Pomeroy v. Collins

243 P. 657, 198 Cal. 46, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 335
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 1926
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11316.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 243 P. 657 (Pomeroy v. Collins) 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
Pomeroy v. Collins, 243 P. 657, 198 Cal. 46, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 335 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

This is an action in equity, brought by the executor of the estate of Mathew Kelleher, deceased, to set aside and compel the cancellation and annulment of four certain trust instruments executed by said Mathew Kelleher, on the ground that said Mathew Kelleher was, at the time he executed the same, mentally incompetent and of unsound mind. It is claimed and alleged that the execution of said trust instruments were induced and procured by fraud and deceit practiced upon said Mathew Kelleher by appellant George D. Collins, Sr., whereby said Kelleher conveyed and transferred to said George D. Collins, Sr., as trustee, certificates representing 910 preferred shares of the capital stock of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a corporation, and certain described real property fronting on Folsom Street, city and county of San Francisco, of the aggregate value of not less than $85,000, all of said property being at the time of his death the property of said Mathew Kelleher, and constituting property belonging to his estate. The complainant also prayed for an order directing the said George D. Collins, Sr., to reconvey and retransfer said real property and stocks to the executor of the said estate. The trial court annulled' said trust instruments and granted relief in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. The appeal taken by George D. Collins, Sr., is from the decree as thus rendered and is joined in by intervener, Helen H. Walsh. The other defendants not being beneficially interested in the result of the action did not join in the appeal.

The trust instruments will be identified in the order and by the same letter stamps that were placed upon them by the trial court. Exhibit “A” purports to be a “Declaration of Trust and Assignment of Stock,” and bears date May 25, 1921. By its terms Mathew Kelleher assigned, transferred, and conveyed to “George D. Collins, Sr., as trustee, and upon the uses and trusts hereinafter specified, 910 preferred shares of the capital stock of the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, a corporation.” A description of the stock is therein set out. The instrument bears the indorsement of and recites the delivery of said stock by said Kelleher to *50 said George D. Collins, Sr., as trustee. The next paragraphs are as follows:

“The said trustee to have and to hold said 910 shares of stock upon the express trust to pay the dividends thereon to said trustor until such stock is sold and to sell, assign, transfer and convey said stock or any part thereof to the purchaser or purchasers and to dispose of the proceeds of such sale or sales as follows, to-wit: To Helen H. Walsh, of West Summerville, Massachusetts; Mrs. Margaret O’Neil, of Boston, Massachusetts; Julia H. Pomeroy, Parish of Drischane, County Cork, Ireland; Patrick 0’Reardon, Parish of Drischane, County Cork, Ireland; $1000 each.
“V.
“All reversionary interests in the proceeds of said sale of said shares of stock, resulting from the death of a beneficiary or other cause and the amount not herein before disposed of, shall vest in said trustee pro se, and not in trust. [Italics supplied.]
“In witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand the day and year first above written.
“Mathew Kelleher.
“Witness:
“Geo. D. Collins, Sr.
“I hereby accept the foregoing conveyances and trust for the purposes therein specified.
“Dated this 27th day of May, 1921.
“Geo. D. Collins, Sr.”

Exhibit “B” is a deed and declaration of trust executed May 26, 1921, whereby the Fulton Street real property is granted and conveyed to said George D. Collins, Sr., as trustee, “to have and hold in fee absolute upon the express trust nevertheless to sell and convey said property and to dispose of the proceeds” as follows: To pay all debts and the expenses of his last illness and funeral expenses; to pay to the Reverend Father McDonald, chaplain of the Holy Cross Cemetery, the sum of $250 for masses for the repose of his soul; to spend $500 for a monument to be erected at his grave and whatever sum may be necessary for perpetual care of the grave. The names of the same beneficiaries set out in exhibit “A” are restated and each is given an additional $1,000. The reversionary interest clause and the “pro se, and not in trust” clause are repeated. The exeeu *51 tian is the same in form as the first instrument. It is dated May 26, 1921.

Exhibit “C” is a declaration of trust and an assignment of stock and precisely the same in substance and form as exhibit “A” except the “pro se, and not in trust” clause is omitted and in lieu thereof (after providing for the payment to the same beneficiaries named in the trust instruments bearing date May 25th and May 26th respectively) the following clause appears: “To dispose of the remaining amount of the proceeds of said sale in accordance with the instructions heretofore given said trustee by said trustor.” [Italics supplied.] It contains a clause providing for the payment of debts and expenses which is not found in exhibit “A.” The execution is the same as in the other trust instruments. It bears date May 27, 1921.

Exhibit “D” is a deed and declaration of trust and repeats the names of the beneficiaries and the amounts of the benevolences set out in the trust instrument marked exhibit “B,” by giving to the Reverend Father McDonald an additional $250 for the saying of masses for the repose of his soul, and by setting aside an additional $500 for the erection of a monument at the grave, and by giving to Helen Walsh, Mrs. Margaret O’Neil, Mrs. Julia H. Pomeroy, and Patrick O’Reardon an additional $1,000 for the third time, making a total of $4,000 to each. It is precisely like the trust instrument marked exhibit “B” except the “pro se, and not in trust” clause is omitted, and like its companion instrument it directs the expenditure of the remaining amount “in accordance with the instructions heretofore given said trustee by said trustor.” The execution is the same as the others and the day of execution is given as May 27, 1921.

The oral instructions which Mr. Collins claims were given to him by Kelleher on May 23, 1921, and which were afterward reduced to writing by Collins, were to be a guide for him in the distribution of the estate. According to Collins’ testimony the oral instructions given by Kelleher contained directions which were not to be disclosed to Kelleher’s friends or made public. These instructions purport to have been acknowledged by Collins before a notary public on May 26, 1921. Omitting the formal parts, the instructions as prepared read:

*52 “And whereas on said 25th day of May, 1921, the said Matthew Kelleher transferred said shares of stock with the exception of the fourteen shares evidenced by certificate No.

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Bluebook (online)
243 P. 657, 198 Cal. 46, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pomeroy-v-collins-cal-1926.