9 N.W.2d 589 | Wis. | 1943
August Giesing was a resident of Waterford, Racine county, Wisconsin. He was the owner of an undivided two-thirds interest as tenant in common in a piece of real estate located in Racine county. He also had a savings account in the defendant bank in Escanaba, Michigan. Defendant Warmington, who was associated with the Escanaba bank, had been a personal friend of August Giesing since 1908. On September 11, 1935, August Giesing was in Escanaba. On that date he signed an agreement and executed a warranty deed conveying his interest in the real estate in Racine county to Warmington as trustee. At the same time he directed the *89 Escanaba bank to transfer his savings account into a joint account in the names of himself and Warmington as trustee or the survivor. The alleged trust agreement provided that Warmington was to hold the real estate and the bank account for the benefit of the settlor, August Giesing, for his life and at his death to divide the property as directed therein among the plaintiffs. The defendants, except for the trustee and the bank, are the heirs at law of said Giesing.
The deed of the real estate was recorded in Racine county. On August 28, 1936, within the year after the trust was allegedly created, the trustee executed and delivered to the settlor a quitclaim deed of the real estate which was also recorded. At that time the trustee wrote Giesing, after consulting the lawyer for the bank, that the trust was now null and void and that everything was back as it had been before the attempted establishment of the trust. Copies of the trust agreement were found among the effects of Giesing when he died which he had marked as destroyed as of January 8, 1937.
August Giesing died June 17, 1937, and his estate was probated in the probate court of Racine county. George Kempkin, who was Giesing's cotenant, deeded his interest in the land in question to Joseph Kempkin, who also holds deeds from all of the other heirs of August Giesing.
The trial court found that a valid trust was created. It was held that the validity of the trust as to real estate was governed by the law of Wisconsin, the situs of the property, and that under Wisconsin law a valid and irrevocable trust was created. As to the bank account, it was held that Michigan law controlled, the trust being created and to be administered in Michigan, and the court read the Michigan decisions as validating the trust even though the settlor retained full control over the bank account during his life. From the judgment for the plaintiffs, all of the defendants except the trustee and the bank appeal. *90
Under the facts of the case as stated above, we must determine whether a valid irrevocable trust was created or whether this was only an arrangement for a testamentary disposition of Giesing's property. While trusts frequently have what Mr. Justice HOLMES described as "a very testamentary look" (Bromley v. Mitchell,
The land in question is in Wisconsin and the validity of the trust in this regard must be determined by the law of the situs of the land, Wisconsin. Restatement, Conflict of Laws, p. 326, sec. 241. The agreement as drawn creates a passive trust as to the life estate of the settlor. A trust "for the benefit of" a cestui is a passive trust. 1 Bogert, Trusts and Trustees, p. 589, sec. 206. In Wisconsin all passive trusts are abolished and the legal title goes to the beneficiary. Sec.
When a trust is passive for a period, the use is executed for that period. Restatement, 1 Trusts, p. 213, sec. 69, commentc. The legal title to the life estate remained in Giesing but the deed to the trustee did pass to him the remainder. In the case of a partially passive trust only so much of the title is left in the trustee as is necessary to enable him to perform his duties. Here the remainder in fee vested in him presently so *91
that on the death of the settlor he could sell the land and divide the proceeds as directed by the settlor. See 1 Scott, Trusts, pp. 418, 419, sec. 692; Highland Park Mfg. Co. v. Steele
(4th Cir.), 232 Fed. 10; Steele v. Smith,
"A, the owner of Blackacre, by a conveyance not operating under the Statute of Uses, transfers Blackacre to B and his heirs to the use of C for life and after C's death in trust to sell Blackacre and divide the proceeds among C's children. The trust for C being passive, it is executed by the statute; the trust for C's children being active, it is not executed by the statute. C has a legal estate for life; B has a legal remainder in fee simple which he holds in trust for C's children." (Sec. 69, illus. 4.)
The trustee during the life of the settlor held the remainder in which the beneficiaries had vested equitable interests. Since there was a present conveyance of this future interest, passing the remainder in fee to the trustee and vesting the equitable remainders in the plaintiffs, although enjoyment was postponed until the death of the settlor, the trust was not testamentary. See Restatement, 1 Trusts, p. 167, sec. 56.
A valid trust having been set up, the settlor and the trustee by mutual agreement could not cut off the rights of the beneficiaries which vested on the delivery of the deed. The deed which the trustee gave to Giesing, being in contravention of the trust, was void. Sec.
This brings us to the trust of the bank account in the bank at Escanaba, Michigan. The bank account being in Michigan *92
and the trustee domiciled there and the agreement having been executed there, the law of Michigan controls as to the validity of the trust of the bank account. See Restatement, Conflict of Laws, p. 376, sec. 294(2); Professor Beale in 45 Harvard Law Review, 969, 970. The settlor did not convey complete legal title to the account to the trustee, but rather made the account into a joint account payable to himself and Warmington as trustee or the survivor. The question arises as to whether there was a valid trust created. The trustee did not get the whole title to the account until Giesing's death, but he got a present interest in the account as joint tenant. That such an arrangement is not void as a testamentary disposition under the law of Michigan seems clear from the case of People'sState Bank of Holland v. Miller's Estate,
Giesing did not withdraw the money from the bank, but he attempted to revoke the trust. Did the reservation of the right to withdraw the full account amount to a reservation of the general power to revoke? We are of the opinion that it did. A power to revoke may be implied from the language of the trust instrument. 3 Scott, Trusts, pp. 1796, 1797, sec. 330.1. It has been held that where the settlor reserved the right to increase or decrease the trust fund, this amounted to a reservation of the general power to revoke. Trenton BankingCo. v. Howard (N.J. Ch.), 187 A. 569, affirmed in
Since the settlor reserved the power to revoke a part of the trust by withdrawing part of the res, there can be no doubt that he intended that such a withdrawal should not affect the validity of the rest of the trust. This is not a case where part of the trust was held invalid. See Gardner v. Bank TrustCo.
We have gone on the assumption that the existence of the agreement was proved. Some question is raised as to the competency of the testimony in this respect. It seems clear from the Wisconsin cases that even if the attorney for the trustee and the bank should not have testified, and we think this doubtful in view of his passive role in the trial, still his competency was unaffected. Will of Cieszynski,
The record shows that Joseph Kempkin bought the other undivided one-third interest in the real estate and took the quitclaim deeds from Giesing's heirs with actual notice of the trust agreement. He acquired only an undivided one-third interest. There was no error in the trial court's direction that *94
he account to the trustee, his cotenant, for the rents and profits. Sec.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed in part and judgment reversed so far as it holds the trust of the personal property unrevoked, and cause remanded with directions to enter judgment in accordance herewith.