Purdy v. Johnson

248 P. 764, 78 Cal. App. 310, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 206
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1926
DocketDocket No. 4764.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 248 P. 764 (Purdy v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purdy v. Johnson, 248 P. 764, 78 Cal. App. 310, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 206 (Cal. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

TYLER, P. J.

Appeal by defendants from a judgment obtained against them in an action to enforce a trust and for an accounting. This is the second appeal in the case.

At the first trial the court found a balance in favor of the defendant trustees in the sum of $8,996.17. An appeal was taken by the plaintiff and the judgment was reversed. (Purdy v. Johnson, 174 Cal. 521 [163 Pac. 893].) Upon retrial a different department of the superior court found a balance in favor of the plaintiffs amounting to the sum of $10,981.74. The present appeal is from this judgment.

The plaintiff is the granddaughter of one Alberto Trescony, who died testate in the year 1892. The appellants J. A. Trescony and Robert F. Johnson were respectively son and son-in-law of the testator and were the executors of his will and they were also named therein as trustees of an undivided one-third of the residue of the estate for the benefit of the plaintiff and her brother Leo A. Christal, who were the children of a deceased daughter of the testator. At the close of the administration of the estate a decree of distribution was made, by the terms of which one-third of the residue of said estate was distributed to the defendants as trustees for the benefit of plaintiff and her brother until they should reach the age of thirty years, at which time their respective shares were to be transferred over to them upon certain conditions. The estate was distributed April 2, 1894, and for a time all of the real property was managed as a whole, but on August 2, 1895, partition was had, and through these proceedings there was set apart to the defendant trustees some 15,336 acres of land in severalty in lieu of the one-third interest theretofore distributed to them.

*313 The complaint contains two counts, the second of which charges misconduct and impropriety on the part of the defendants in the management of the trust estate. It is there alleged that while acting as trustees, defendants filed some six accounts of their transactions, five of which were settled by the court and had become final. It is then charged that plaintiffs did not have notice or knowledge of the presentation of these accounts, or of the hearing and settlement thereof. Then follow averments that defendants have carelessly and negligently managed their trust in certain particulars and so carelessly kept the accounts thereof as to deprive plaintiff of a large amount of rents, income, and assets to which she is entitled. With reference to the sixth account it is charged that as a result of the failure of the trustees to keep proper accounts the plaintiff has been wrongfully debited with a sum of money as due from her to the trustees, whereas, in truth.and in fact, the trustees are indebted to her in a sum exceeding $7,000.

The prayer of the complaint is that the court enforce the trust by directing that defendants convey to plaintiff an undivided one-half interest in the trust property; that the orders of the superior court settling the first five accounts be set aside and corrected and modified to conform with the true facts, and that said trustees be compelled to account to the plaintiff for all their dealings and transactions with the property of the trust estate; that on such accounting the trustees be charged with interest from the time of the reception by them of all funds wrongfully withheld.

The answer of the trustees denies all of the alleged misconduct and declares the willingness on their part to transfer to plaintiff her share of the estate. It alleges that plaintiff is indebted to defendants in a sum approximating $14,000. The answer further denies all of the charges affecting the propriety or conclusiveness of the settling of the first five accounts, but declares that.“inasmuch as the plaintiff seems to be dissatisfied with the accounts referred to in her complaint” the defendants join in plaintiff’s prayer and ask that the orders settling said five accounts be • vacated, and that a new account be taken covering the entire period of the duration of the trust, and that upon payment of the amount found to be due by or to the plaintiff, she receive *314 from the defendants a conveyance of her interest in the trust property.

Upon the first trial as above indicated judgment went in favor of defendants in the sum of $8,996.17. All of the charges made by plaintiff with reference to concealment, misconduct, or negligence by the trustees were there negatived by the findings. It was also found that while there were some errors in the accounts, such errors were inadvertently made, and that in all matters connected with the trust estate and the management thereof the trustees had acted with the utmost fidelity toward the beneficiaries and had conducted their trust with prudence and economy. Among the findings was one to the effect that the sum of $500 per annum was a reasonable amount to be allowed to said trustees as their compensation.

The findings were attacked on appeal. The judgment in favor of the trustees was reversed. Several of the disputed items in the account were reviewed on this appeal, and it was there held that the allowance of these disputed items \by the lower court justified a reversal of the judgment. The case was therefore remanded for the taking of a new account in accordance with the established principles of equity. In reversing the judgment the court had occasion to point out that the lower court adopted a course with reference to the trial that was irregular. The plaintiff had insisted that the trustees prove the correctness of the account. The bourse adopted permitted them to take the stand and subject themselves to cross-examination without any direct examination on their own behalf.

This was held to be a fundamental misapprehension of the nature and extent of the obligation of trustees to account to their beneficiaries. It was declared that the burden of proof was hpon the trustees to establish affirmatively the propriety of the charges and credits which were assailed, and that while the adherence of this rule might result, considering their method of keeping the accounts, in the trustees being compelled to forego repayment of sums which they may have had properly and in good faith expended for the benefit of the trust, and being charged with having received money in eases where they had not in fact received it, their good faith could not save them from the consequences of this neglect, and whatever doubts might arise from their *315 failure to keep proper records, or their inability to establish all the items of their accounts, must be resolved against them.

Appellants do not here complain of this rule as it is admitted that the trustees were farmers, unfamiliar with bookkeeping and who had large interests of their own to attend to, and did not keep full and accurate accounts of their transactions, in consequence of which they are mulcted in a large sum of money for which they are morally entitled to credit. They do contend, however, that although the trial took place some twenty-four years after the creation' of the trust, the record shows clearly that as to certain of, the disallowed items, everything necessary to support them: as proper charges, fully appeared.

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Related

In Re the Estate of Mellott
574 P.2d 960 (Court of Appeals of Kansas, 1977)
Purdy v. Bank of America National Trust & Savings Ass'n
40 P.2d 481 (California Supreme Court, 1935)
Vincent v. Werner
38 P.2d 687 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1934)
Purdy v. Johnson
280 P. 181 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
248 P. 764, 78 Cal. App. 310, 1926 Cal. App. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purdy-v-johnson-calctapp-1926.