Estate of Jones
Estate of Jones
Opinion
OPINION
Edna A. Jones, a named beneficiary of a trust created by the will of her brother, Charles Courtney Jones, appeals from a court order directing that certain sums of money be paid out of the corpus of the trust for the benefit of decedent's wife, Mrs. Patricia M. Jones. The respondent herein, Southern California First National Bank, is the conservator of the estate of Mrs. Jones. *Page 276
Following the death of Mr. Jones, his widow, suffering from grief and poor health, was made the subject of conservatorship proceedings. When the Jones' estate of over $400,000 was first distributed,1 Title Insurance and Trust Company ("TI"), named under the will as cotrustee with Mrs. Jones, was appointed as sole trustee. A few months later, TI, who had served as conservator of Mrs. Jones' estate, was relieved of its conservatorship duties, and Southern California First National Bank was named as successor. At the same time, conservatorship proceedings were transferred to San Diego County where the conservatee resided. Upon its resignation as conservator, TI handed its successor, Southern California First National Bank, an accounting of conservatorship expenses. In examining this accounting it was discovered that none of the expenses incurred for the widow's estate were reimbursed from the corpus of the trust pursuant to the provisions authorizing the trustee to invade the trust corpus. Consequently, the bank petitioned the court to order TI, in its capacity as trustee, to so reimburse the conservatorship estate of Mrs. Jones. *Page 277
In response to the bank's petition the Los Angeles Superior Court issued an order construing the trust and directing the trustee to disburse trust funds to reimburse the conservatorship estate of Mrs. Jones. The court construed the above-cited provision of the trust as requiring, in conformity with the testator's intent, that the trustee pay out of the trust corpus such sum as would be adequate to cover the widow's living expenses, including conservatorship costs, where net income is insufficient to meet such expenses.2 Accordingly, the court ordered the trustee pay the following sums in reimbursement of the widow's conservatorship estate:
(1) $53,593.67 for the necessary and reasonable maintenance expenses of the widow, expenses incurred by TI in its capacity as conservator of Mrs. Jones' estate from September 1, 1972, to April 15, 1974; (2) $14,000 to TI for ordinary and extraordinary services as conservator of the estate of the widow during the period from September 1, 1972, through April 22, 1974; (3) $3,050 in attorney's fees to the firm serving TI in its capacity as conservator of the estate during the aforementioned period; (4) $4,479.52 in attorney's fees to the firm serving the conservator of the person of the widow from November 16, 1973, through July 31, 1974. The court also ordered the trustee to reimburse the Bank, as conservator of the estate of Mrs. Jones, for futureexpenditures from the conservatorship estate for the proper "support, maintenance, comfort, happiness, education or recreation of the widow" approved by the court.3 *Page 278
Construction of the Trust
The words of the trust expressly grant to the trustee thediscretionary power to invade the trust corpus. (See paragraph C(6) of the decree of distribution, hereinbefore quoted in full on page 276 ante.) Paragraph C(7)(h) of the decree of distribution further provides that "[u]nless specifically limited, all discretions conferred upon the Trustee shall beabsolute, and its exercise conclusive on all persons interested in the trusts." (Italics added.) The grantor was aware that his wife would have ample assets of her own by virtue of her succession to half of the substantial community assets and by virtue of her outright gift under the will. Importantly, the trustee was given tight control over the necessity, time, and amount, of payments which could be made from the trust capital.4With the above stated factors in mind, an analysis of paragraph C(6) (quoted on p. 276, ante) compels us to arrive at a conclusion different *Page 279 from that of the trial judge. (Our determination of the proper construction of the trust as it relates to the discretion of the trustee makes it unnecessary to respond to other contentions raised on appeal.)
Paragraph C(6), for our limited purpose, may be stated to provide: "If the trustee deems the net income payable hereunder not sufficient to provide for the proper support [etc.] of any beneficiary . . . and (2) without taking into consideration other income or financial resources of such beneficiary, other income or financial resources of such beneficiary, it may . . . pay . . . such additional part, up to and including the whole thereof, of the principal of the trust estate . . . all as the Trustee deems adequate in its absolute discretion." As we read this provision, the trustee, in his discretion, may disregard consideration of a beneficiary's other assets, but is not required to disregard them in determining whether the net income is adequate to provide proper support, etc. The additional proviso in paragraph C(6) not quoted above, "(1) whether or not such beneficiary is at the time receiving or entitled to receive income hereunder," lends reinforcement to our conclusion. The only fair reading of the total provision of paragraph C(6) gives the trustee absolute discretion to invade the corpus for beneficiaries other than the one receiving the income. It is a granting of total reliance upon the judgment of the trustee and absolves the trustee of any liability upon the exercise of its discretion. The sole limitation is a total abuse of discretion, and in the instant case, where substantial assets and income are shown from a separate estate and there is evidence of the widow's income from other sources, we find no abuse of discretion. There is no showing that the trustee did not merely conclude that the income available to the widow from the trust was adequate and, if it was not, that there were other resources available to her so as to provide the support, etc., desired by the testator.
The judgment (order construing the trust and instructing the trustee to disburse funds) is reversed.
Kaus, P.J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.