Lindenberger v. Kentucky Title Trust Co.

110 S.W.2d 301, 270 Ky. 579, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 12, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 110 S.W.2d 301 (Lindenberger v. Kentucky Title Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lindenberger v. Kentucky Title Trust Co., 110 S.W.2d 301, 270 Ky. 579, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 126 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

G. L. Lindenberger, Sr., died testate in Louisville, Ky., on October 4, 1927. By Ms will he created certain trusts as well as remainder interest in Ms devised property, some of the beneficiaries of which were and still are infants and they compose a part of plaintiffs in 'this declaratory judgment action which was filed in the Jefferson circuit court against Lindenberger’s trustee and all other parties having an interest in the subject matter involved. The time for the termination of the involved Lindenberger trust, under the latter’s will, is not definitely fixed, but is made contingent upon the happening of events which are certain to occur at some unknown time, but in no event is it in violation of the rule against perpetuities.

The Pendennis Club in the city of Louisville is a social corporation organized without profit. It owned property on the south side of Walnut street in that city and between Third and Fourth streets, the western line of which was at the rear of a large business building, occupied by the Stewart Dry Goods Company, and is located on the lot in the southeast corner of the junction of Walnut and Fourth streets. It also owned a one-half undivided interest in a 20-foot lot fronting on Fourth street and immediately adjacent to the Stewart Dry Goods Company building north of it. In the early part of 1928 the club mortgaged its property to secure $675,000, for the payment of which it issued its bonds running through a series of years, and the trust deed or *581 mortgage that it so executed named the Louisville Trust Company as trustee for its bondholders. The trustee therein later became financially involved and was reorganized. A part of the plan for such reorganization was the taking over by the Kentucky Title Trust Company of certain assets of the Louisville Trust Company, and the Kentucky Title Trust Company thereby became, under that arrangement, trustee under the Lindenberger will, as well as trustee for all of the assets transferred to it by the Louisville Trust Company, the latter having theretofore also been appointed and acting as trustee under the Lindenberger will.

Prior to December 31, 1931, the Kentucky Title Trust Company, as trustee in the Lindenberger trust, acquired and became the owner of $275,000 worth of the Pendennis Club bonds, the remaining $400,000 being owned by the Louisville Trust Company, but which was later transferred to the Kentucky Title Trust Company as pointed out above. Following that, and pursuant to possessed authority therefor, it as Lindenberger trustee surrendered the bonds owned by that trust in consideration of the Pendennis Club conveying to it the title to certain of its properties, including the one-half undivided interest it owned in and to the 20-foot lot fronting on Fourth street above described. That is the condition of the title to the real estate here involved at this time. The other $400,000' indebtedness of the Pendennis Club was also arranged for. by the issuing of new funding bonds to that amount, and a holder of one of them (H. W. Russell) is likewise a party in this litigation in his own capacity and as representative of other owners of bonds of the same issue, as well as owners of other bonds secured by the trust which the Kentucky Title Trust Company took over from the Louisville Trust Company under the reorganizing agreement hereinbefore mentioned.

The real estate here involved (consisting of vacant lots on the south and east of the Stewart Dry Goods Company building) is practically nonproductive of income, yielding only about $1,100 net, accruing from rentals as parking spaces for automobiles. The Stewart Dry Goods Company proposed to lease it for a period of 15 years, with the right of renewal for another 15 years, and to utilize the property by improving it so that substantial income from rentals would be received by its owners. The proposition was agreed *582 to by all parties interested; bnt there existed some donbt as to whether the Lindenberger trustee had the authority to enter into such an agreement, and also, whether the Kentucky Title Trust Company possessed such authority, under its other trusteeship of a vast amount of bonds that it took over from the Louisville Trust Company in the reorganized arrangements of the latter’s affairs hereinbefore referred to. The doubt as to the authority of the Lindenberger trustee to execute the proposed lease is based upon these facts, (a) that the proposed Stewart Dry Groods Company lease, if it should exercise its option to renew it after the first 15-year term, would, possibly, extend beyond the termination of the Lindenberger trust, and (b), even if not so, then the Lindenberger will did' not by express terms confer authority on the trustee of the trust thereby created to “lease” real estate that the testator did not own at the time of his death, it being remembered that the real estate here involved was acquired by that trustee-after the testator’s death, but under power and authority conferred by the Lindenberger will. The trial court interpreted the instruments involved and adjudged the rights of the parties so as to uphold the right of both the Lindenberger trustee, and that of the Kentucky Title Trust Company, as successor of the Louisville Trust Company for various bondholders, to-execute the proposed lease, and this appeal by the plaintiffs below from that judgment is for the purpose-of obtaining from this court a review thereof.

In disposing of fact (a), a suggested reason why the Lindenberger trustee is without authority to execute a lease that might possibly extend beyond the termination of the trust created by that will, it may be said generally that trusts are peculiarly institutions of equity, and it is now and always has been the cherished, policy of that branch of jurisprudence to so construe-them as to carry out the intent and purpose of their' creator. The language ' of the Lindenberger will, in creating the trust therein made, is of a very sweeping" nature, as it relates to the conferring of authority on the trustee for the benefit of the cestuis que trust. It is-a lengthy document and authorizes the trustee to convert, convey and reinvest the trust funds within its sound business discretion, which are owned by the testator at his death, and it was in pursuance of such authority that the real estate involved was obtained by *583 the trustee. Another provision of the will authorized the trustee to also “lease” any real estate then owned by the testator, and in still another provision the trustee was Vested with authority to also sell, mortgage, or convey any future acquired real estate that might be obtained in carrying out the provisions of the trust. However, in that last provision the word “lease” was not. employed though it was done with reference to real estate that the testator owned at the time of his death. Clearly, the purpose of the testator, in the creation of' the trust which he provided in his will, should not be so. interpreted as to confine the authority of the trustee to “lease” only real estate that was owned by him at the-time of his death, and to withhold the right to lease after-acquired real estate which it is clear, by viewing the language of the will throughout its contents, was intended by the testator to be managed and controlled in the same manner as real estate owned by him during his lifetime.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
110 S.W.2d 301, 270 Ky. 579, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindenberger-v-kentucky-title-trust-co-kyctapphigh-1937.