In Re Estate of Eilert

21 P.2d 630, 131 Cal. App. 409, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 734
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 25, 1933
DocketDocket No. 1245.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 630 (In Re Estate of Eilert) 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
In Re Estate of Eilert, 21 P.2d 630, 131 Cal. App. 409, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 734 (Cal. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BARNARD, P. J.

This is an appeal from an order settling the fifth annual account of a trustee under the will of Delia Eilert, deceased. Delia Eilert died on May 29, 1923, and in accordance with her will there was distributed to the respondent, as trustee, fifty-three and four-fifths shares of the capital stock of Eilert Products Company, a corporation, the net earnings and income to be paid to the appellant, William J. Eilert, during his lifetime and, on his death, the cor%nis of the trust to go to certain remainder-men. The appellant was president of the Eilert Products Company. This corporation owned twenty-four acres of land in the city of Fresno, upon which were situated certain buildings and equipment formerly operated as a brewery and later used in the manufacture of ice-cream and soft drinks. The corporation also owned three other pieces of real property, of which one had been used for warehouse purposes and the other two had formerly been leased to others for saloon purposes.

In 1925 the twenty-four acre tract of land, with the buildings and equipment thereon, was sold for $400,000, the purchase price to be paid in installments, and in 1926 the three other properties were sold for $125,484. During the next few years the corporation distributed a large part of its assets, in the form of cash received from the sale of these real properties, through dividends to its stockholders. The respondent received during several years the proportion of the amounts thus distributed to which the shares of stock it held in trust were entitled. Each check received was marked “dividend” and the respondent assumed that the same represented income upon the stock held in trust. Four *411 annual accounts were filed by the respondent trustee showing the receipt of such sums as income and the payment of practically all of the same to the appellant as life tenant, under the provisions of the trust. An order was made by the court approving each of said four annual accounts, which orders were never appealed from and have become final.

A fifth annual account was filed on November 25, 1930, setting forth the receipt during that year of $3,998.40, derived through such dividends from the sale of real estate by the corporation, and also the receipt of $574.60 from dividends paid by the corporation from operating profits during the current year. It was further reported that the trustee had discovered that the corporation had sold its properties and was reducing them to cash, and that all the dividends theretofore received by the trustee had included a pro rata portion of the moneys received by the corporation from the sale of properties held by the company at the time of the creation of the trust. The report then set forth an account of the moneys coming from the proceeds of the sales of the corporation properties which had theretofore been paid to the appellant; that said amounts had theretofore been paid to the appellant under the mistaken belief that they represented income from the corpus of the estate, and were previously reported to the court, by reason of this mistake, as income received and paid to appellant; that since the discovery of the mistake the trustee had withheld further payments to the appellant and was retaining all amounts received from the corporation since the rendition of the last account as a part of the principal of the trust fund; and instructions and directions were asked from the court as to the duty of the trustee under the trust provisions.

The appellant filed objections to the account and report and, after evidence taken at a hearing in which all parties took part, the court found that $16,820.70 of the amounts shown to have been paid to the appellant and accounted for in the four previous accounts was, in fact, a part of the capital or corpus of said trust funds; that the same came from the sale of properties owned by the corporation at the time of the death of the testatrix; that the same had been delivered to the trustee by the corporation as earnings; that the same were understood by the trustee to be earnings *412 of the corporation and were received and disbursed as such; that the trustee had no knowledge of the source of these funds until after the receipt of the amounts reported as received in the fifth account; and that prior to the receipt of the sums accounted for in the fifth account the trustee had no information which would put it on inquiry or lead it to suspect that the so-called dividends received by it from the corporation were not paid out of earnings of the corporation, or that the same were derived from the sale of the corporation assets. After appropriate conclusions of law, the court directed the trustee to take steps and proceedings to recover from the appellant the sum of $16,820.07, to be held as a part of the capital or corpus of the trust when and as recovered. The court further ordered the trustee to retain all income from the trust estate then in its hands or subsequently received, to which the appellant would otherwise be entitled, and to apply the same upon the amount found to have been overpaid to appellant, until such time as that amount had been returned to the corpus of the trust. From this order the life tenant or beneficiary has appealed.

In effect, at least, the court ordered the trust estate’s share of the proceeds from the sale of properties held by the corporation at the time of the death of the testatrix to be kept intact as a part of the corpus of the trust estate. This brings up the first question presented to us as to whether the appellant, as life tenant, is entitled to an alleged increase in the value of the real estate owned by the corporation, it being claimed that this real estate greatly increased in value after the death of the testatrix. It is argued that of the twenty-four acres of land upon which the business of the corporation was located, only three acres had been used in connection with the business carried on, while the rest was unused and vacant land. The statement is made in appellant’s brief that this land was worth $5,000 an acre at the time of the death of the decedent and $10,000 an acre at the time the property was sold. No evidence of this latter value is pointed out and reference is apparently made to a provision in the mortgage, taken back when the land was sold, to the effect that certain specified portions of the land could be released from the mortgage upon the payment of $10,000 an acre. This by no means fixes such a value, and the entire property, consisting of land, build *413 ings, equipment and stock, was sold for a lump sum of $400,000. It further appears that at the time of the death of the testatrix all of the properties of the corporation were carried on the books of the corporation at a value of $522,850.59. These properties were later sold for $525,884, leaving no such increase as that contended for. Irrespective of its amount, we think this increase became a part of the corpus of the trust estate.

In support of his contention that such increase must be considered as income, the appellant relies upon Estate of Gartenlaub, 195 Cal. 375 [197 Pac. 90, 24 A. L. R.

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 630, 131 Cal. App. 409, 1933 Cal. App. LEXIS 734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-eilert-calctapp-1933.