Sheean v. Michel

57 P.2d 127, 6 Cal. 2d 324, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 508
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1936
DocketS. F. 15469
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 57 P.2d 127 (Sheean v. Michel) 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
Sheean v. Michel, 57 P.2d 127, 6 Cal. 2d 324, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 508 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The plaintiff became the purchaser at an execution sale of certain lots situated in Alameda County. He brought the present action to quiet his title thereto against the claims of the defendants. The court ordered judgment for the defendants, from which judgment the plaintiff appealed.

The claims of the defendants were based upon a declaration of trust executed by the defendant, Emile Michel, purporting to convey extensive real property, including the lots here involved, to himself in trust. The instrument was recorded in Alameda County on January 26, 1932. A judgment for the sum of approximately $25,000 was recovered in November of the same year against said defendant Emile Michel, pursuant to which the execution sale to the plaintiff took place. The validity of the provisions of the trust instrument was called into question by the plaintiff’s action and the defendants ’ answer and cross-complaint. The plaintiff contends that the pertinent provisions of the trust, create a suspension of the power of alienation in violation of section 715 and related sections of the Civil Code. If this contention has sufficient *326 merit, the judgment must be reversed, and it will not become necessary to consider other facts involved or points presented.

In the instrument in question the trust purposes and objects are specifically declared to be the “use, benefit and enjoyment, and behoof of my wife, Marie P. Michel, and my children born and to be born of the marriage of myself and Marie P. Michel, my wife, the children now living being named as follows”, naming six children, the eldest of whom was in his twelfth year at the time the instrument was executed. Although Marie P. Michel was declared to be a beneficiary of the trust, no specific provision for her benefit was included. Emile Michel, as the trustee, was empowered to hold and manage the property conveyed by the instrument, and any property subsequently added by him, and to sell any of it without notice or court order or approval, and without bond or appraisement, or to mortgage or lease any of it, and to invest the proceeds in such property or securities as he should deem best. The trustor declared that he should not be held for any loss by reason of accident, or mistake, or error in judgment exercised by him in good faith as trustee. The seventh clause provided that the trustee should receive so much of the income as should accrue during the “minority 0 of my children”, and apply the whole or any part to the board, lodging, education or maintenance in any manner he should deem best without accountability for his judgment in such application. By the eighth clause the trustee was given ' power to permit “any one of my said children to draw from said trust fund any amount I shall think to be best up to the amount of such child’s undivided share in such fund, but no more”; and that in case of the “death of one or more of my said children”, the issue of such deceased child or children shall receive the parent’s share by right of representation. By the ninth clause the trustor provided that in the event of the death of “any of my said children” without issue, such child’s portion of the fund “and its accumulations” shall be divided equally among “my said other children or their issue” in like manner as the balance of the fund “shall be handled, and not otherwise”. The tenth clause states: “When and at the time the youngest of my said children shall have attained” the age of twenty-one years, the trustee is directed to make a settlement “with each of said children”, *327 each to receive an equal share in the trust property and any accumulated income.

The trustor reserved the power, whenever he should deem it necessary, to revoke the trust. The trustee was empowered to nominate his successor, who should administer the trust in the same manner, and be vested with the same powers and duties. The thirteenth clause reads: 11 That I as trustee shall defend the title to said real estate and every part and parcel thereof, against the claims of all persons whomsoever. ’' The trustor declared that he, as trustee, would keep a strict account of the trust fund and all additions and accumulations and render a 3rearly statement. The twenty-first to twenty-fourth clauses inclusive contained some general and special provisions relating to the creation of so-called spendthrift trusts, designed to prevent the assignment, transfer, hypothecation, sale under execution or other process, or any other application of any part of the trust income or property to debts incurred b3r any of the beneficiaries.

If the trust thus attempted to be created is by its terms designed to be continued during the minorities of children born after the delivery of the trust instrument, it is obvious that the instrument creates a suspension of the power of alienation in violation of the provisions of section 715 of the Civil Code. That section provides that, except in the single ease mentioned in section seven hundred seventy-two, which exception is not material here, “the absolute power of alienation cannot be suspended, by an3r limitation or condition whatever, for a longer period than as follows: 1. During the continuance of the lives of persons in being at the creation of the limitation or condition; or 2. For a period not to exceed twenty-five years from the time of the creation of the suspension.” The possibility of the suspension of the power of alienation created J¡y the contingency that all of the persons in being at the time of the creation of the trust may die before the youngest unborn child becomes twenty-one years of age, or the possibility of the suspension beyond the twenty-five-year period, renders the trust void at its creation and title does not vest in the trustee. (Secs. 716, 749, 771, Civ. Code; Estate of Troy, 214 Cal. 53, 56 [3 Pac. (2d) 930].) “Section 716 declares that ‘every future interest is void in its creation which, by any possibility’ may suspend the power of alienation longer than the Code permits. This possibility is *328 to be determined by the conditions existing ‘at the time of the creation’ of the limitation or future interest . . . ”—in this case at the time of the execution and delivery of the trust instrument. (Secs. 749, 771, Civ. Code.) “ ‘The statute does not permit us to wait and see whether events may not so transpire that in fact no perpetuity [suspension] results, but if under the terms of the deed or will creating the trust, when properly construed, the instrument “by any possibility may suspend” the absolute power of alienation beyond the continuance of lives in being, the instrument, whether a deed or will, is void, and no trust is created nor any estate vested in the trustees ’. (Estate of Steele, 124 Cal. 533, 537 [57 Pac. 564]; . . . ” (Estate of Whitney, 176 Cal. 12, 15, 16 [167 Pac. 399] ; Estate of Maltman, 195 Cal. 643, 649 [234 Pac. 898] ; Estate of Troy, supra, p. 57.)

The defendants contend that the language of the instrument may be interpreted as limiting the period of suspension only during the minorities of the children living and named in the instrument, and yet carry into effect the intent of the trustor to apply the income and corpus of the trust property for the benefit of all the children of the trustor and his wife, both as to those living at the creation of the trust and those born thereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.2d 127, 6 Cal. 2d 324, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheean-v-michel-cal-1936.