Lombardi v. Blois

230 Cal. App. 2d 191, 40 Cal. Rptr. 899, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 862
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 19, 1964
DocketCiv. 21690
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 230 Cal. App. 2d 191 (Lombardi v. Blois) 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
Lombardi v. Blois, 230 Cal. App. 2d 191, 40 Cal. Rptr. 899, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 862 (Cal. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, P. J.

We review the final apportionment of the fortune 1 of Henry Miller amassed from a fabulous empire of land and cattle and preserved for his posterity within the impregnable walls of a trust for half a century. Two competing bands of remaindermen in this last engagement clash *194 over their respective shares in the corpus. As we shall explain, we have concluded that the amount of these shares was correctly determined by the trial court. We therefore affirm the judgment.

The facts are not in dispute. On April 17, 1913, Miller executed a deed of trust under which he transferred most of his fortune, including all of his shares of stock in Miller & Lux, Inc. to his daughter Nellie Miller Nickel and her husband J. Leroy Nickel as trustees in trust for his family, subject first to the payment of the income thereof to the trustor for life. On the same day he executed a will creating a testamentary trust with virtually identical provisions. 2 Under the terms of the inter vivos trust, so far as here pertinent, all of the trust income with certain exceptions not here material was to be paid after Miller’s death to “Nellie Miller Nickel, and her husband, J. Leroy Nickel, share and share alike during their natural lives, and to the survivor of them during the natural life of such survivor.” Upon their deaths, the income was to be paid “equally to the children of the said Nellie Miller Nickel and J. Leroy Nickel and the issue of any deceased child born in lawful wedlock, per stirpes, during the lives of such of said children, as are living at the time of the death of said party of the first part [Henry Miller].” Upon the death of any of such children leaving issue “born in lawful wedlock them surviving,” the share of such child in the income was to be paid to such issue, but if such child left no lawful issue, “the share of said child shall go to the other of said children and issue of any deceased child per stirpes and not per capita.”

The trust further provided that upon the death of Nellie Miller Nickel and J. Leroy Nickel and all of their children living at the time of Henry Miller’s death, the corpus, with certain exceptions, “shall pass to, vest in, and is hereby conveyed to the descendants bom in lawful wedlock of the said Nellie Miller Nickel and J. Leroy Nickel, per stirpes and not per capita, absolutely and free of all trusts, ...”

Henry Miller died on October 14, 1916, survived by his daughter Nellie Miller Nickel, her husband J. Leroy Nickel and three of their four children, George W. Nickel, J. Leroy Nickel, Jr., and Beatrice Nickel Bowles Morse, a fourth child, Henry Miller Nickel having predeceased Henry Miller on *195 February 7, 1909, leaving no issue. J. Leroy Nickel died on June 17, 1937, whereupon all of the trust income was paid to Nellie Miller Nickel. The latter died on July 31, 1944, at which time, pursuant to the provisions set forth above, the income was paid in equal shares to George W. Nickel, Beatrice Nickel Morse and J. Leroy Nickel, Jr. Upon the death of the last named person without issue on May 28, 1959, the income was paid in equal shares to George W. Nickel and Beatrice Nickel Morse. George W. Nickel died on February 23, 1962, whereupon the income was paid one-half to Beatrice and one-half to the issue of George, that is one-eighth (%) each to Sally Nickel Mein, George W. Nickel, Jr., and Mary Nickel Lombardi, son and daughters of George W. Nickel, and one-eighth (%) in equal shares to Nina Beverly Nickel and John Charles Nickel, as the surviving issue of John Beverly Nickel, the fourth child of George W. Nickel, who predeceased him on November 24, 1954.

Beatrice Nickel Morse, the last survivor of the children of Nellie Miller Nickel and J. Leroy Nickel living at the time of the death of Henry Miller, died on December 11, 1962, thereby terminating the trust and in accordance with its provisions making the corpus distributable to the ‘1 descendants” of Nellie and her husband “per stirpes and not per capita, absolutely and free of all trusts.” Those descendants, as we have indicated, fall into two groups: (1) the issue of Nellie’s son George, appellants herein, hereafter referred to as the Nickel remaindermen; 3 and (2) the issue of Nellie’s daughter Beatrice, respondents herein, hereafter referred to as the Bowles remaindermen. 4

The single question presented is what is the share of each remainderman in view of the trustor’s direction that the corpus shall go to the descendants of Nellie Miller Nickel and J. Leroy Nickel per stirpes and not per capita. The Nickel remaindermen contend that the first generation of takers, namely Nellie Miller Nickel’s seven grandchildren, constitute the “stirpes” or family roots and that the corpus should be divided into seven equal parts at the level of the grand *196 children, each living grandchild receiving one-seventh (1/7) of the corpus and appellants John Charles Nickel and Nina Beverly Nickel sharing equally the one-seventh (1/7) of their deceased father John Beverly Nickel and thus each receiving one-fourteenth (1/14) of the corpus. The Bowles remainder-men, on the other hand, contend that the “stirpes” or family roots are to be found among the children of Nellie Miller Nickel, that the corpus should first be divided in two equal parts at the level of Nellie’s children, George W. and Beatrice, one-half (%) thereof being distributed to the Nickel remaindermen and one-half (%) to the Bowles remaindermen. According to this contention, each of the Nickel remaindermen are entitled to one-eighth (%) of the corpus (one-fourth of one-half) except appellants John Charles Nickel and Nina Beverly Nickel who, sharing equally the one-eighth (y8) share *197 of their deceased father, should each receive one-sixteenth (1/16), and each of the Bowles remaindermen are entitled to one-sixth (1/6) of the corpus (one-third of one-half).

On motions for judgment on the pleadings made in two consolidated actions, 5 6 the trial court upheld the contention of the Bowles remaindermen and rendered judgment accordingly. This appeal by the Nickel remaindermen followed.

At the outset, two cardinal precepts guide our examination of the central issue. First, since the court below based its construction of the Henry Miller trust solely on the terms of the trust instruments 6 without the aid of extrinsic evidence, under settled principles of appellate review we are not bound by the interpretation given by the trial court and we therefore proceed, as is our duty, to make the final determination in accordance with the applicable principles of law. (Estate of Platt (1942) 21 Cal.2d 343, 352 [131 P.2d 825]; Meyer v. State Board of Equalization

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Bluebook (online)
230 Cal. App. 2d 191, 40 Cal. Rptr. 899, 1964 Cal. App. LEXIS 862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lombardi-v-blois-calctapp-1964.