Silverston v. Mercantile Trust Co.

122 P. 976, 18 Cal. App. 180, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 8, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 887.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 122 P. 976 (Silverston v. Mercantile Trust Co.) 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
Silverston v. Mercantile Trust Co., 122 P. 976, 18 Cal. App. 180, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The action is in partition. Appellant states that “there is practically no controversy as to the facts.” The amended complaint alleges that plaintiff and defendant, Mary Gray Tobin, are the owners as tenants in common of certain personal property consisting of notes and bonds; that the Mercantile Trust Company of San Francisco claims some interest adversely to plaintiff, but that it is without right. The answer denies that plaintiff and said defendants are the owners or tenants in common or otherwise of the property and admits that the said Mercantile Trust Company claims an interest in the property adverse to plaintiff, but denies that such claim is without right. It is alleged in the answer that the property is held in trust by said company as follows: That on the fifteenth day of August, 1893, the plaintiff, defendant, Mary Gray Tobin, and Edwin B. Dimond, together with their father, W. H. Dimond, entered into an *182 agreement with Horace G. Platt, which is set forth as exhibit “A,” according to the terms of which said Platt was to receive certain real and personal property belonging to W. H. Dimond and to his three children, in trust for said children during the term of their lives, applying the income to their use and support, and to “give and convey” one-third of said property to E. B. Dimond upon the death of said W. H. Dimond, and, upon the death of either of the daughters, “to give and convey” one-half of the remaining two-thirds to the devisees and legatees or heirs of the one so dying. On August 16, 1893, another agreement was made whereby W. H. Dimond succeeded Horace G. Platt as trustee under the same trust; that said W. H. Dimond died on or about the eighteenth day of June, 1896, without having appointed his successor in said trust either by will -or deed; that thereafter Edwin B. Dimond and the Union Trust Company of San Francisco, as executors of the last will and testament of said W. H. Dimond, brought an action in the superior court in and for the county of San Francisco, against plaintiff herein, her husband, Paul B. Jarboe, Mary Gray Tobin and her husband, Joseph S. Tobin; that in the complaint therein the execution of said deed of trust referred to as exhibit “A” and also the execution of the deed of trust from said Platt to W. H. Dimond and also the death of said Dimond without having appointed a successor were alleged and set forth, and the prayer was that the court appoint a successor in said trust to said W. H. Dimond and that the plaintiffs as said executors be authorized to turn over to said trustee so appointed by the court the property set forth in said deeds of trust; “that Eleanor Sophie Jarboe (the plaintiff herein) appeared in said action and contested the same; that said action was tried upon its merits; that the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law and found that all the allegations of the complaint were true,' and that a judgment and decree should be entered adjudging that said W. H. Dimond was the trustee under said trust, and that Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver should be appointed trustees in place of said W. H. Dimond, deceased, with all the powers, duties, liabilities and obligations set forth in said trust as incumbent upon and belonging to the trustee under said trust, and thereupon the court duly made, gave and entered its judgment and decree appointing *183 Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver trustees in the place and stead of W. H. Dimond, deceased, as trustees under said trust, with all the powers, duties, liabilities and obligations set forth in said trust as incumbent upon and belonging to the trustee under said trust”; that they accepted the trust and so entered upon the discharge of their duties; that certain other actions were brought, in which plaintiff herein was a party, relating to this trust property; that they were contested by plaintiff herein and tried upon their merits and judgment rendered therein. The answer further alleges that the action is barred by the laches of plaintiff and by the provisions of section 343 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Furthermore, it is averred that “The same cause of action at issue in this action, to wit, the validity of said trust above set forth, was duly adjudged and decided in said three actions above mentioned and set forth, to wit, said action brought by said executors of the will of W. H. Dimond, and said action brought by this plaintiff and others against'said trustees and executors of the will of W. H. Dimond, deceased, and said action above set forth brought by said trustees against this plaintiff and others; that this plaintiff appeared in each of said actions and contested the same; that said three actions were heard and decided upon their merits, and that in each of said three actions the trust herein set forth was in issue and- was adjudged and decided to be valid.” The judgment-roll in one of these actions, No. 24,203, entitled Edwin B. Dimond and Union Trust Company, etc., v. Eleanor Sophia Jarboe and others, “and also the judgment-roll in No. 24,202, entitled Horace Q. Platt and B. P. Oliver as trustees, v. Eleanor Sophia Jarboe, and others,” were received in evidence. It is stipulated by the parties hereto, as stated by appellant, that the statements appearing in the answer to the amended complaint as to the contents of the record in the two actions just mentioned are substantially correct statements of the contents of the said judgment-rolls and are sufficiently detailed for the purposes of this appeal. From said statement it appears specifically that in the first above-mentioned case the court found, among other things, as hereinbefore stated, that “Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver should be appointed trustees in place of said W. H. Dimond, deceased, with all the powers, duties, liabilities and obligations set forth in said trust as incumbent upon and *184 belonging to the trustees under said trust, and that said parties, under and by virtue of said judgment and decree, accepted said trust and entered upon the discharge of their duties as such trustees under said trust, as successors to said W. H. Dimond, with all the rights, powers, duties and estate held or enjoyed by said W. H. Dimond as such trustee as aforesaid.” In the second of these cases the court found all the allegations of the complaint to be true, which included the averment of the institution of an action by said Eleanor Sophia Jarboe, Paul It. Jarboe, Mary Gray Tobin and Joseph S. Tobin against Horace G. Platt and B. P. Oliver as trustees, and the Union Trust Company of San Francisco as executor of the last will of decedent, and the rendering of a judgment therein, adjudging and decreeing what part of the money in the hands of the defendants constituted a portion of the principal sum of said trust property and what part constituted the income of said trust property collected by said W. H. Dimond, and directing the distribution of these funds in accordance with the terms of said trust, one-fourth of the income fund being distributed to said Eleanor Sophia Jarboe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 P. 976, 18 Cal. App. 180, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silverston-v-mercantile-trust-co-calctapp-1912.