Tidwell v. Richman

127 F. Supp. 526, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1998
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedNovember 30, 1953
DocketCiv. A. No. 13742
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 127 F. Supp. 526 (Tidwell v. Richman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tidwell v. Richman, 127 F. Supp. 526, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1998 (S.D. Cal. 1953).

Opinion

TOLIN, District Judge.

This is an action between Lyda Tidwell and Frederick I. Richman each of whom is a trustee and trustor under a declaration of trust. Plaintiff has brought suit asking this Court to permit her to void the declaration of trust and for a distribution of the assets of the estate to the trustors. She claims that the trust is a voidable one because of (1) undue influence in the inception; (2) fraud in the inception; (3) fraudulent and improper management; and (4) that after the establishment of the trust it has been fraudulently and wrongfully managed by the defendant to such an extent that he should be removed as agent of the trustees and the trust should be terminated.

At a pretrial conference the Court ordered a trial upon the single issue of whether there was undue influence or fraud or both which moved plaintiff to execute the declaration of trust. It was held by the Court that if plaintiff prevail on this issue, there need not be a trial as to the later issue except as it might become involved in distribution of the estate to the persons entitled thereto and in an accounting which would necessarily be involved. Plaintiff has objected to this procedure on the basis that a showing of certain acts of mismanagement (which she claims she is able to show) will relate back to the things which were done before she executed the trust declaration, and will show that certain privileges of management which defendant has under the trust declaration were in fact set up as they are in order to enable him to do the supposedly high-handed and improper acts of which she accuses him. The order of the Court relating to the separation of issues for trial is a provisional one. It provides for a trial upon the issue of voidability of the [528]*528trust because of undue influence and fraud in the inception. Evidence of how the trust has been managed since it has been created has been specifically excluded from the trial of the issue regarding undue influence and fraud in the inception. The Court has ruled that if plaintiff prevail upon the theory thus being tried, the only need to go into acts of management will be in the accounting. The ruling was that if plaintiff cannot establish her cause of action upon the theory of wrong in the beginning, the Court will still hold open its findings in that, regard so that if any evidence received in the course of trying the issue of post execution management and alleged' fraud be relevant to what has been termed the First Issue, the Court would not have foreclosed itself from' consideration thereof in making its findings. This has brought the case to trial in a posture where potentially plaintiff might make out her case on trial of the First Issue and establish a right to voiding the declaration of trust and distribution of the assets with an accounting. If the evidence be insufficient for that' purpose, she still would have a right, under the terms of the order severing issues for trial, to continue to try fraud in the inception during the trial of the issue of mismanagement and fraud on the part of the agent after the trust was executed. Trial of the First Issue has occupied in excess of 19 days of testimony and argument. It therefore readily appears that trial of the other referred to issues would also be extensive and that it has been' provident to sever the issues in order to conserve trial time with its attendant expense to the litigants. It now appears that plaintiff has made out her case on her theory of undue influence in the inception of the árrangement, and the only reason for setting forth the limitations immediately above described is to explain to any reviewing court that this case has been tried upon a limitation as described.

The creation of the trust arises out of many circumstances which include the fact that Mrs. Tidwell and Mr. Rick-man were the immediate descendants of parents who left considerable wealth.

Early in the occurrence of circumstances which led to execution of the declaration of trust, Lyda Tidwell was known as Lyda Blythe Richman Nagel. She was at that time the wife of one Nagel whom she thereafter divorced. She later married Albert Ray Tidwell, with her brother’s grumbling acceptance of the union. The brother has always considered him one of the host of fortune hunters whom he continually feared as threats to the inheritance. She is a woman well educated in Liberal Arts, having been graduated from well-respected schools, and holds some academic degrees indicating advanced education. Her education has been predominantly in language and literature. Following graduation from the last of the schools which she attended, she was employed for a time by the State of California in one of the relief agencies which existed during the depression years. Her posir tion was that of case worker and at one time she was a supervisor of case workers. Apparently she did well in that env ployment. She has taught school in one of the South American countries where she instructed children of resident American Nationals. Since her return she has-delivered public lectures on her observations and experiences in travel.

Although making no claim to being a woman of great physical beauty, Mrs. Tidwell is nonetheless a person of considerable personal charm and attraction. It would be expected that if she were without estate, she would still be appealing as a prospect for matrimony. This is important here because of defendant’s long-term insistence that it i® not true. Defendant Frederick I. Rich-man is her only sibling. He is older, much more aggressive, and a successful' member of the California State Bar. His-very considerable learning and ability in the law and handling of property brought, him to a position where his parents had considerable trust in him as an advisor concerning their own affairs, and they manifested a great deal of pride in the-[529]*529ability and progress of their son. Throughout her youth, Mrs. Tidwell (first as Lyda Blythe Richman, and later as Lyda Blythe Richman Nagel) held a young sister’s considerable admiration for the very real and proudly recognized accomplishment and senior standing in the family of her Stanford-trained lawyer brother. She thought of herself as educated in the gentle arts and of defendant as a wise, technically trained master of practical estate problems. He was actually a man of somewhat testy and domineering disposition, inclined to be critical of his younger sister’s habits and friends. While she looked up to him, he looked down upon her. The parents, who were in declining years (the father having already suffered a stroke and being under some disability) had need to rely for some guidance in legal and property affairs, and often looked in part to their accomplished son for that guidance. Mrs. Tidwell often accompanied her father and brother on errands to a rental property. She sometimes even collected some rents but never became, nor was trained to become, a manager of income property. The culture which had been acquired by their daughter Lyda was in the classical type of education. The brother had developed his natural talents to the extent that he was a capable, well-trained lawyer, having special acquaintance with trust and related matters. He was given to making sharp taunts toward his sister, expressing to her that she lacked physical charm and possessed physical disabilities (which were really non-existent unless she has recently been remarkably reconstructed) that would make her undesirable in the marriage market except to a fortune hunter to whom she would have strong attraction solely because of the substantial nature of her then prospects of inheritance and later realization of those prospects. The evidence indicates that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
127 F. Supp. 526, 1953 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tidwell-v-richman-casd-1953.