In re Bradford Trust

524 So. 2d 1213, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 11240, 1987 WL 45681
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 25, 1987
DocketNo. 86 CA 0336
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 524 So. 2d 1213 (In re Bradford Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Bradford Trust, 524 So. 2d 1213, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 11240, 1987 WL 45681 (La. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinions

WATKINS, Judge.

This is a suit brought by Mark Allen Bradford, of the full age of majority, and Mrs. Anne Crowell Wilson, divorced wife of Donald E. Bradford, in her capacity as tu-trix of the minor child, Amy Crowell Bradford, to force the resignation of E. Briggs Wharton, judicially appointed successor trustee to Ben F. Downing, Jr. of the Donald E. Bradford Trust, and to surcharge Wharton for revenues and profits that allegedly were lost to the trust through Wharton’s alleged breach of trust. The trial court rendered judgment in favor of Wharton, generally, ordering that Wharton’s resignation as trustee be accepted,1 but in other respects declining to grant plaintiffs’ demands. Plaintiffs have appealed this judgment. We amend the judgment of the trial court to surcharge Wharton for breach of trust and to force Wharton to reconstitute the trust.

Donald E. Bradford was a member of the Baton Rouge law firm of Sanders, Miller, Downing and Kean. By instrument dated June 15,1971, Donald Bradford transferred 40.7 shares of the common stock of Security Abstract & Title Company of Baton Rouge, Inc., represented by Certificate No. 49, in trust to Ben R. Downing, Jr., as trustee, with the settlor’s three then minor children, Mark Allen Bradford, Leigh Ann Bradford2, and Amy Crowell Bradford, as beneficiaries of income and principal in equal shares. The trust was to last until each beneficiary reached age 21 and then to terminate. Named as successor trustee in the trust instrument in the event the office of trustee should become vacant was R. Gordon Kean.

The trust instrument contained the following exculpatory language in Section 6.5:

6.5 The Trustee shall not be in any manner liable or responsible by reason of any loss, injury, or destruction that may happen to or be done to the property in any of the trusts or any part of such property by or through the action or neglect of the Trustee or by or through the action of neglect of any other person, nor shall the Trustee be answerable or responsible for any act or thing whatsoever except the Trustee’s own willful fault or gross negligence.

A fourth child, Beth Bradford, was born after the trust was created and is not a beneficiary.

Donald Bradford and Anne Crowell Bradford were divorced in October, 1979, with Anne Crowell Bradford being granted custody of the beneficiaries, who were still minors. Anne Crowell Bradford was further named tutrix of the three beneficiaries.

Allen Crowell, maternal grandfather of the three minors, had added the sum of $54,000.00 to the trust by a series of checks. Other increases in trust corpus came from profits to the trust, there being no trust corpus added other than the additions made by Allen Crowell.

In 1981, Ben R. Downing, Jr., R. Gordon Kean, and E. Briggs Wharton filed a petition to have Wharton appointed successor trustee to Ben R. Downing, and by ex parte order dated April 16, 1981, Wharton was named trustee in the place and stead of Downing. The ex parte order contained the following language pertinent to the issues presently presented:

[1215]*1215IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Ben R. Downing, Jr. and E. Briggs Wharton, shall not be required to furnish any accounting in regard to the change of the Trustee, except as for such accountings as are required under the terms of the Trust instrument.

Section 6.1 of the trust instrument reads as follows:

6.1 Each year the Trustee shall render an account of the administration of the trust to the beneficiaries of the trust in accordance with the provisions of Section 2088 of the Louisiana Trust Code, as it may hereafter be amended.

Donald Bradford withdrew from the law firm of Sanders, Miller, Downing & Kean in 1982.

Ben R. Downing furnished no final accounting, and no annual accountings in the course of his administration. His successor, Wharton, contends in his brief that annual accountings were furnished for the years of 1971-1981 by the filing of income tax returns. Wharton further contends that as administrator of the minor children’s estate in the years before the divorce, Bradford waived further accounting.

LSA-R.S. 9:2088 B and C read as follows:

B. A trustee shall render to a beneficiary or his legal representative at least once a year a clear and accurate account covering his administration for the preceding year. His first annual account shall relate to the calendar year during which he became responsible for the trust property, or, at his option, the first accounting period of not more than twelve months and shall be rendered within ninety days after the expiration of that calendar year or accounting period. Each annual account shall show in detail all receipts and disbursements of cash and all receipts and deliveries of other trust property during the year, and shall set forth a list of all items of trust property at the end of the year.
C. A trustee upon the termination, revocation, or rescission of the trust, or upon his resignation or removal, shall render to a beneficiary or his legal representative his final account covering the period elapsed since his most recent annual account (or, should the trust have terminated, or have been revoked or rescinded, during the first year, the period elapsed since he became responsible for the trust property), and setting forth the same information required for annual accounts.

It would appear that Bradford as legal representative of his minor children had the capacity to receive annual accountings until his marriage was dissolved by divorce in October, 1979, but that he never had the procedural capacity to waive the filing of an annual accounting or to lessen the requirements of the Trust Code in LSA-R.S. 9:2088 B by accepting an income tax form in lieu of an accounting, as an income tax form would not contain all of the information required for an annual accounting by 9:2088 B.

As to failure of Downing as trustee to file a final account, it should be noted that the language of the ex parte order relieving Downing of the duty to file any but an annual accounting is of no effect, as the beneficiaries were not served with any pleadings that would furnish notice that Downing as trustee was being relieved of that duty, although that duty is clearly imposed by LSA-R.S. 9:2088 C. Although the trustee may be relieved from duties that would be placed upon him by the administrative provisions of the Trust Code, before doing so, the presentation of argument, oral or written, is contemplated which, obviously requires an adversary hearing. LSA-R.S. 9:2065, Bogert, Trusts and Trustees, (2d Ed.Revised) § 561. No such adversary hearing ever took place. Had a final account been required of Downing, rather than being waived, Wharton would have been in a position to determine whether Downing had committed a breach of trust. Wharton insists that he had no means by which he could determine whether the trust had properly been administered by Downing. It is Wharton’s own fault that by waiving a final accounting he deprived himself of that means.

[1216]*1216The trustee is liable in certain instances for breach of trust committed by a predecessor trustee. Those cases are listed in LSA-R.S. 9:2204, which reads as follows:

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Related

Albritton v. Albritton
622 So. 2d 709 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1993)
Matter of Donald E. Bradford Trust
538 So. 2d 263 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1989)
In re the Donald E. Bradford Trust
526 So. 2d 785 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 So. 2d 1213, 1987 La. App. LEXIS 11240, 1987 WL 45681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bradford-trust-lactapp-1987.