Miller v. Exchange Nat. Bank of Tulsa

1938 OK 135, 80 P.2d 209, 183 Okla. 114, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 190
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 1, 1938
DocketNo. 27317.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1938 OK 135 (Miller v. Exchange Nat. Bank of Tulsa) 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
Miller v. Exchange Nat. Bank of Tulsa, 1938 OK 135, 80 P.2d 209, 183 Okla. 114, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 190 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Kay 'county. The Exchange National Bank of Tulsa, as-signee of a note and mortgage executed by Alma M. England to the Albright Title & Trust Company, filed its action asking judgment for $50,000, attorney’s fees and interest and foreclosure of a mortgage executed to secure payment of the note. Plaintiffs in error herein were given leave to intervene, and they filed separate petitions in intervention, asserting a vested, beneficial interest in this note by virtue of a trust agreement executed in their favor by their father. Hereafter we shall refer to the plaintiffs in error as “beneficiaries” and to the defendant in error as the “bank.”

February 25, 1929, Zack T. Miller, as grantor, created a $50,000 trust fund for the interveners with the Albright Title & Trust Company as trustee. The articles of trust provided that the corpus of the trust was to be loaned to Alma M. England, secured by her note and mortgage on real estate in Ponca City. The interest, less trustee’s fees, was to be paid for education and support of the interveners according to the provisions of the trust, for a period of ten years, unless terminated by grantor’s death.

Article 6 of the trust provided:

“The grantor hereby reserves the privilege to revoke this agreement at any time, and may do so by giving thirty days’ written notice to the trustee and by paying the trustee a revocation fee of twenty-five ($25) dollars, and the trustee shall thereupon deliver the trust property to the grantor.”

The loan was completed and the interest paid the beneficiaries under the trust until February 6, 1931. A few weeks prior to this time, Z. T. Miller had entered into a tentative agreement with the bank, whereby the bank would sell him the notes of the Miller Bros. 101 Ranch and certain claims against the Geo. Miller estate, to be secured by the notes and claims, an assignment of his own life insurance policy and this note and mortgage for $50,000.

Upon meeting to consummate the deal, the bank’s representative learned that Z. T. Miller had not obtained Mrs. England’s note and mortgage from the trustee. Thereupon they called the Albright Title & Trust Company on the telephone and it was agreed that the written notice of revocation would be waived. The trustee then assigned the note and mortgage to the bank, and Miller’s representative took them back to the ranch, at which time they were turned over to- the bank's representative. Miller later executed two receipts to the trustee, acknowledging the trust to he at an end. Thereafter the bank collected the interest and credited it upon the note.

The beneficiaries claim that under the terms of the trust, Virginia Miller Flood is entitled to $1,000 and Zack Miller, Jr., to *115 84,025.01. The trial court found that the evidence did not sustain the pleas of intervention, denied their petitions, rendered judgment upon the note and decreed that foreclosure and an order of sale of the mortgaged property issue. The real question here is whether the creator of a trust estate can revoke the trust in any manner, except by strict compliance in the manner and method provided in the trust agreement. The beneficiaries assign five grounds of error for reversal, which are presented under three propositions.

The question raised by the first proposition submitted is whether, upon execution of the trust, the beneficiaries became owners of a vested, beneficial interest in the trust estate. The beneficiaries cite authority and urge the point that when this trust was created, they then had a vested, beneficial interest in the trust estate, of which they could not be deprived. However, the cases cited are cases which involve a trust created by parol. Naturally in eases of this kind a beneficiary must necessarily consent to any alteration or revocation. Any action to enforce performance of a trust is against the trustee, since the theory of a trust is that the grantor passes all control over the trust res and nothing remains to be done on his part.

The beneficiaries cite Jones v. Clifton, 101 U. S. 225, 25 L. Ed 908, and Corliss v. Bowers, 30 Fed.2d 135, which case holds that the “creation of a revocable trust vests in beneficiary present estate in all respects valid until power of revocation is exercised.” In the instant case a different situation prevails, and must necessarily be looked to in deciding this matter.

In the articles of trust the grantor expressly reserved the power of revocation, which he could exercise at any time he saw fit before the expiration of the ten-year term for which the trust was created. Up to this point the beneficiaries did have an interest; of this'- there can be no doubt. However, when the grantor saw fit to enforce his right of revocation, then that interest was removed from them, as though the trust had expired by the passage of the time for which it was created, or by death of the beneficiaries.

Section 11882, O. S. 1931, provides as follows:

“Where the grantor in any conveyance reserves to himself, for his own benefit, an absolute power of revocation, such grantor is still to be deemed the absolute owner of the estate conveyed, so far as the rights of creditors and purchasers are concerned.”

By statute in this state the question has been settled that where the grantor in a conveyance reserves the absolute power of revocation for his own benefit, then he is still deemed to be the owner in so far as the rights of creditors and purchasers are concerned.

We are next confronted by the question of the construction to be placed upon the power of revocation expressly reserved by the grantor in article 6 of the trust articles. The second contention of the beneficiaries being based upon the claim that when a trust is created and the mode of revocation is specified, then the only effective revocation must be in the manner provided.

Article <5 of the articles of trust provided:

“The grantor hereby reserves the privilege to revoke this agreement at any time and may do so by giving thirty days’ written notice to the trustee and by paying the trustee a revocation fee of twenty-five ($25) dollars, and the trustee shall thereupon deliver the trust property to the grantor.”

We must - decide as to the interpretation to be placed upon the words by which the grantor reserved this power of revocation. The beneficiaries contend that where a particular mode of revocation is specified in the power which is reserved, then this must be followed if . the revocation is' to effectively take away the vested interests of the beneficiaries.

Apparently this exact problem has never before been called to the attention of this court, since there seems to be a lack of authority upon the point. The beneficiaries, in their brief, have cited numerous cases from other jurisdictions, all holding that where a trust has once been created it can only be revoked in the manner provided.

The evidence disclosed that on February 6, 1931, the bank’s representative called upon the grantor at the Miller ranch, relative to completing a deal based upon a tentative oral agreement, whereby .Miller was to take up obligations of the Miller Bros.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 135, 80 P.2d 209, 183 Okla. 114, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-exchange-nat-bank-of-tulsa-okla-1938.