Taliaferro v. Taliaferro

921 P.2d 803, 260 Kan. 573, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedJuly 26, 1996
Docket72,929
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 921 P.2d 803 (Taliaferro v. Taliaferro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taliaferro v. Taliaferro, 921 P.2d 803, 260 Kan. 573, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 122 (kan 1996).

Opinion

*575 The opinion of the court was delivered by

Larson, J.:

In this declaratory judgment action, proponents of the Will C. Taliaferro Trust appeal from a trial court decision that the trust was invalid because the setdor had not transferred title to property he owned to himself as trustee. We reverse and hold that where the settlor of a trust executes a declaration of trust, no transfer of legal tide to the trust property is required to fund the trust.

On March 29, 1990, while in the hospital, Will C. Taliaferro executed two revocable trust indentures, a will, and various odier documents. The trust documents had been prepared by his nephew, an attorney, who had little estate planning experience. The first trust was called the Taliaferro & Browne Trust. It covered the ownership of Will C. Taliaferro’s business venture, the Taliaferro & Browne, Inc., engineering firm, and the proceeds of a life insurance policy on his life. This Taliaferro & Browne Trust was the subject of our decision in Taliaferro v. Taliaferro, 252 Kan. 192, 843 P.2d 240 (1992).

The second trust was a personal revocable inter vivos trust, the Will C. Taliaferro Trust, and is the subject of this action. Section One of the Will C. Taliaferro Trust provides in part:

“I, Will Cedric Taliaferro,, as Grantor, hereby declare the establishment of the Will C. Taliaferro Trust (hereinafter sometimes referred to as ‘the trust’). I hereby declare that I have appointed myself as Trustee of the Trust (hereinafter sometimes referred to as ‘The Trustee’) and declare, further, that as the Trustee, I accept and hold in trust all of the property described in Schedule A, which is attached hereto and incorporated herein by reference. Such property, together with any other property that may later become subject to this trust, shall constitute the trust estate, and shall be held, administered and distributed by the Trustee as herein provided.”

The trust property was described in Schedule A to the trust indenture:

“The following described property of Will. C. Taliaferro is held in trust and made subject to the terms and provisions of the foregoing Declaration of Trust for the Will C. Taliaferro Trust:
“1. All Douglass Bank stock that is solely or separately owned by Grantor.
*576 “2. Grantor’s entire interest in Equitable Insurance Company Policy number 34-590-634 MSC/KSM, a policy of insurance on the life of Carl Buckner.
“3. All of Grantor’s household goods, the contents of Grantor’s safe deposit box, and all other tangible personal property owned by Grantor at the time of execution of this agreement, subject to disposition at the Trustee’s discretion from this date forward, and all such property hereinafter acquired by Grantor and delivered to Trustee as of the date of death of Grantor.”

Will C. Taliaferro was the income beneficiary of this trust during his life. After his death, the successor trustee was to distribute the accrued income and corpus among a number of named beneficiaries, with the remainder to go to Betty Taliaferro, who was Will C. Taliaferro’s wife, his sole heir, the executor named in his will, the designated successor trustee of the Will C. Taliaferro Trust, and the opponent of the trust herein.

Will C. Taliaferro died September 1, 1990. The present case is a declaratory judgment action brought by Betty Taliaferro to determine the validity of the Will C. Taliaferro Trust. In her petition, Betty Taliaferro contended that Will C. Taliaferro never transferred any of the property allegedly subject to the trust into the trust because none of the property in Schedule A had been assigned to the trust or to Will C. Taliaferro as trustee. She further alleged that Will C. Taliaferro did not treat the properly as trust property during his lifetime but rather as if he owned it individually. Mrs. Taliaferro purported to bring the action to establish the ramifications if she were required to elect against her husband’s estate plan.

After, hearing cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court determined that a material question of fact existed as to whether Will C. Taliaferro had the requisite intent to create a valid trust and ordered an evidentiary hearing. The court reasoned: “The intent of Mr. Taliaferro (as expressed in the trust document) to create a pour-over trust is clear enough, but the fact that he did no overt acts transferring property to die trust leaves his intent in question.”

After the evidentiary hearing, the trial court found the Will C. Taliaferro trust to be invalid. It held the evidence did not show that Will C. Taliaferro had intended to transfer property to the *577 corpus of the trust. The trial court held that Pizel v. Pizel, 7 Kan. App. 2d 388, Syl. ¶ 3, 643 P.2d 1094, rev. denied 231 Kan. 801 (1982) laid down three requirements the trust had to meet to be a valid inter vivos trust: “(1) an explicit declaration and intention to create a trust; (2) definite property or subject matter of the trust; and (3) the acceptance and handling of the subject matter by the trustee as a trust.”

The trial court found there was a sufficient declaration of trust and intent to create a trust to meet the first Pizel requirement— an explicit declaration and intention to create a trust — and that the second requirement — that there be definite property or subject matter of the trust — was satisfied by the Douglass Bancorp stock owned by Will C. Taliaferro, the life insurance policy on Carl Buckner, and Will C. Taliaferro’s personal jewelry and clothing.

However, the trial court found that the evidence failed to establish the third requirement of a valid trust it attributed to Pizel. The court found the evidence did not establish that the trustee, Will C. Taliaferro, had accepted and handled the subject matter of the trust as trust property, nor had Will C. Taliaferro, as settlor, effected the transfer of the property to the trust. The trial court reasoned at length, but concluded in relevant part: “Under Pizel he was required by words or acts to immediately divest himself of title, and to vest title in himself as trustee. Nothing in Mr. Taliaferro’s words or actions indicates that he did in fact intend to divest himself of title to his property.”

The court also based its decision on its conclusion that whatever Will C. Taliaferro’s original intentions were when executing the trust document, he changed his mind about creating a trust in the months following. This holding was drawn primarily from the fact that Will C. Taliaferro had transferred the stock subject to the Taliaferro & Browne Trust to himself as trustee but took no similar action with respect to property subject to the Will C. Taliaferro Trust.

On appeal, the appellant proponents of the trust argue the trial court erred in finding the trust to be invalid.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
921 P.2d 803, 260 Kan. 573, 1996 Kan. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taliaferro-v-taliaferro-kan-1996.