McAdoo v. Sayre

78 P. 874, 145 Cal. 344, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 592
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1904
DocketS.F. No. 3974.
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 78 P. 874 (McAdoo v. Sayre) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McAdoo v. Sayre, 78 P. 874, 145 Cal. 344, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 592 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to prevent the defendant as judge of the superior court of Lake County from making an order declaring the trust terminated and directing certain testamentary trustees to pay over, convey, and deliver the trust property to the beneficiaries.

The facts are substantially as follows: Upon the final settlement of the estate of Cora Lyons Floyd a large amount of property was distributed to certain trustees in trust to hold the same during the lifetime of the daughter of deceased, to maintain and support the daughter during her life out of the income, and upon her death to pay over and deliver the same to the descendants of the daughter, or, if there were no descendants, to such person as the daughter should by will appoint, or, failing such appointment, to the petitioners herein. The daughter died on February 11, 1904, leaving no descendants. A document purporting to be her last will, whereby she bequeathed and devised all her estate to her husband, Milos Mitrov Gopcevic, was admitted to probate in the superior court of San Francisco County on March 9, 1904. In April, 1904, the trustees filed an account and report of the trust in the superior court of Lake County, entitled “In the Matter of the Estate of Cora Lyons Floyd, deceased,” in which, in addition to a statement of their account and an inventory of the trust property, they alleged the marriage of the daughter to Gopcevic on October 6, 1903, her subsequent residence in San Francisco, her death there without'issue, and that she left a will which .had been admitted to probate. The account, due notice having been given in the mean time, came on for hearing on May 13, 1904. On that day the executors of the will of the daughter and Gopcevic, the surviving husband, filed an answer to the account and report of the trustees. The answer states the bequest and devise by the daughter to Gopcevic, her husband, alleges that by virtue *346 thereof all the property of the trust vested in said 'Gopcevic (Civ. Code, sec. 1330), and asks an order declaring the trust at an end and directing the trustees to pay over, convey, and deliver the property to him.

The cause thus presented was submitted to the court, and the respondent, as judge of said superior court, was about to determine the matters involved in the account and declare the balance due, and was considering whether or not the court had jurisdiction in that proceeding to determine who was entitled to the property and to order the trustees to pay over, convey, and deliver the trust property to the person or persons entitled thereto. The purpose of the proceeding in this court is to prevent the lower court from proceeding to do anything more than to settle and declare the balance dire on the account.

There is thus presented the question whether or not section 1699 of the Code of Civil Procedure confers upon the superior court, in the settlement of a trustee’s account in the proceeding there established for that purpose, jurisdiction to ascertain and determine who are the persons entitled to the trust property, and, upon the final account, to direct the trustee to deliver the property to such persons in settlement of the trust, or to approve and confirm such delivery if already made by the trustee. The respondent contends that the court may in that proceeding do all these things. The petitioners claim that the power of the court is exhausted when it has adjusted all disputes as to the correctness of any items of the account and has allowed compensation and expenses to the trustee and declared the balance due.

Upon a consideration of the questions usually involved in the settlement of the accounts of trustees of any class of trusts, it is apparent that the court having jurisdiction of the matter of such settlement, even if its functions be limited to the mere ascertainment of a balance,' must frequently be called on to determine who is - entitled to the property. One who has no interest in the trust has no standing in court to assail the account presented by the trustees, nor to move the court to require an account of them. The section in question gives the right to apply for an order on the trustees for an account, exclusively to the beneficiary or his guardian. Even if this provision were omitted, such right would still be lim *347 ited to those having some interest in the trust or in the trust property. The trustee, then, has the right, when an account presented by him is attacked by objections at the hearing, or when he is cited to appear and render an account, to make the preliminary objection that the person who thus invokes the action of the court with respect to the trust has himself no interest in the property, and hence cannot be heard to make his objection or demand an accounting. This objection of the trustee may be disputed, and thereupon the court must determine whether or not such party is the beneficiary, or is interested in the trust. So, also, there may be, as in this ease, two or more parties each claiming to be beneficiaries. In such a case the trustee may be justly entitled to credits if one of these parties is the real beneficiary, which he could not have if the other was the party interested. The account cannot be settled without a determination of the question as to which party is entitled. Considered as a mere matter of power, therefore, the court must have the authority in such a proceeding, whenever the necessity properly arises, to determine who are the persons entitled as beneficiaries.

But the precise question here involved is whether or not, independent of any necessity arising from a dispute over specific items of the account, or over the right to contest the same, the court has a general power, upon final settlement at the termination of the trust, to dispose of the entire matter of the trust by determining who, by the terms of the trust, is entitled to the property, and directing the trustees to turn over the same to such person. The decision of this question depends on the effect to be given to the language of section 1699 of the Code of Civil Procedure. That section declares that: “Where any trust has been created by or under any will to continue after distribution, the superior court shall not lose jurisdiction of the estate by final distribution, but shall retain jurisdiction thereof for the purpose of the settlement of accounts under' the trusts.” It also provides that such testamentary trustee may during the continuance of the trust, or at its termination, “render and pray for the settlement of his accounts as such trustee, before the superior court in which the will was probated, and in the manner provided for the settlement of the accounts of executors and administrators.” Further provision is made for notice to be given *348 of the hearing, and for citation to compel the trustee to account, but these provisions are not important to the present question.

Jurisdiction for a certain purpose necessarily includes authority to do all things necessary to accomplish that purpose, which can be done by the means afforded. Every trustee who, by the terms of the instrument creating the trust, has possession or control of the trust property is chargeable in his accounts with the whole of the estate thus committed to his hands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
78 P. 874, 145 Cal. 344, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 592, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcadoo-v-sayre-cal-1904.