Wogman v. Wells Fargo Bank & Union

267 P.2d 423, 123 Cal. App. 2d 657, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1235
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1954
DocketCiv. 15725
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 267 P.2d 423 (Wogman v. Wells Fargo Bank & Union) 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
Wogman v. Wells Fargo Bank & Union, 267 P.2d 423, 123 Cal. App. 2d 657, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1235 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.—Alta

P. Wogman, the only child of Hans Petersen, a deceased trustor, her husband Waif rid, and their adult child Vincent, brought this action in equity against *659 the trustee of the trust and the guardian ad litem for the unborn and unascertained heirs of Alta, to modify and/or terminate a trust created by the will of Hans Petersen, who died in 1928. Eggers, the guardian, filed an appearance, but in no other way participated in the proceedings. The trial court terminated the trust and ordered the corpus to be transferred, unconditionally, to Alta. The Wells Fargo Bank and Union Trust Company, the trustee of the trust, appeals. Eggers is not a party to this appeal.

When the testator died on July 11, 1928, he was 71 years of age, having executed his will in January of 1928. He was survived by his third wife Petra, then 58, by his daughter Alta, then 32, who was married to Waif rid. Alta and Waif rid had one child, Vincent, then 8 years of age. By the will the testator created a trust as to that portion of his estate that was his separate property. The . value of the corpus of the trust estate at the time of the death of the testator was $29,000. At the time of trial (June of 1951) it was valued at $25,000.

The will provided that the trust was to last “for twenty-one (21) years from the date of my death and until the deaths of my wife, Petra C. Petersen, of my daughter, Alta Petersen Wagman, and of Walfrid M. Wagman, the husband of my daughter, Alta Petersen Wagman.” It provided that the trust income should be disbursed as follows:

1. To pay $30 a month to Petra, during her life.

2. To pay the rest of the income (all of it upon the death of Petra) to his daughter Alta during her life.

3. If Alta died before the end of the trust to pay her share of the income to her children, and if she left no children, then to two designated sisters of the deceased. No express provision for the disposition of the corpus upon the termination of the trust was made in the will, although Alta was made residuary legatee. The trustee was not given any power to use any of the corpus for any purpose during the continuance of the trust.

The decree of final distribution was entered in September of 1929. No challenge was made by anyone of any of its terms. It distributed the corpus of the trust to appellant as trustee, generally provided for the purposes of the trust in language substantially similar to that used in the will, and provided for the period of duration and termination of the trust in the following language: “Upofi the expiration of said period of twenty-one (21) years from July 11, 1928, *660 the date of the death of said Hans Petersen, deceased, or upon the death of his surviving wife, Petra C. Petersen, his daughter, Alta Petersen Wagman, and Walfrid M. Wagman, the husband of his daughter Alta Petersen Wagman, whichever shall be the longer, said Trust shall cease and determine and the Trust Estate then remaining in the hands of said Trustee shall vest in and go to the heirs at law of Alta Petersen Wagman, in accordance with the laws of Succession of the State of California then in force.”

Petra died in 1942, and the two sisters of the deceased named as alternate income beneficiaries to take if Alta died childless before the termination of the trust, died in 1928 and 1938, respectively. * The petition here involved was filed in 1950. At that time Alta was 55. Her son Vincent was 31, and was married, but childless. Thus, the only named income beneficiaries then alive were Alta and Vincent, and the only other income beneficiaries would be future children born to Alta who would share in the income if Alta predeceased Vincent or Walfrid. In addition, if Alta survives- her husband and son and then dies, then a wholly new set of heirs at law, not necessarily unborn but not ascertainable until her death, would inherit the corpus.

At the trial the only witnesses, all called by respondents, were Alta, Vincent and the trust officer of appellant. Most of the evidence was directed towards showing the present financial condition of the Wogmans and the amount of income of the trust, respondents challenging the investment policies of the trustee. It was admitted that Alta and her husband are not destitute. Over the past four or five years they have averaged about $3,500 annually, including the income from the trust, which now runs to about $60 per month. Walfrid had been a farmer for some time, but for the six or seven years prior to trial he and his wife had been in the real estate business in Sebastopol, California. They do not own their own home, but do own an automobile. They wish to use a portion of the corpus to buy a home.

There is much evidence as to the investment policies of the trustee in relation to the corpus of this trust. These policies, and whether the trustee abused its powers, are *661 problems not involved on this appeal. The trust could not be terminated because of these matters, there being other less heroic remedies for such abuses, if they exist.

The trial court found that the will disclosed an intent on the part of the testator to protect his wife and daughter; that the wording of the will indicates that the trustor intended that the trust should continue for a maximum of 21 years; that no provision in the will was made for the vesting of the corpus; that Vincent and Waif rid have consented to the termination; that contingent beneficiaries are represented by a guardian ad litem; that the purposes of the trustor have been fulfilled; that it is in the best interests of all that the trust be terminated; that the trustee has had no interest in the trust since July 11, 1949, when the trust became void under section 715 of the Civil Code. The judgment decreed that the trust be terminated as of July 11, 1949, 21 years after the death of the testator, and the trustee was directed to transfer all of the corpus remaining to Alta.

From the findings it is quite apparent that the trial court was convinced, and so held, that under the terms of the will the testator had expressed an intent that the trust should exist for a maximum of 21 years, and that by terminating the trust as of July 11, 1949, * it was merely terminating the trust in accordance with its terms as set forth in the will. It is also clear that the trial court was also of the opinion, and so held, that if this was not the proper interpretation of the will, then the trust provision was invalid as a violation of the rule against remoteness of vesting contained in section 715 of the Civil Code. Both conclusions, in our opinion, are unsound.

Whether the testator expressed an intent that the trust should last but 21 years, must be ascertained primarily by interpreting the language used in the decree of distribution and not from the language used in the will. It is true that where the terms of the decree of distribution are ambiguous the will may be looked to in order to clarify the ambiguity. (Moxley v. Title Ins. & Trust Co., 27 Cal.2d 457 [165 P.2d 15]; Mitchell v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
267 P.2d 423, 123 Cal. App. 2d 657, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wogman-v-wells-fargo-bank-union-calctapp-1954.