In Re the Trusteeship of the Will of Daniels

799 P.2d 479, 247 Kan. 349, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 171
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 26, 1990
Docket63,776
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 799 P.2d 479 (In Re the Trusteeship of the Will of Daniels) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Trusteeship of the Will of Daniels, 799 P.2d 479, 247 Kan. 349, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 171 (kan 1990).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Herd, J.:

This case originated as a probate case requiring the construction of two testamentary trusts. Guaranty State Bank & Trust Company (Guaranty), trustee of testamentary trusts established by Vernon E. Daniels, brought this action requesting an interpretation of the wills of Vernon Daniels and Dora Dell Daniels. The district court ruled in favor of the named remaindermen in Vernon Daniels’ will. The Court of Appeals, in an unpublished decision filed February 2, 1990, reversed and held Vernon’s daughter, Dee Ann Roshong, had the power to appoint all trust assets to herself. We granted the petition for review.

Vernon Daniels and Dora Daniels, husband and wife, executed their individual wills on December 12, 1974. Vernon established two testamentary trusts known as Vernon E. Daniels Trust No. 1 (Trust No. 1) and Vernon E. Daniels Trust No. 2 (Trust No. 2). Trust No. 1 was to equal the maximum marital deduction allowable at the time of Vernon’s death. Trust No. 2 included the residue of Vernon’s estate.

Vernon gave all his property, in trust, to Guaranty, as trustee, for the use and benefit of Dora and Dee. The entire net income of Trust No. 1 was payable to Dora during her lifetime. Vernon’s will also granted Dora the power to appoint the corpus of Trust No. 1. Trust No. 2 was held for the benefit of Dora and after her death for the benefit of Dee.

*351 Vernon’s will further granted Dee the power to appoint the entire corpus of Trust No. 2 to herself:

“XXIV
“My daughter shall, after the death of my wife, have the right and power by will or other instrument in writing to appoint the entire corpus of the Vernon E. Daniels Trust No. 2, or any part thereof, to herself, to her estate, or to any other person or persons, free of this trust. Said right and power to appoint is expressly made exercisable by the said Dee Ann Roshong alone.” (Emphasis added.)

Dora executed her will on the same date and exercised the power of appointment granted in Vernon’s will:

“III
“In the Will of Vernon E. Daniels, my husband, in Paragraph IX thereof, it is provided:
“ ‘My said wife shall have the right and power by will or other instrument in writing to appoint the entire corpus of said trust, or any part thereof, to herself, to her estate, or to any other person or persons, free of this trust. Said right and power to appoint is expressly made exercisable by the said Dora Dell Daniels alone, at any time, and in all events.’
“I hereby exercise the power of appointment thereby vested in me and hereby give all of the property of which I die seized unto the Guaranty State Bank and Trust Company, Beloit, Kansas, in trust, nevertheless, for the use and benefit of my daughter, Dee Ann Roshong, as provided under the Vernon E. Daniels Trust No. 2 in the Last Will and Testament of Vernon E. Daniels dated December 12, 1974.“ (Emphasis added.)

On April 2, 1980, Vernon executed a codicil revoking paragraph XXIV of his will and substituting the following provision:

“My daughter, after the death of my wife, shall have the right and power by Will or other instrument in writing to appoint one-half of the corpus of the Vernon E. Daniels Trust No. 2 to a husband or a child by birth or adoption but only if the adoption is of a minor. This right and power to appoint is made exercisable by my daughter, Dee Ann Roshong, alone. If Dee Ann Roshong does not appoint as above provided, then the entire corpus of the Vernon- E. Daniels Trust No. 2 shall be distributed under the next succeeding provision.”

The remaining one-half of the corpus of Trust No. 2 was to be distributed to named remaindermen, the appellees.

Vernon died June 14, 1980, and his will was admitted to probate in Mitchell County, Kansas. Dora died on August 7, 1985, and her will was also admitted into probate in Mitchell County, Kansas.

*352 On October 15, 1986, Dee exercised the power of appointment granted to her in Vernon’s will and appointed the entire corpus of Trust No. 1 to herself. Guaranty, acting as testamentary trustee of Vernon’s trusts, filed a petition in district court alleging that Dora had not exercised the power of appointment provided under Vernon’s will and sought a determination of whether Dee could appoint to herself all the assets of Trust No. 1 and a determination of the extent of Dee’s power of appointment over Trust No, 2.

The magistrate judge determined Dee had no power to appoint Trust No. 1 because Dora had exercised her power of appointment which brought all assets under the control of Vernon’s codicil. The magistrate further ruled that under Vernon’s codicil Dee had only the power to appoint one-half the corpus of Trust No. 2 and had no power to appoint the assets to herself. Additionally, the court determined Dee was entitled only to the income of Trust No. 1 and could not invade the principal, all in accordance with paragraph XX of Vernon’s will. Both the remaindermen and Dee appealed the magistrate’s rulings.

The district court found that Dora properly exercised the power of appointment granted in Vernon’s will. The district court also determined that Dora gave her property, not to Trust No. 2, but to Guaranty for the use and benefit of Dee as provided under Vernon’s Trust No. 2. Thus, the court ruled that K.S.A. 59-3101, which authorizes pour-over trusts, was not applicable because Dora’s gift was not a testamentary addition to Trust No. 2; rather, it was the creation of a new trust to be administered under the provisions of Trust No. 2.

The district court further ruled that Dora’s power of appointment, which incorporated provisions of Vernon’s will, was not to the exclusion of Vernon’s codicil. Since Vernon’s will was properly executed and subject to change, the subsequent codicil materially changed Dee’s power of appointment, limiting the power to appoint to only one-half the corpus of Trust No. 1 and Trust No. 2 to a husband or child. Thus, the court found Dee’s attempt to appoint all the assets of Trust No. 1 to herself invalid.

Finally, the district court determined Dee was entitled only to the income from the two trusts and that reasonable attorney fees should be paid from the corpus of the trusts.

*353 Dee appealed the district court rulings. The Court of Appeals found that K.S.A. 59-3101 was applicable because Dora intended to pour over the assets from Trust- No. 1 into Trust No. 2. However, because Dora’s will provided for a different disposition than Vernon’s codicil, the court ruled the testators failed to vact in concert” and thereby rendered the pour-over provisions inoperative. Thus, the Court of Appeals found Dee had the power to appoint to herself all the-assets of either trust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
799 P.2d 479, 247 Kan. 349, 1990 Kan. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-trusteeship-of-the-will-of-daniels-kan-1990.