Smith v. Drake

94 S.W.2d 236, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 506
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 15, 1936
DocketNo. 8233.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 94 S.W.2d 236 (Smith v. Drake) 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
Smith v. Drake, 94 S.W.2d 236, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 506 (Tex. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

BLAIR, Justice.

This appeal is from the action of the trial court refusing to sanction the mortgage of trust property by the trustee, to pay taxes, and to make repairs or improvements. The proceedings, in the nature of an agreed case, was instituted by appellant Mrs. Dorothy Smith, as trustee and guardian, to obtain the sanction of the court to mortgage trust property to pay accrued taxes, and prevent the eventual sale of the property for taxes, and to make permanent repairs or improvements actually necessary to preserve the trust estate; a peculiar situation having arisen which precluded the payment of the taxes when due and the making of the repairs or improvements when needed out of such rentals as could be realized from the dilapidated and antiquated trust estate building.

*237 We have reached the conclusion that the trial court erred in refusing to sanction the mortgage of the trust property for the purposes stated under the peculiar circumstances of this case. The trust estate was created by a provision of the will of John W. Harris, deceased, which read: “I hereby devise and bequeath unto my two be'loved grandchildren, named Evelyn Annette Smith and Harris Holloway Smith, the two ■children of my daughter Dorothy Smith, the brick building situated * * * in 'San Angelo, Tom Green County, Texas, said property to be held in trust by my Independent Executrix, hereinafter named, until sajd children reach the ages of twenty-five years respectively, and then to vest in fee simple, share and share alike in said ■children, and it is my desire that all the rents and revenues received from said “building, less the taxes and repairs, insurance, etc., and that said rentals be paid to the mother of said children who is hereby named trustee for said children, and who is also named independent executrix hereinafter to be mentioned, said rentals to be used for the support, education, etc., of said ■children.”

Appellant accepted the trust, qualified, as independent executrix under the will, and by appointment of the probate court became ■the guardian of the estate of the said Evelyn Annette and Harris Holloway Smith, whose ages at the time of the trial were ten ■and twelve, respectively. The trust estate •consisted of two lots in San Angelo, upon -which was situated a brick business building, 50 feet by 125 feet, which comprised the entire estate of said minor children. At the time the will was executed and when the testator died, in 1928, the building was rented for $200 per month and continued to be so rented by the trustee through 1929. In the latter part of 1930 the building became vacant, due to local economic cón-•ditions and because of the general depression prevailing everywhere. The trustee reduced the rents, but was unable to secure a permanent tenant, and the building was last rented for about six months in 1933 as a storage plac'e for automobiles in connection with a nearby hotel, at a rental of $40 ■per month. The building had become anti1 •qiiated. Its walls had become marred and defaced, the floors were in a bad state of repair, and the plate-glass front had been broken. In such condition the building was ■deteriorating and going to waste and could only be saved by encumbering the trust property to secure money to -pay accrued taxes and to make permanent repairs and improvements on the building. Taxes in the sum of $2,250 had accrued against the property and it would eventually be sold for taxes. The repairs or improvements contemplated would cost $2,750. This sum would remodel the building and improve the lots for use as a complete modern automobile service station and a news or concession stand. As thus improved the trust property could be immediately rented for $150 per month or more, which would be sufficient to care for future taxes and repairs, pay the interest, and amortize a $5,000 loan in five years, with possibly a small balance for use in the support and education of the minor children.

Appellee Mrs. Nellie Davis Drake, as guardian of the estate of Koa Drake Cook, a minor, agreed to make the loan of $5,000 necessary to pay the taxes and make the repairs or improvements, upon the condition that her attorney approve the authority of the trustee and guardian to mortgage the trust property. The attorney refused to approve the loan, being of the opinion that the testamentary trust created was an active trust, and that the trust instrument did not authorize the trustee to mortgage the trust, property. Whereupon appellant Mrs. Dorothy Smith, as independent executrix and as trustee and guardian of the estate of said minor children, joined by her husband, who also joined as plaintiff and next friend of the minor children, instituted this proceeding to construe the testamentary trust, and to obtain the sanction or instruction of the trial court to mortgage the trust property for the purposes stated.

The trial court denied the relief sought, upon the ground that the testamentary trust was an active trust, excluding the jurisdiction of the probate court over the estate of the minors; and that the instrument creating the trust did not expressly nor imr pliedly authorize the trustee to mortgage the trust property to pay the accrued taxes and to make the permanent repairs or improvements actually necessary to preserve the trúst estate.

In reaching its conclusion, the trial court followed the rule of construction often applied by courts of equity in the interpretation of testamentary trusts, which in the language of the authorities is that the trustee’s power to mortgage trust property depends upon the terms of the trust instrument; that the trustee cannot mortgage trust property unless such power is ex *238 -pressly given, or intent to confer it can be implied from the - terms and circumstances surrounding the trust; and that courts of equity cannot add or subtract anything from a testamentary trust, but must leave it as the testator made it, giving it only such construction as he intended. Jackson v. Templin (Tex.Com.App.) 66 S.W.(2d) 666, 92 A.L.R. 873; Faulk v. Dashiell, 62 Tex. 642, 50 Am.Rep. 542; Quisenberry v. J. B. Watkins Land-Mortgage Co., 92 Tex. 247, 47 S.W. 708; McNeill v. St. Aubin (Tex.Civ.App.) 209 S.W. 781; Haldeman v. Openheimer, 103 Tex. 275, 126 S.W. 566; Kent v. McDaniel (Tex.Civ.App.) 178 S.W. 1006. But such rules have no application to the instant case. The rule applicable to this proceeding and sought to be invoked by appellant is that when peculiar and unforeseen conditions have arisen which make it necessary to pay accrued taxes and to make permanent repairs or improvements reasonably necessary to preserve the trust property, or to meet such unforeseen conditions as may substantially impair the accomplishment of the purpose of the trust, the court of equity will sanction, direct', or permit the trustee to deviate from the terms of the trust instrument, and mortgage the trust property in order to raise money to pay accrued 'táxes and to make permanent repairs or improvements. The principle of the rule is well stated in ’ Restatement .of the Law of Trusts, § 167, p.. 415, as follows: “The court'will direct or permit the trustee1 to deviate from a term of the trust if owing to circumstances not known to the settlor and not anticipated by him compliance would defeat or substantially impair the accomplishmérit of the purposes of the trust; and in such case, if necessary to carry out the purposes of the trust, the court may direct or permit the trustee to do. acts which, are not authorized or are forbidden by the' terms of the trust.”

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.W.2d 236, 1936 Tex. App. LEXIS 506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-drake-texapp-1936.