In Re Bucklin's Estate

51 N.W.2d 412, 243 Iowa 312, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1327, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 396
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 5, 1952
Docket47978
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 412 (In Re Bucklin's Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Bucklin's Estate, 51 N.W.2d 412, 243 Iowa 312, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1327, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 396 (iowa 1952).

Opinion

Smiti-i, J.

The will of Ulysses Bucklin,. admitted to probate April 10, 1950, created a trust “for the use” of. his- son, “the income arising therefrom to be paid to said Ralph R. Bucklin quarterly or yearly as may seem best to said trustees.” It further provided for payment to him, at the trustees’ discretion, of “any part of the corpus” and then added:

“No person other than said Ralph R. Bucklin or his legal representative shall have a right to acquire any interest in or to compel payment of any of the funds of said trust, and no creditor, or assignee, or transferee of said Ralph R. Bucklin Shall have a right to compel payment * * * or to acquire any interest therein by attachment, garnishment, execution or otherwise.”

Then follows provision that: in event of attempted assignment or transfer by Ralph; or any attempt by any person other than Ralph or his legal representative to acquire any interest or secure payment; or in event of Ralph’s bankruptcy or insolvency the trustees shall have discretion to exclude Ralph “from all interest in said trust funds” and to hold same for Ralph’s “depend *314 ents, wife, lineal descendants or relatives as said trustees shall deem proper,” but with the right to reinstate him later. It is provided further that upon Ralph’s death the trustees “shall have the right to' pay” the funds “to his legal representative, or to such of the lineal descendants” as the trustees may select.

-Beneficiary’s former wife, Nina Bucklin Wharton, claims to be a creditor on account of unpaid installments of .child support money under a divorce decree, dated September 14, 1932.

Upon application of the surviving trustee and over Nina’s objections the trial court held it was the intention of testator to give the trustee full power, in his discretion, “to pay over or withhold the corpus or principal and also the income of the trust property without the authority or consent of” the beneficiary or his former wife or “of any other person or of the court, all in accordance with the purposes and objects of said trust as set forth in said will”; and that “neither said beneficiary nor any other person has any right in or to said funds, property or income or can acquire any right therein unless and until the same shall have been paid over to a beneficiary of said trust in the discretion of said trustee.”

Nina Bucklin Wharton, objector herein, has appealed from said decision, urging the court erred: (1) In construing the trust to be discretionary with the trustee “as to the gift of income”; and (2) in holding valid the restraints “excluding the gift * * * from legal process.”

Otherwise stated, appellant contends the trust is a true spendthrift, and not a discretionary, trust; that the court erroneously construed it to be the latter; that the restrictive provisions on alienation are illegal; and that as a true spendthrift trust we should declare it invalid. The controversy involves only the status of the income. The beneficiary, ..though served with notice, did not appear in the hearing below and has not appealed.

I. Appellant argues the court’s interpretation of the trust as discretionary ignores the plain language which says the income is to be paid to the beneficiary either quarterly or yearly as may seem best to the trustee; and that this language, contrasted with the next sentence which expressly makes any payment from the corpus purely discretionary with the trustee, clearly means distribution of income is not discretionary; also that the court’s *315 order ignores the further sentence which says “no person other than” the beneficiary “shall, have a right * * # to compel payment * * and this further confirms that the beneficiary can compel payment while it attempts to make that absolute right inalienable.

We agree with the contention thus far. The discretionary provision relates only to payments out of corpus. No discretion is lodged in the trustee as to payment of income except in case a forfeiture be declared for some attempted assignment or other cause provided in the latter part of the trust provision. And we also agree that under modern terminology this is a true spendthrift, as distinguished from a discretionary, trust.

II. Many words have been written by courts, lawyers and text writers about spendthrift trusts and their validity or invalidity. Doubtless the term has at times been loosely applied to discretionary'trusts designed to prevent alienation, by withholding vesting of the equitable right of the beneficiary to compel distribution.

Appellant argues the invalidity of the trust here and contends the status of the true spendthrift trust in Iowa as to validity has never been determined and presents the case as one of “first impression.”

But in In re Estate of Tone, 240 Iowa 1315, 1325, 39 N.W.2d 401, 407, after clearly pointing out the distinction between ‘ discretionary and so-called “true” spendthrift trusts, the language of the wills in question was held to create spendthrift trusts “unquestionably valid at least as to the meóme p&yable to the life beneficiary(Italics supplied.)

Appellant, citing this ease to establish the distinction between the two kinds of trusts, ignores the explicit language above-quoted, merely saying “the Tone case dealt solely with the question of an alleged abuse of discretion -on the part of the trustee under the purely discretionary provisions binding the principal in that case.”

Appellee, on the other hand, cites the Tone case, not on the question of the validity of spendthrift trusts as to income, bixt to- support his contention that-the trust here is in fact discretionary, as the trial court held;

*316 In this state of the record, without conceding the question is an open one in this jurisdiction, we deem it proper to review the considerations which we think demonstrate the validity of what has come to be called the true spendthrift trust.

The Restatement of the Law of.Trusts, section 152, page 368, defines a “valid” spendthrift trust (as to income)'-as one by the terms of which “the beneficiary is entitled to the income” and in which it is provided “that his interest shall not be transferable by him and shall not be subject to the claim of his creditors.” See 54 Am. Jur., Trusts, section 152, where it is said the validity of spendthrift trusts “is upheld in this country by the great weight of authority.” See also 65 C. J., Trusts, section 27, page 238; section 308, page 555 ; and page 230. :

The annotation on Validity of Spendthrift Trusts, 119 A. L. R. 19, lists thirty-two jurisdictions (including Hawaii) in which the courts have held restraints on alienation of income valid. Among the minority of ten (including England) listed the other way, are five also contained in the majority list. This was in 1939. What a similar survey would show now we cannot attempt to learn. It is manifest the confusion in nomenclature between discretionary and spendthrift trusts would make any mathematically correct count of noses or citation of cases as burdensome as it would be inconclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 412, 243 Iowa 312, 34 A.L.R. 2d 1327, 1952 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-bucklins-estate-iowa-1952.