May v. OKLAHOMA BANK AND TRUST CO.

2011 OK 52, 261 P.3d 1138, 2011 Okla. LEXIS 54, 2011 WL 2341577
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 14, 2011
Docket107,707
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2011 OK 52 (May v. OKLAHOMA BANK AND TRUST CO.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
May v. OKLAHOMA BANK AND TRUST CO., 2011 OK 52, 261 P.3d 1138, 2011 Okla. LEXIS 54, 2011 WL 2341577 (Okla. 2011).

Opinion

COLBERT, V.C.J.

T1 The issue in this matter is whether a trustee is entitled to charge the trust for attorney fees it incurred and a "special trustee fee" it imposed for recovering a portion of the royalty income which the trust would have received if trustee had met its statutory obligation to file a partial decree of distribution that transferred the mineral estate to the trust. This Court holds that fees incurred as a result of the trustee's negligence are not chargeable to the trust under the Oklahoma Trust Act.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

12 This matter began in 1996, when Marvin Gentry May (Beneficiary) and Alice M. Lindamood filed a petition asking the court to remove The Oklahoma Bank and Trust Company (Bank) as trustee of the Homer E. May Testamentary Trust (Trust) for mismanagement. The trial court denied the petition but it assumed jurisdiction over the Trust, at Bank's request, to supervise the administration of the Trust. The court included a requirement that annual account-ings of the Trust be approved by the court.

{3 In 2008, Beneficiary objected to the eleventh annual accounting asserting that Bank "failed, neglected or refused to take the necessary steps to cause royalty income from mineral acreage located in Roger Mills County, Oklahoma to be paid to the Homer E. May estate or Trust, resulting in substantial loss to the estate or Trust." Beneficiary objected to the payment of $4,095.30 in attorney fees expended by Bank in an attempt to recover the royalty income and $6,347.34 for a trustee's fee. The court overruled Beneficiary's objection and approved the eleventh annual accounting. That order was not appealed.

T4 In 2009, Bank filed a twelfth annual accounting. Beneficiary filed an objection claiming that Bank breached its duty as personal representative of the Homer May Estate and as trustee of the Trust when it:

failed, neglected or refused to comply with its statutory duty to record the Decree of Partial Distribution (entered In The Matter of the Estate of Homer E. May, Case Number P~86-148, District Court of Custer County, Oklahoma on March 6, 1989) with the County Clerk of Roger Mills County, Oklahoma, or to take other necessary steps to cause royalty income from minerals located in Roger Mills County ... to be paid to the Homer E. May estate or Trust, resulting in substantial loss to the beneficiaries of the Trust.

The minerals in question consisted of "(aln undivided 5 acres of oil, gas and minerals" located in Roger Mills County.

T5 Beneficiary noted that the twelfth annual accounting revealed Bank paid *1140 $19,457.80 to the law firm of Elias, Books, Brown and Nelson to recover $112,195.27 in royalty income from the Estate of Dollie May. Beneficiary claimed that the money paid to the Estate of Dollie May "should have been paid to the Trust, but for [Bank's] breach of its fiduciary duty." Beneficiary also noted Bank paid itself $8,894.22 as a "special trust fee" for recovering this money for the Trust.

16 Homer and Dollie May purchased an undivided 10 acres of minerals in Roger Mills County as tenants in common. Homer died testate in 1986 and Bank was appointed the personal representative of the estate. In his will, Homer provided a life estate in the homestead for his Wife, Dollie, and placed the rest of the property in the Trust. A Decree of Partial Distribution was entered on March 6, 1989, which distributed to the Trust five undivided acres from the 10 acres in Roger Mills County. Beneficiary asserted that Bank had a duty to record in the County Clerk's office the decree of partial distribution or a notice of the decree pursuant to the statutory requirement that decrees affecting land must be recorded. The statute provides in part:

When a judgment or decree is made, setting apart and defining the homestead, confirming a sale, making distribution of real property, or determining any other matter affecting the title to real property, a certified copy of the same must be recorded in the office of the county clerk of the county in which the real property is situated.... Instead of filing the judgment or decree in the office of the county clerk where the real property described in the judgment or decree is located, a notice of the judgment or decree may be filed in the office of the county clerk of any county where the real property described in the judgment or decree is located.

Okla. Stat. tit. 58, § 711 (2001). Bank failed to file in Roger Mills County the decree of partial distribution from Homer's estate. Without such a filing, there was no notice of record that the Trust owned the five-acre mineral estate. 1

T7 Beneficiary noted that Bank did not take any action in regard to the mineral interest until 18 years later when it discovered that royalties from the Trust's five acres had been paid to Dollie. Beneficiary asserted that the beneficiaries of the Trust should not "have to foot the bill" to recover the royalties from Dollie's estate.

18 A hearing on Beneficiary's objection was held on September 21, 2009. G.W. Low-ry, Jr., Bank's president and trust officer, testified that Bank had relied on its agent, C.B. Graft, the lawyer for Homer's estate who also did work for Homer before his death, "to do anything that needed [to be] done as far as filing." Lowry testified that Bank first became aware in 2007 that royalties were being paid to Dollie that should have gone to the Trust. Bank filed a claim against the Dollie May Estate and settled the matter for a portion of the royalties that should have been paid to the Trust. Bank subtracted the attorney fees incurred to recover the settlement and assessed a ten per cent "special trust fee" for the recovery. Lowry testified that he did not know that there had been any production from the mineral interest held by Homer. He opined Bank had acted prudently in regard to the five-acre interest owned by the Trust.

19 Beneficiary testified that he had the County Clerk check the Roger Mills County land records in the summer of 2007, and there was no record of anything filed that related to the five acres of minerals. He claimed that sometime after March 6, 1989, he asked Lowry "more than onee" about the mineral interest in Roger Mills County "because the royalty was not showing up on the ... quarterly reports or the annual reports." Beneficiary knew that the five-acre mineral interest was producing at the time of Homer's death and admitted that he had known since at least 1992 that Bank was not collecting all the royalties it should have been *1141 collecting. He claimed Bank told him that the five acres "went to Dollie."

T 10 The trial court approved the accounting and all actions taken by Bank. The Court of Civil Appeals affirmed.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

111 Issues involving trusts are matters of equitable cognizance. See In re Lorice T. Wallace Revocable Trust, 2009 OK 34, ¶ 2, 219 P.3d 536, 537. "In an equitable matter, the Court will examine the whole record and weigh the evidence, but the trial court's findings will not be disturbed in that review unless they are clearly against the weight of the evidence or some governing principle of law." Id.

ANALYSIS

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Related

Margaret Blair Trust v. Blair
2016 OK CIV APP 47 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2016)
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2015 OK CIV APP 81 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 OK 52, 261 P.3d 1138, 2011 Okla. LEXIS 54, 2011 WL 2341577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/may-v-oklahoma-bank-and-trust-co-okla-2011.