Lelong v. Succession of Lelong
This text of 164 So. 2d 671 (Lelong v. Succession of Lelong) 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.
Opinion
Camille LELONG et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
SUCCESSION OF Michel Paul LELONG, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.
*672 Watson, Williams & Brittain, by Arthur C. Watson, Natchitoches, for plaintiffs-appellants.
Bethard & Bethard, by Henry W. Bethard, III, Coushatta, for defendant-appellee.
Before TATE, SAVOY, and CULPEPPER, JJ.
TATE, Judge.
This is an action to set aside a testamentary trust. The plaintiffs are the three children of the decedent, together with a co-trustee of the trust. The defendant is another co-trustee, who is also the executor of the will creating the trust.
The plaintiffs appeal from the dismissal of their suit. Essentially, they contend that the trust should be terminated because circumstances not known or anticipated by the settlor will defeat or substantially impair the purposes for which the trust was created. See LSA-R.S. 9:2174 and 9:2175 of the Louisiana Trust Estates Law, LSA-R.S. 9:1791 et seq.
The testamentary trust created by the testator's last will provided that, after payment of expenses and of certain legacies, the "balance" of his estate should be placed in trust for ten years following the date of his death. The testator stated that he did not want his property ("inherited or bought *673 and hardly accumulated"), either the real estate or the securities, to be "dispersed for lesser values." The testator further wanted the trustees "to consider first the development of my properties, their exploitation, in a rational way, and for their expenses and reserves for the future 2/3 (two-third) of the income (property and securities) should be kept every year."[1]
The plaintiffs-appellants contend that the purpose of creating the trust evidenced by the will, was to use the income of the estate to develop the properties (8000 acres of real estate) over a period of ten years. This purpose cannot be fulfilled and the trust should be terminated, they argue, because there will be only negligible income left to develop the property in question, after the legacies and the estate taxes are paid, and after two-thirds of the trust income is diverted to the forced heirs of the testator as required by law.[2]
On the other hand, the trial court decreed, inter alia, in dismissing the plaintiffs' contentions, that the testator's provision that he wanted the trustees "to consider first, the development of my properties, their exploitation, in a rational way", was merely, in the trial court's words, "a precatory suggestion and not a mandatory instruction to the trustees, who are hereby recognized under the terms of the trust to have full authority to dispense the income from same in their sound discretion."
In effect, then, the trial court construed the intended purpose of the decedent in creating the trust simply to retain his estate intact for ten years following his death, with merely a suggestion to his trustees that they use the trust income to develop the real estate properties in a rational way.
I.
The decedent died in August 1962 possessed of an estate valued in excess of one million three hundred thousand dollars. To summarize in round figures, the decedent's gross estate included essentially the following:
Stocks and bonds_______ $ 750,000.00 Land (8000 acres) _____ 400,000.00 Cattle ________________ 80,000.00 Cash __________________ 30,000.00
The evidence also shows that the decedent's estate is subject to cash liabilities *674 slightly in excess of $500,000, including legacies and the federal estate tax ($400,000).
In order to satisfy this liability, the appellants suggest, it will be necessary either to sell two-thirds of the securities or else to borrow money upon the land, in either of which events there will be a substantial diminution in the net cash income available to develop the property and to pay the estate expenses.
The appellants also produced a summary of the decedent's income and expenses from the estate over the six years preceding his death, based upon his federal income tax returns. According to the latter, the decedent enjoyed a net income from his securities of approximately $36,000 per year, but the farming and cattle operations conducted on his land showed an annual net loss each year, varying from $6,000 in 1962 to $28,000 in 1958.
The appellants suggest, for instance, that if two-thirds of the stocks and bonds are sold in order to pay the $500,000 cash liabilities of the estate, then the annual income of $36,000 from them will be reduced by two-thirds, i.e., to $12,000, of which two-thirds must be paid to the forced heirs (see Footnote 2 above), so that the negligible sum of $4,000 will be left to pay any deficit in plantation operations and to develop the land. (The appellants produced testimony that approximately XXXX-XXXX acres of the estate were uncleared bottomlands, which according to the estimate of a contractor would take at least $75$100 per acre to clear and to convert into pasture land.)
The appellants contend that, therefore, the purpose of the trust (i.e., in their opinion, to develop the estate lands) will be substantially impaired or defeated because of circumstances not known or anticipated by the testator, namely, (1) that two-thirds of the trust income was required by law to be paid to the forced heirs, and (2) that the major share of the income-producing securities of the estate were to be sold because of a large federal estate tax liability. There would thus be no or little income to develop the trust properties; or, even, the trust would sustain an operating deficit every year, with the possibility of an eventual loss of the estate lands.
The appellants rely upon the principles summarized as follows at 89 C.J.S. Trusts § 93, p. 927: "When a trust is impossible of fulfillment the court will terminate it and have the property distributed. * * * A trust will be terminated where * * * its continuance becomes pecuniarily profitless, expensive, or hopeless. Where the accomplishment of the purposes of a trust if continued, would be impaired substantially by circumstances not known or anticipated by the settlor, the trust will be terminated." See LSA-R.S. 9:2174, 9:2175; De La Vergne v. St. Paul, 216 La. 92, 43 So.2d 229.
The appellants' contentions are extremely forceful. However, in our opinion, the trial court correctly held that they must fall.
II.
The following general legal principles are applicable herein:
"Whenever possible, that construction of a trust instrument will be favored which upholds the validity of the trust and renders the instrument effective." 90 C.J.S. Trusts § 161d, p. 20. "In construing a trust, the settlor's intention controls and is to be ascertained and given effect, unless opposed to law or public policy." Id. at § 162a, p. 26. "Parol or extrinsic evidence may be admitted to aid in construing a trust instrument only if the instrument is ambiguous or uncertain, and only to explain, and not to contradict, the instrument." Id. at § 165a, p. 34.
We must also here note the principle stated as follows at 90 C.J.S. Trusts § 163, p. 32: "* * * it has also been held that instruments creating trusts are to be liberally *675 construed to carry out the intention of the trustor, and that the court should construe conditions liberally, whenever it may properly do so, in order to avoid a forfeiture.
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164 So. 2d 671, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lelong-v-succession-of-lelong-lactapp-1964.