Sayers v. Baker

171 S.W.2d 547, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 363
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 1943
DocketNo. 2347
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 S.W.2d 547 (Sayers v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sayers v. Baker, 171 S.W.2d 547, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 363 (Tex. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

.LESLIE, Chief Justice.

Sam R. Sayers, Trustee, instituted this suit against Earl M. Baker to recover $3,131.70 claimed to be due Miss Myla Baker, the beneficiary under the terms of a trust agreement. The defendant answered that he paid said sum direct to T. B. Baker, a brother of Myla Baker, and that such payments were made in various amounts at different times, but in each instance at the direction and with the authority of Myla Baker, who was at all times sui juris and entirely competent.

The trial before the court without a jury resulted in a judgment that plaintiff take nothing, and he appeals.

In substance the facts are as follows:

Earl M. Baker, Myla Baker and T. B. Baker were parties to the trust agreement, and on Myla’s complaint to the Trustee that the amounts paid by Earl M. Baker to T. B. Baker were improperly charged to her account under the trust, said Trustee [549]*549instituted this suit to judicially determine whether the defendant, Earl M. Baker, is in default under the terms of the trust agreement.

On or about December 10, 1938, the trust agreement in question was executed, by the terms of which Earl M. Baker was to pay $9,000 per year for the sole use and benefit of his aunt, Miss Myla Baker, during her life time, and upon her death to his Uncle, T. B. Baker, if living, until his death, which obligation was secured by the transfer to Sam R. Sayers and Frank Canaday, Trustees, of 64,000 shares of the common stock known as non-par of Resort Hotel Company, a Texas corporation, which owns and operates the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas. Earl M. Baker “had the right and option but not the legal duty or obligation to pay said $9000.00 annually from any other source or income and thereby avoid default.” The stock and dividends and respective rights of Myla Baker and T. B. Baker were “never to be transferred, assigned, or otherwise hypothe-cated by them or either of them * * *.”

Contemporaneously with the execution of said trust agreement, at the request of Sam R. Sayers, attorney for Myla Baker and T. B. Baker, a letter was written by Earl M. Baker directed to Miss Myla Baker, beneficiary, and Mr. T. B. Baker as her successor in trust, authorizing the withdrawal of $750 per month by the beneficiary direct, beginning February 1, 1939, in lieu of the $9,000 lump sum payment provided for in the trust agreement to be made to the Trustee at the end of each year. This letter, which was executed and delivered at the same time of the execution and delivery of the trust agreement, expressly authorized the payment of $750 per month by Earl M. Baker direct to the beneficiary, Myla Baker, and, upon her death, to T. B. Baker, if living.

This trust agreement and letter given in connection therewith were a part and parcel of a transaction between Earl M. Baker and T. B. Baker and Myla Baker, which was concluded on or about December 10, 1938, by the execution and delivery of sixteen written instruments by and between the parties. Some of these instruments were deeds, and others were contracts and reciprocal releases — all executed at the same time in the presence of the attorneys for all parties.

The trust agreement, by virtue of said letter, became operative as to the payment of $750 per month on February 1, 1939. At this time Myla Baker was living at the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas, where the agreement provided Earl M. Baker should furnish her an “apartment, •living accommodations, etc.”, and it was more convenient for her to be paid through the Baker Hotel than any other manner. Accordingly Earl M. Baker notified Louis Gambrell, Auditor of the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, to pay the $750 per month in accordance with said letter and to charge his account.

Myla Baker and T. B. Baker, with the consent of Myla Baker (as found by the trial court and approved by this court), began drawing excess of $750 per month in substantially equal shares, the first withdrawal being on February 10, 1939, in the sum of $1,000 by T. B. Baker through Myla -Baker. This sum was sent at the request of Myla Baker to T. B. Baker, who was then in Mexico. Through February, March and April, 1939, T. B. Baker made six withdrawals, aggregating $1,483.90 under said trust agreement with the authority and approval of Myla Baker.

Between January 31st and April 30th, Myla Baker made eleven different withdrawals of money, aggregating $2,202.70 under said trust agreement through the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas. Consequently, on April 30, 1939, Myla Baker and T. B. Baker, with the consent of Myla Baker, had withdrawn under said trust agreement through the Baker Hotel a sum of money considerably in excess of the allotted $750 per month, but not in excess of $9,000 per year.

In May, 1939, T. B. Baker requested Gambrell, Auditor of the Baker Hotel, permission to make an additional withdrawal. He was informed by the Auditor that the trust account had been overdrawn, since an allowance of only $750 per month was authorized. Thereupon the Auditor refused to allow T. B. Baker to draw any additional amount and reported the matter to Earl M. Baker. The Auditor’s attitude in the matter “up set” Myla and T. B. Baker, and Myla reported Gambrell’s action to Earl M. Baker. The conversation and negotiations that followed between the parties resulted in Earl M. Baker informing Myla Baker that it would be alright for her and T. B. Baker to go ahead and draw in excess of $750 per month, provided they did not withdraw more than $9,000 in any one year under the trust [550]*550agreement. Earl M. Baker communicated this arrangement to Auditor Gambrell in the presence of Myla Baker. T. B. Baker was in the hotel at the same time.

Thereafter, Myla Baker and T. B. Baker continued to withdraw through the Baker Hotel in Mineral Wells, Texas, under said trust agreement sums in excess of $750 per month. Finally, about July 1, 1939, T. B. Baker, who was then in Mineral Wells, called Louis Gambrell to the apartment of Myla Baker in said hotel, and at that point Myla and T. B. Baker, in the presence of each other, requested the Auditor to prepare for them a statement of all withdrawals they had made up to that time under said trust agreement. Such statement was made and delivered to each of them. The only objections made to the statement by either Myla or T. B. Baker was to a $1,000 charge made for payment of fee to Sylvan Lang and an item to a Dr. St. Clair for eye glasses.

In August, 1939, Auditor Gambrell was requested by Myla Baker to render an additional statement of said account, which he delivered to her. No objections were made to said statements, except the one concerning the $1,000 fee to Lang and the charge for glasses, both of which items were eliminated from said account.

Upon a full hearing of the testimony, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of appellee, Earl M. Baker, and on request of appellant filed findings of fact and conclusions of law which were not excepted to. Neither did the appellant request additional findings nor complain of insufficiency in the findings.

The trial court’s conclusions of law were, in part as follows: “I conclude as a matter of law that said trust agreement, being created for the benefit of Myla Baker, as beneficiary, and T. B. Baker, as residuary beneficiary, by Earl M. Baker, settlor, and all parties being sui juris and mentally competent to contract, that such payments aggregating $3,131.70 to T. B. Baker by Earl M.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.W.2d 547, 1943 Tex. App. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sayers-v-baker-texapp-1943.