Matter of Donald E. Bradford Trust

538 So. 2d 263, 1989 La. LEXIS 108, 1989 WL 6034
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 30, 1989
Docket88-C-1014
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 538 So. 2d 263 (Matter of Donald E. Bradford Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Donald E. Bradford Trust, 538 So. 2d 263, 1989 La. LEXIS 108, 1989 WL 6034 (La. 1989).

Opinion

538 So.2d 263 (1989)

In the Matter of DONALD E. BRADFORD TRUST.

No. 88-C-1014.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

January 30, 1989.
Rehearings Denied March 2, 1989.

*264 Shannon Daigle, Paul Hurley, Anita M. Warner, Hurley & Hoffmann, New Orleans, Henry Salassi, Jr., Salassi & Clark, Baton Rouge, for applicant.

James Thomas, II, Wall, Thomas, Riche & Wall, Ashton Stewart, Stewart, Preis, Stewart & Stewart, Baton Rouge, for respondent.

CALOGERO, Justice.

The beneficiaries of the Donald E. Bradford trust initiated this action against E. Briggs Wharton, trustee, to force his resignation as trustee and to recover amounts lost to the trust through alleged breaches of his obligations as trustee. The breaches of trust complained of by the beneficiaries occurred both before and after Wharton became trustee.

The trial court ordered Wharton's resignation as trustee, but found that he was not liable to the trust for any breaches of the trust agreement.

The court of appeal effectively reversed the trial court, agreeing that Wharton must resign, but also holding that he must reconstitute the trust for amounts lost through breaches of the trust. 524 So.2d 1213 (La.App. 1st Cir.1987). The total amount for which the court of appeal found Wharton liable, $47,782.88, included amounts lost to the trust while Wharton's predecessor, Ben F. Downing, Jr., was trustee ($18,255.56) and losses that occurred after Wharton became trustee ($29,527.32). The court of appeal further ordered that Wharton is liable to the trust for legal interest on the foregoing amounts, compounded annually from the date of each loss.

The court of appeal's holding that Wharton is liable for losses incurred by the trust while his predecessor was trustee prompted our writ grant in this case. 526 So.2d 785 (La.1988). For the reasons set forth below, we find that the court of appeal erred in holding Wharton liable for losses that occurred before he became trustee. The principal amount of the judgment against Wharton should be reduced by the amount of those losses ($18,255.56).

In all other respects, we affirm the court of appeal's judgment, and hold that Wharton is liable to the trust for $29,527.32 (the amount of losses, as found by the court of appeal, which were incurred as the result of breaches of trust after Wharton became trustee), together with legal interest thereon from the date of each loss, compounded annually.

(I) FACTS

Donald Bradford established a trust in 1971 for the benefit of his three minor children, Mark Allen Bradford, Leigh Anne Bradford and Amy Crowell Bradford. At the time that this trust was established, Donald Bradford was married to Anne Crowell, the mother of the three beneficiaries.

At the outset of the trust, the trust corpus consisted of 40.7 shares of stock in Security Abstract Title Co. of Baton Rouge, Inc. This stock was donated to the trust by Bradford. The corpus of the trust was later supplemented by a $54,000 cash donation from Allen Crowell, the maternal grandfather of the beneficiaries. Between 1974 and 1978, Bradford used trust assets to purchase over 11,000 shares of stock in Lehman Corporation. The Lehman stock was purchased for the trust and held as a trust asset until its sale in 1982 (the sale of the Lehman stock will be discussed in further detail below).

In October, 1979, Bradford and Anne Crowell were divorced. Crowell was named tutrix of the children of the marriage, including the three children named as beneficiaries of the trust (one other child of the marriage, Beth Bradford, was born after the creation of the trust and is not a named beneficiary).

Ben R. Downing, Jr., a member of the same Baton Rouge law firm with which Bradford was associated, was named trustee of the Donald R. Bradford Trust at its inception in 1971. He served in that capacity *265 until Bradford left the employ of the law firm in 1981. At that time, E. Briggs Wharton, a longtime friend of Bradford and his family, agreed to succeed Downing as trustee.

On the joint petition of Downing, Wharton and R. Gordon Keane (the latter was named as the successor trustee to Downing in the trust agreement, but decided that he did not want to serve in that capacity), the district court signed an ex parte order on April 16, 1981 which approved Downing's resignation as trustee and appointed Wharton as his successor. This ex parte order also contained the following language:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that Ben R. Downing, Jr. and E. Briggs Wharton, shall not be required to furnish any accounting in regard to the change of the Trustee, except as for such accountings as are required under the terms of the Trust instrument.

Wharton assumed the duties of trustee and held that position when the present controversy arose. This action was brought by and on behalf of two of the beneficiaries of the trust, Mark Allen Bradford, who has now reached the age of majority, and Amy Crowell Bradford, who is below the age of majority and whose claim is asserted by her mother and tutrix, Anne Crowell Wilson. The third beneficiary, Leigh Anne Bradford, has released Bradford from all claims covered by this litigation, has not asserted a claim against Wharton and is not a party herein.[1]

On September 13, 1988, after our writ grant in this case, Wharton filed a voluntary petition for relief under Chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Middle District of Louisiana. The automatic stay issued in connection with that filing prohibited the further prosecution of any civil action against Wharton, including the present case. However, on October 6, 1988, the bankruptcy court entered an order lifting the stay "so as to permit the Courts of Louisiana, including, without limitation, the Supreme Court of Louisiana, to finally determine the issues in said cause, now pending before the Supreme Court of Louisiana, entitled Donald E. Bradford Trust, No. 88-C-1014...." This order lifts the automatic stay for the purposes of this case and specifically permits us to decide this case.

(II) LAW AND ANALYSIS

(A) Is the Trustee Liable for Acts of the Predecessor Trustee?

As chronicled in the court of appeal opinion, significant amounts of trust proceeds were diverted to Bradford's personal use while Downing was trustee. These diversions totalled $12,146.52. The facts surrounding these diversions are thoroughly recited in the court of appeal opinion, 524 So.2d at 1216-17, and we agree with the court of appeal's finding that these diversions were improper and should not have been permitted by Downing.[2]

The court of appeal also found that while Downing was trustee, he allowed the trust to purchase Bradford's interest in Inniswald Partnership, an entity in which Bradford had a personal investment. After the trust purchased Bradford's interest in Inniswald Partnership, the partnership paid *266 dividends on that interest totalling $15,236.83. These dividends were retained by Bradford for his personal use. The court of appeal reasoned that the $15,236.83 should have been paid to the trust rather than Bradford, since the trust, through payments made from 1975-1977, had purchased Bradford's Inniswald interest. 524 So.2d at 1216.

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Bluebook (online)
538 So. 2d 263, 1989 La. LEXIS 108, 1989 WL 6034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-donald-e-bradford-trust-la-1989.