charities by a testator leaving heirs of certain classes (including children) the excess falls into intestacy and goes to the specified heirs. The trust declaration here contained a “spendthrift” restriction. It also included a provision giving the trustee power to invade corpus in an emergency affecting the daughter. The probate court reasoned that the possible exercise of that right made it impossible to determine until the daughter’s death whether or not the gifts to nonexempt charities would exceed one-third and therefore held that distribution of the intestate portion of the estate must await that death. Since the daughter is well-to-do exercise of the right to invade corpus is unlikely, although, of course, possible. It is more probable that the nonexempt charitable bequests will greatly exceed one-third and the result of the court decree, therefore, from a practical standpoint is that the purpose of Probate Code section 41 will be defeated (since under the decree seven-fifteenths of the estate when distributed ivould go to persons having no claim upon the testatrix’ bounty). For the same [177]*177reason the will ■ of the testatrix may he said to have been frustrated.

On this appeal we reject the contention that this result can be avoided by allowing the daughter to renounce the entire trust. We hold, however, that it can be avoided if (1) the daughter waives the right to invade corpus and (2) petitions the probate court for an order authorizing the purchase of an annuity which will pay her $250 per month for life. (3) The same court order can preserve the “spendthrift” restriction of the trust. (4) All of its purposes having been fulfilled, the trust can then be terminated, and (5) the balance of the estate can then be distributed. Appellant, in her briefs, has expressed a willingness to waive and petition the court as hereinabove in (1) and (2) stated.

The reasons for our conclusions will be developed hereinafter in this opinion.

The testatrix died leaving an estate, the appraised value of which is $301,746.40. Her only heir at law is her daughter, appellant Aubrey Nicely Herrington, a woman now 58 years of age. The will of the testatrix, after making insubstantial specific bequests, leaves the residue to a bank in trust, directing the trustee to pay from income $250 per month to the daughter, Mrs. Herrington, for life, with a discretionary power in the trustee to invade corpus and increase payment to the life beneficiary if necessary in an emergency and only while the emergency endures. Also included in the trust provisions of the will is a standard “spendthrift” provision.1 By the terms of the will the trust terminates upon the death of Mrs. Herrington, and the trust estate residue is to be distributed to five named charities “share and share alike.”

Four of these charities are nonexempt from the restrictions of Probate Code section 41 which state that when a decedent leaves heirs of certain specified classes (of which a daughter is one) charitable devises and bequests “may not collectively exceed one-tliird of the testator’s estate” as against such specified heirs “who would otherwise, as aforesaid, have taken the excess over one-third, and if they do, a pro rata deduction from such devises and legacies shall be made so as to reduce [178]*178the aggregate thereof to one-third of the estate. ’ 2 The section then provides: “All property bequeathed or devised contrary to the provisions of this section shall go to the [specified heirs] of the testator, if and to the extent that they would have taken said property as aforesaid hut for devises or legacies.” (Italics supplied.) By Probate Code section 42 certain public and constitutionally tax-exempt entities are exempted from the restrictions of Probate Code section 41. The University of California is one of these. By Mrs. Nicely’s will the Regents of the University of California are to receive the fifth share of the residue of the testamentary trust. This gift is to be used for scholarships.

During the probate of the will Mrs. Herrington petitioned the probate court for an order determining heirship and for declaratory relief. The matter was heard and argued, the court filed a memorandum opinion, findings were made and, on November 12, 1963, an interlocutory decree and judgment was filed.

The essential findings of the court were: (1) that the entire residue of the estate (after paying the specific bequests and costs of administration, including the federal estate and California inheritance taxes) must be delivered to the trustee named in the will, the trust funds to be managed by it, with $250 per month to be paid to Mrs. Herrington from income for life (subject only to augmentation in the event of an emergency as specified in the will). The court also found (2) that the trustee’s right of invasion of corpus mentioned above made it impossible to determine whether there would ever be any residue of the trust estate, or if so whether the shares of the nonexempt charities collectively would, or would not, exceed one-third thereof. Therefore, it found further distribution of the estate must await the death of Mrs. Herrington. The court further found that when Mrs. Herrington dies the residue of the trust, if any, will then be distributed three-fifteenths (i.e., one-fifth) to the Regents of the University of California, five-fifteenths (i.e., one-third) to the private charities collectively, and seven-fifteenths (i.e., two-thirds less one-fifth) to the heirs or assigns of Mrs. Herrington.

The court’s decree made the following provision for pay[179]*179ment of the taxes: “That the Federal Estate Taxes and the California Inheritance Tax on the intestate portion, if any, of the estate be charged against the person or persons entitled to such portion and not as an expense of the administration of the estate.”

Mrs. Herrington appeals from the decree. She challenges deferment of distribution of the intestate portion of the estate until the date of her death. She argues that deferment will result in the distribution of such portion not to her but to others not within the purview of Probate Code section 41. She also disputes the probate court’s asserted disregard of the testatrix’ expressed intent that all taxes be paid as expenses of administration. Those are her two principal contentions; another will be noted.

The four nonexempt charities, as “parties aggrieved,” join with appellant in the first of her contentions. They find painful the fact that, tacked onto the substantial reduction they must admittedly suffer because of the restrictions of Probate Code section 41, they will receive nothing until Mrs. Herrington dies — an event which, since that lady was born in January 1907, the mortality tables tell us cannot be expected to occur before 18 years (1983), and which conceivably could be deferred until 1990-1995 if the strides of medical science in prolonging human life outraee atomic and other perils.

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Related

Estate of Nicely
235 Cal. App. 2d 174 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)

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Bluebook (online)
235 Cal. App. 2d 174, 44 Cal. Rptr. 804, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrington-v-national-foundation-for-infantile-paralysis-calctapp-1965.