Wheeler v. First National Bank

10 Cal. 185
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1937
DocketL. A. No. 15567
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Cal. 185 (Wheeler v. First National Bank) 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
Wheeler v. First National Bank, 10 Cal. 185 (Cal. 1937).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The plaintiff sued the trustee of an express trust and the beneficiaries thereof for an accounting, a declaration of the rights and duties of the respective parties under the trust provisions, and other equitable relief. From the judgment rendered the plaintiff appealed. No reporter’s transcript was filed. The appeal is presented on the clerk’s transcript and the briefs of the respective parties.

In February, 1929, John L. Wheeler and Louise A. Wheeler, the parents of the plaintiff, Sheldon C. Wheeler, entered into a declaration of trust whereby they conveyed to The First National Bank of Santa Ana certain described real and personal property, to hold for the benefit of the trustors in their lifetime, and thereafter for the benefit of their son and the brothers and sisters of John L. Wheeler. The real property consisted of a forty-acre orange grove situated in Orange County subject to a $50,000 mortgage, and a residence in Santa Ana subject to a $4,000 mortgage. The personal property consisted of money on deposit to the trustors’ account in the trustee bank; ranch equipment, machinery and tools; household goods and jewelry; certificates repre[187]*187senting 1,000 shares of stock of Merchants Petroleum Company ; five shares of Farmers and Merchants Savings Bank of Santa Ana; and six life and accident insurance policies issued on the life of John L. Wheeler.

Louise A. Wheeler died on November 13, 1930, survived by her cotrustor, John L. Wheeler. The only provisions of the trust declaration which are pertinent in this controversy are those which bear upon the happening of the contingency of the death of Louise A. Wheeler survived by John L. Wheeler.

Paragraph 5 of the trust declaration provides that upon the happening of that contingency, John L. Wheeler should be permitted to withdraw from the trust corpus all the household furniture, automobiles, and the jewelry, clothing and personal adornments of Louise A. Wheeler. The property remaining in the trust was then to be divided into two equal parts to be known as subdivisions “A” and “B”. John L. Wheeler was given the right to manage both parts and upon his written request at any time after three months following the death of Louise A. Wheeler, he had the right to withdraw from the trust the portion thereof comprising subdivision “A”. .He was permitted to retain all the income from both parts while they remained in the trust and to continue to receive the income from subdivision “B” should he withdraw subdivision “A”. It was further provided that thereafter, should subdivision “A” and the income from subdivision “B” be insufficient for his support and comfort, he should receive sufficient amounts of the principal of subdivision “B” as the trustee in its uncontrolled discretion should deem necessary and advisable, but payments of principal from subdivision “B” could not be made to him so long as there remained in his possession any part of subdivision “A”. The declaration of trust contained provisions for the distribution of subdivision “B” to Sheldon C. Wheeler and to the brothers and sisters of John L. Wheeler upon the latter’s death, which it is not necessary to notice specifically. The controversy here is concerned only with the propriety of the withdrawal by John L. Wheeler of a portion of the trust estate following the death of Louise A. Wheeler.

In March, 1931, pursuant to a written request of John L. Wheeler, the trustee transferred to him the northeasterly [188]*188ono-half of the forty-acre orange grove, the ranch equipment, household goods, jewelry and other personal property, the entire residence property subject to the $4,000 mortgage, one-half of the shares in the trust, and three of the insurance policies. John L. Wheeler also withdrew money on deposit amounting to about $2,000. He paid to the trustee the sum of $100 for the balance of the equity in the residence property. The mortgage on the forty-acre grove was adjusted by the payment thereon by John L. Wheeler of the sum of $5,000, and by a separate renewal of one-half of the remaining indebtedness of $45,000 against each twenty acres of the ranch property. The trustor failed to pay the insurance premiums on two of the insurance policies remaining in the trust, which thereupon lapsed. At the time of the trial he reconveyed to the trust a one-half interest in the farm equipment and machinery.

The trial court declared the rights of the parties and the powers and duties of the trustee, as to which no controversy is presented on this appeal. It found that a division of the estate at the time requested and a withdrawal of one part thereof was authorized by the trust provisions, but that the division made was not equal; that the part withdrawn by John L. Wheeler exceeded in value the part remaining by the sum of $15,786. After allowing certain credits on account of sums advanced by John L. Wheeler for the benefit of the trust, it- adjudged that equality would be attained by the payment into the trust, or upon the mortgage on the real property remaining in the trust, of the sum of $5,000. It therefore ordered that the defendant reimburse the trust estate and the trustee in the sum of $5,000. The judgment was made a lien upon all of the property transferred and withdrawn by John L. Wheeler from the trust estate, subject to the existing encumbrances thereon. The judgment contained the provision that the trustee should be under no obligation to cause execution to issue against any property of John L. Wheeler so long as the orchard property was owned by him without an increase otherwise in the encumbrances upon it. It also provided that John L. Wheeler should be relieved of the lien against his property upon the payment by him of $5,000 on the principal of the indebtedness against the orchard property remaining in the trust. The court decreed that the transfers of property withdrawn from [189]*189the trust by John L. Wheeler were not void and that the plaintiff was not entitled to judgment setting aside any of said transfers. It accordingly expressly ratified and confirmed such transfers.

The defendant, San Joaquin Fruit and Investment Company, which held the note and mortgage on the orchard property, filed a cross-complaint seeking a foreclosure of the mortgage indebtedness amounting the $22,500 against the orchard property remaining in the trust. Judgment of foreclosure was rendered by the court.

The court ordered that each party pay his own costs, except as specially otherwise provided by the judgment of foreclosure.

The plaintiff’s contention is that the trial court erred in refusing to set aside and cancel the transfers to John L. Wheeler and restore the property to the trust estate. The plaintiff seems to have assumed that the court’s findings and conclusions are to the effect that the transfers were wrongful and in violation of the terms of the trust. He therefore places reliance on cases wherein property has been converted by the trustee, or some other wrongful disposition thereof has been made in contravention of the trust. But we are satisfied that the plaintiff has misconceived the result of the'trial court’s action. Contrary to the plaintiff’s assumption, the court found that the transfers were not void but were authorized, and that the division of the property was merely unequal. It provided for equality by a judgment that $5,000 be placed in the trust estate by the surviving trustor, and otherwise ratified and confirmed the transfers. The plaintiff is not here in a position to urge that with the $5,000 additional placed in the trust the division would still be unequal in so far as value is concerned.

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Carter v. Chotiner
291 P. 577 (California Supreme Court, 1930)
In Re Estate of Spreckels
123 P. 371 (California Supreme Court, 1912)

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Bluebook (online)
10 Cal. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-first-national-bank-cal-1937.