Matter of Trust Created by Hill

499 N.W.2d 475, 1993 Minn. App. LEXIS 408, 1993 WL 118556
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedApril 20, 1993
DocketC7-92-1877, C9-92-1878
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 499 N.W.2d 475 (Matter of Trust Created by Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Trust Created by Hill, 499 N.W.2d 475, 1993 Minn. App. LEXIS 408, 1993 WL 118556 (Mich. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

ANDERSON, Chief Judge.

Appellant Maud Hill Schroll, the beneficiary of a securities and timberland trust, tried to unilaterally remove the trustee of her 1917 trust and appoint a replacement. The trustee petitioned the district court for instructions, challenging Hill Schroll’s appointment and removal power. Hill Schroll and her two children counterclaimed against the trustee, alleging mismanagement of the trust assets and breach of fiduciary duties. The court concluded the trust instrument did not give Hill Schroll the unilateral power to appoint and remove trustees. It also found the trustee had neither mismanaged assets nor breached its fiduciary duty to the beneficiary. We affirm.

FACTS

On New Year’s Eve day, 1917, Louis W. Hill, Sr., the son of railroad magnate James J. Hill, created trusts for his wife, Maud van Cortlandt Taylor Hill, and his four minor children, Louis W. Hill, Jr., Cortlandt T. Hill, James Jerome Hill, II, and Maud van Cortlandt Hill (Hill Schroll). He retained the services of William Mitchell, an attorney with Doherty, Rumble & Butler (Doherty), to draft the trust instruments. Each trust contained various securities and an undivided one-sixth interest in about 100,000 acres of Oregon timberland. Louis W. Hill, Sr. retained the remaining one-sixth of the timberland for himself. Now, three-quarters of a century later, we are asked to render an opinion as to what Louis W. Hill, Sr. intended the trust language to mean.

The Louis W. Hill, Jr. 1917 Trust, the Cortlandt T. Hill 1917 Trust, and the Maud van Cortlandt Hill Schroll 1917 Trust (Hill Schroll 1917 Trust) exist today. Two of thé original trusts — Maud van Cortlandt Taylor Hill’s and James J. Hill, II’s — terminated upon their beneficiaries’ deaths, and the assets poured over into the three remaining trusts.

Louis W. Hill, Sr. acted as sole trustee of all the trusts until 1941, when he appointed his son, Louis W. Hill, Jr., as trustee of his own trust, and First Trust National Association (First Trust) as trustee of the other trusts. Louis W. Hill, Jr. acted as sole trustee of his own trust until First Trust was appointed co-trustee in 1983. Louis W. Hill, Jr.’s wife, Elsie Hill, and son, Louis Fors Hill, were also appointed as co-trustees of Louis W. Hill, Jr.’s trust. Gaylord Glarner, a retired officer of First Trust, was appointed co-trustee of the Cortlandt Hill Trust at the same time. For a short period in 1989, Ronald Poole, an investment advisor, served as co-trustee of the Hill Schroll 1917 Trust along with First Trust.

In 1937, before appointing his son trustee, Louis W. Hill, Sr. retained Mason, Bruce & Girard (Mason), an Oregon timber management firm, as consultants for the Oregon timberland. To provide on-site management of the timberland, Louis W. Hill, Sr. and First Trust created Timber Service Company. 1 In 1946, Louis W. Hill, Sr. entered into long-term cutting contracts with Willamette National Lumber Company (Willamette) and Santiam Lumber Company (Santiam). The contracts, entered into in response to the post-war demand for timber, called for cutting all old-growth timber from the trust timberland over the next 30 years. About 20 years later, in 1967, Willamette and Santiam merged into a single company called Willamette Industries and, at about the same time, a management decision was made to reduce the harvest level under the contracts. The contracts terminated in 1986.

Although Willamette Industries’ cutting contract was to end in 1986, managers of the timberland began preparing for its conclusion in the 1970s. Preparation for the contract’s termination was discussed at annual meetings in Oregon, which the trustees, timber managers, consultants, and beneficiaries attended. In June 1989, an *481 organizational meeting was held which only the trustees and timber managers attended. At this meeting, Jack Barringer of Barringer & Associates explained that a reduced volume of timber would be available for harvest over the next 50 years due to the inventory’s young age distribution. He referred to this reduced volume of available timber as a “black hole.”

Two months later, the trustees held another meeting before the 1989 annual meeting, where they discussed the information about the annual harvest levels to be presented to the beneficiaries at the upcoming annual meeting. Ronald Poole attended this second meeting and later told Hill Schroll that her timber income would be reduced. Immediately, Hill Schroll signed an instrument purporting to remove First Trust pursuant to her power to appoint and remove trustees under the trust instrument. She appointed two of her children, J. Christopher Schroll and Susannah Schroll, as replacement trustees. Later, on May 30, 1990, she removed her children by written instrument and appointed University National Bank & Trust Company of Palo Alto, California (University Bank) as sole trustee.

After Hill Schroll appointed her children as trustees, First Trust petitioned the Ramsey County District Court (trial court) for instructions regarding its duties with respect to the management of the timberland. The petition was amended twice, and ultimately First Trust challenged Hill Schroll’s mental competency and her unilateral power to appoint and remove trustees under the trust instrument. Hill Schroll and two of her children (the Schrolls) brought an action against First Trust, Mason, and Bar-ringer, alleging mismanagement of the timberland and breach of fiduciary duties.

During this time, the Schrolls asked Do-herty to refrain from representing First Trust in the litigation because the firm had also represented Hill Schroll in personal matters for much of her life. When Doherty refused, the Schrolls moved the trial court for Doherty’s disqualification. The trial court denied their disqualification motion and a subsequent reconsideration motion. The Schrolls then sued Doherty for legal malpractice.

In July 1991, the trial court granted First Trust partial summary judgment on the Schrolls’ mismanagement and breach of fiduciary duty claims. Dismissal of the claims involving First Trust’s pre-1984 conduct was based on the statute of limitations, and claims involving pre-1988 conduct were dismissed based on res judicata. The trial court also dismissed the Schrolls’ malpractice claim against Doherty for pre-1984 conduct, based on the statute of limitations. The malpractice claim for conduct after 1984 survived and was severed from this litigation. In August 1991, the trial court dismissed the Schrolls’ mismanagement claim against Mason and Barringer.

In October 1991, the trial court allowed University Bank to intervene. After a ten-week bench trial in 1992, the trial court concluded (1) Hill Schroll did not have unilateral power to appoint and remove trustees under the trust instrument; (2) the doctrine of hostility does not require that First Trust be removed as trustee; and (3) First Trust neither mismanaged the Oregon timberland nor breached any fiduciary duty to the Schrolls. The Schrolls’ motions for amended findings and a new trial were denied. They now appeal from the final judgment.

ISSUES

I. Did the trial court err by holding Hill Schroll lacked the unilateral power to appoint and remove trustees?

II. Did the trial court improperly restrict University Bank’s role as an interve-nor?

III.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
499 N.W.2d 475, 1993 Minn. App. LEXIS 408, 1993 WL 118556, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-trust-created-by-hill-minnctapp-1993.