Marshall v. Frazier

81 P.2d 132, 80 P.2d 42, 159 Or. 491, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 73
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 81 P.2d 132 (Marshall v. Frazier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. Frazier, 81 P.2d 132, 80 P.2d 42, 159 Or. 491, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 73 (Or. 1938).

Opinions

BAILEY, J.

This suit was instituted by the plaintiffs, Joseph W. Marshall and Lawrence C. Marshall, *496 for an accounting by the defendant, Charles R. Frazier, of all assets coming into his possession or under his control as trustee for the said plaintiffs. From a decree fixing and determining the amount of the trust estate, the trustee’s compensation and fees to his attorney, the plaintiffs have taken this appeal.

The plaintiffs are the grandsons of Colin C. Frazier. On July 3, 1906, the grandfather executed his last will and testament, in which he named Turner Oliver and the defendant, Charles R. Frazier, as executors. By this will he devised and bequeathed all his property, real and personal, to the defendant herein as trustee for the use and benefit of the testator’s widow and his two children, Marie Frazier, who became the mother of these plaintiffs, and George Frazier. The will directed that all the personal property be divided equally between the testator’s two children when the younger, George, should reach the age of twenty-one years, and that upon George’s reaching the age of thirty years the title to certain real property should vest in him and his sister, respectively. A specific bequest of an annual payment to the widow, made a charge on the testator’s entire estate, is not here important, inasmuch as the widow died before George reached the age of twenty-one years,.

Prior to June 3, 1907, Colin C. Frazier died, and on that date his will was admitted to probate. Thereafter, on or about July 18, 1908, an order was entered approving,.the final report- of the executors and directing that the remaining assets of the estate be turned over to the defendant as trustee under the will.

Before the estate was closed, however, Marie .Frazier on December 25, 1907, married Joseph W. Marshall. Two days before her marriage, on December 23, 1907, Marie Frazier, under her full name of Anna *497 Marie Frazier, executed and delivered to the defendant an instrument in the form of a deed, whereby she conveyed to the defendant and William Frazier and their successors and assigns, as trustees, all her interest in the estate of her late father, Colin C. Frazier. By this instrument it was provided that the trustees were to pay to her annually during her lifetime the net income from the said property after deducting all necessary charges and expenses of administering the trust. Upon her death, if she left any child or children surviving her, the trustees were to pay the income from said property to such child or children, or to their legal guardian, “until the youngest of such children shall reach the age of thirty (30) years, and shall thereafter pay the principal of said property to such child or children or to the children of a deceased child.” William Frazier died shortly after the execution of this instrument, leaving as sole trustee Charles R. Frazier.

On March 29, 1909, George Frazier became twenty-one years of age, and the defendant as trustee under the will of Colin C. Frazier, and in pursuance of the provisions thereof, delivered in equal shares to George Frazier and his sister, Marie Frazier Marshall, the personal property of the Colin C. Frazier estate. No question is here raised concerning the right of said Charles R. Frazier, either as trustee under the will of Colin C. Frazier, deceased, or under the trust instrument of Marie Frazier Marshall, to distribute to Marie Frazier Marshall at that time one-half of the personal property of her father’s estate. Nor is there any claim that she did not receive her. full share, which amounted to approximately $12,000 in value.

George Frazier became thirty years of age on March 29, 1918, and according to the trust provisions of the will of Colin C. Frazier, the defendant was required *498 then to turn over the real property to him and his sister. Marie, however, had died on May 18, 1915, survived by her husband, Joseph W. Marshall, Senior, who died in 1918, and the plaintiffs, who in 1915 were of the ages respectively of one and four years.

The real property which was specifically devised by Colin C. Frazier to Charles B. Frazier in trust for Marie Frazier consisted of two farms in Union county, one of 160 acres and the other of 433 acres, and city lots in Portland on Hawthorne avenue, which will hereinafter be mentioned as the Hawthorne avenue property.

On or about August 20, 1917, the defendant, presumably as trustee under the will of Colin C. Frazier, sold to William Webster the 160-acre farm, for a consideration of $18,500. On that date Webster paid $3,000 of the purchase price, and on January 21, 1918, paid an additional $2,000. The 433-acre farm was sold, on or about August 20, 1917, to Floyd McKennon, for $45,000, toward which purchase price McKennon then paid the sum of $5,000. In each instance a mortgage was given for the balance of the purchase price. Both of these sales were made by the defendant prior to the time that George Frazier reached the age of thirty years and therefore prior-to the time when the title to the said real property was, ¿ccording to the terms of the Colon C. Frazier will, to vest in Marie Frazier Marshall or her heirs.

Out of the $10,000 cash payments made on the two properties, as above mentioned, the trustee paid $2,-378.28 in real .estate brokers’ commissions and $173.92 for sundry expenses; Liberty bonds were purchased with $500; and a loan of $6,700 was made to Joseph Healy.

In 1934 the plaintiffs herein requested the defendant to render an accounting of his trusteeship. He thereupon engaged Arthur Berridge & Company, cer *499 tified public accountants and auditors, of Portland, to prepare an accounting. The report of the accountants divides the trusteeship into two periods, one from 1909 to April 1, 1918, and the other from April 1, 1918, to June 30, 1934. April 1, 1918, apparently was selected as the dividing line between periods for the reason that George Marshall did not reach the age of thirty years until March 29 of that year.

The defendant had kept no books of account from 1908 to 1934, under either the Colin C. Frazier will or the Marie Frazier trust deed. The difficulty experienced by the accountants in making up a set of books is described by Mr. Berridge, as follows: “Well, there were no books and records, your Honor, but just a mass of papers, produced. There were canceled cheeks, there were bank deposit slips, and there were contracts and deeds, miscellaneous legal documents, and the first thing I did, I took the bank deposit slips and arranged them by years, and then I took the years and arranged them by months, until I got it in chronological order. I did the same with the disbursements. Then I got some loose sheets of paper and from the bank deposit slips I made up a cash record of receipts and traced the deposits to. the bank, and then from the checks I made up a record of cash disbursements, and with that information from what I call a loose-leaf cash book then I constructed ledger accounts, charging and crediting the ledger accounts with the information I had from these cash sheets, and from, that ledger I prepared the report a copy of which” appears in the record. The defendant assisted the accountants, as much as he was able, in maldng up the books.

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Marshall v. Frazier
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Bluebook (online)
81 P.2d 132, 80 P.2d 42, 159 Or. 491, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-frazier-or-1938.