in the Estate of Eldridge Lee Brimberry

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 31, 2006
Docket12-04-00154-CV
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
in the Estate of Eldridge Lee Brimberry, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

ChiefJustice ^V^7*7^*^ Clerk James T. Worthen ^s^ao*^ c:,vn IY >s jA SK Twelfth Court of Appeals Justices q hi:i Staff Att< >rney Sam Griffith Margaret Hussey Diane DeVasto

Friday, March 31, 2006

Mr. William R. Pemberton Mr. Timothy D. Salley P. O. Box 1112 604 East Goliad Avenue 306 N. 7th Street Crockett, TX 75835 Crockett, TX 75835

RE: Case Number: 12-04-00154-CV Trial Court Case Number: 8444

Style: In the Estate of Eldridge Lee Brimberry, Deceased

Enclosed is a copy of the Memorandum Opinion issued this date in the above styled and numbered cause. Also enclosed is a copy of the court's judgment.

Very truly yours,

CATHY S. LUSK, CLERK

By: KtilUJUL. MA Katrina McClenny, Chief Deputy Clerk

CC: Hon. John Ovard Judge Sarah Tunnell Clark Ms. Bridget Lamb

1517 West Front Street • Suite 354 • Tyler, TX 75702 • Tel: 903-593-8471 • Fax. 903-593-2193 Serving Anderson, Angelina, Cherokee, Gregg, Henderson, Houston, Nacogdoches. Rains. Rusk. Sabine. San Augustine. Sketby, Smith. Trinity. I'psbur. Van Zandt and Wood Counties www.12thcoa.courts.state.tx.us NO. 12-04-00154-CV

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT

TYLER, TEXAS

IN THE ESTA TE OF § APPEAL FROM THE

ELDRIDGE LEE BRIMBERRY, § COUNTY COURT AT LAW

DECEASED § HOUSTON COUNTY, TEXAS

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is a probate case. Appellants, Jerry Lee Brimberry, Alice Sue Colburn, Norma Kay Durfee, and Tonya Renee Pelham, applied for probate of the will of Eldridge Lee Brimberry, deceased. Theyalsosoughtto havetwo of the executors namedin the will appointed as independent co-executors and to have Delores McComb McDonald, the third executor named by the testator, disqualified from serving as independent co-executor. The trial court admitted the will to probate and appointed all three executors named in the will as independent co-executors. The trial court required each independent executor to post a $600,000.00bond although the will provided that no bond should be required of them. Appellants complain in their first issue that the trial court erred in requiring Jerry Lee Brimberry and Norma Kay Durfee to give bond as a condition to their qualifyingas independentco-executors. In their secondissue, Appellantscontendthat the trial court abused its discretion in failing to find that Dolores McComb McDonald was disqualified to act as independent co-executor. We modify the trial court's order and affirm as modified.

Background

Eldridge Brimberry died on August 21, 2003. His spouse of thirty-six years, Errolene Brimberry, diedfour and a half years earlier on March 25,1999. Her estateconsisted of $10,000.00 in separate property and one-half ofthe community estate, her half valued at $383,869.00. Her will named her husband, Eldridge, as independent executor and trustee of the trust created by the will. The trust directed that the trustee pay to her husband out of the income of the trust estate such amounts "as are reasonably required, in the trustee's discretion, for his health, maintenance and support in his accustomed manner of living at my death." Apparently, Eldridge made no effort to segregate the property of the trust from his own property. On March 6, 2001, some two years after Errolene's death, Eldridge changed the name on his checking account in the First State Bank in Grapeland to "E. L. Brimberry or Delores McComb." The account created was a joint account with right of survivorship. The account had been opened originally on March 18, 1981 as a joint account of "E. L. Brimberry or Errollene Brimberry," joint tenants with right of survivorship. At Errollene's death, the account balance was $1,244.00. At Eldridge's death, the account contained $64,292.94. After Eldridge's death, Delores withdrew all but $1,200.00 from their joint checking account. The inventory of Errollene's estate shows that at her death she also possessed a community one-half interest in two certificates of deposit issued by the Grapeland State Bank worth a total of approximately $89,000.00, her community one-halfinterest amounting to $44,500.00. One ofthese certificates of deposit was closed on March 6, 2001, two years after Errollene's death. It was replaced on that date by a new certificate styled as E. L. Brimberry, payable on death to Delores McComb McDonald. At Eldridge's death, there was $70,000.00 in the account represented by the certificate of deposit. Delores claims the entire account as her own by virtue of the "payable on death" clause to her.

The inventory also shows that Errollene possessed a community one-half interest in an Edward Jones account having a total value of $76,784.00, her half interest being $38,392.00. A Paine Weber account included in the inventory contained $199,562.00, Errollene's half interest amountingto $99,781.00. Accordingto the evidenceadducedat trial, at Eldridge's death four years later, the Edward Jones account had grown to $171,000.00 and the Paine Weber account contained $191,000.00. The total appreciation in the two accounts between the deaths of Errollene and Eldridge amounted to $86,654.00. Shortly before Eldridge died, Delores collected a $297.00 payment on a contract for deed due from Willie Shepherd. Eldridge endorsed the check, and Delores deposited it in the checking account from which she withdrew all but $ 1,200.00. The contract for deed had been the community property of Errollene and Eldridge, and Errollene's one-half interest became part of the trust estate of the trust created by her will. Appellants contend that after Errollene's death, Eldridge failed to segregate his property from the property of the trust created by Errollene's will. Since the trust property remained commingled with his own property, Appellants argue that the entire commingled fund must be treated as subject to the trust. While avoiding any accusation that their father breached his fiduciary duty in his management of the trust estate, they nevertheless maintain that his attempt to convey the bank accounts was ineffectual to transfer ownership to Delores. Therefore, they contend that Delores's claim as sole owner of the checking account and the certificate of deposit is a claim adverse to Eldridge's estate rendering her unsuitable to act as independent co-executor. They further contend that as one ofthe successor trustees to her father ofErrollene's trust, she breached her fiduciary duty in withdrawing money from the bank account, at least part of which was property belonging to the trust estate. Similarly, they regard her claim to the entire certificate of deposit payable to her on Eldridge's death as a breach of her duty as trust fiduciary. Delores contends that as trustee ofErrollene's trust, Eldridge had broad powers to do all acts that an absolute owner of the property could do, subject only to his fiduciary duty. In Delores's view, Eldridge was free to consider the bank accounts as his own and an offsetting portion of the investment accounts as trust property if he believed that would benefit the trust. The growth in the brokerage accounts together with his portion of the bank accounts exceeded the total amount of the certificate of deposit payable to Delores on his death and the joint checking account that Delores took as survivor upon his death. At the conclusion of the final hearing, the court determined that Delores was entitled to the balance of the joint checking account as Eldridge's survivor and that she was entitled to the certificate ofdeposit which Eldridge had directed the bank to pay to her on his death. Therefore, she was not making an adverse claim to property of Eldridge's estate. Hence, she was not "unsuitable" to act as independent co-executor.

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