Appellee, the Central National Branch of First National Bank at Lubbock (“the Bank”), filed suit for specific enforcement of a partition agreement against appellant Marvin A. Dierschke in his capacity as trustee of five trusts created for his children.
1
After a bench trial, the district court ordered parti
BACKGROUND
At the center of this dispute is approximately three hundred twenty-five acres of farmland located in Tom Green County, Texas. Prior to 1991, this land was co-owned by Marvin Dierschke’s five children’s trusts, and individually by Marvin and Janis Dierschke, with the trusts and the couple each owning an undivided one-half interest. The Bank held a first and prior lien on the Dierschkes’ undivided one-half interest in the land to secure the repayment of a promissory note in the amount of $780,000.
Pursuant to a Chapter 12 reorganization plan filed by the Dierschkes, Marvin Dierschke in his capacity as trustee (hereinafter “Trustee”), the Dierschkes, and the Bank entered into a written agreement to partition the land dated November 20, 1989. The agreement provided that either party could demand partition of the land upon notice to the other owners. The agreement further stated that all owners agreed that the land was susceptible to partitioning, listed several appraisers that could be used by the owners, and allocated the appraiser’s costs among the owners.
The Dierschkes subsequently defaulted on their reorganization plan, and the automatic bankruptcy stay was lifted. The Bank could then foreclose on their deed of trust lien, and the Bank obtained title to an undivided one-half interest in the land through a trustee’s deed dated May 7, 1991. The Bank then tried to enforce the partition agreement. The Bank selected three different appraisers listed in the agreement, but the Dierschkes rejected their selections. After these rejections, the Bank filed the underlying lawsuit for specific enforcement of the partition agreement. During the suit, the Bank and the Trustee entered an agreed order appointing an appraiser. After a bench trial, the trial court rendered judgment in favor of the Bank, finding that the partition agreement was enforceable and ordering the land partitioned according to the recommendation of the appraiser.
The Trustee challenges the district court judgment, contending that the terms of the trusts prohibited him, in his capacity as trustee, from entering into the partition agreement. In his first point of error, the Trustee contends that the trial court erred by enforcing the partition agreement “because bank had prior knowledge of spendthrift provisions and therefore knew trustee lacked authority to enter into an agreement to partition trust corpus without notice to, consent of, or ratification by beneficiaries.” In his second point of error, the Trustee contends that the trial court abused its discretion in ordering partition because partition of the land resulted in an economic loss to the beneficiaries of the trusts.
DISCUSSION
Underlying the Trustee’s first point of error is the premise that because his children’s trusts were spendthrift trusts, he lacked the power as trustee to agree to partition land owned by the trusts without his children’s approval. This first point of error requires a review of the nature of both partition and spendthrift trusts.
An undivided possessory interest in property is a tenancy in common.
Rittgers v. Rittgers,
Cotenants may voluntarily partition land by written agreement.
Houston Oil Co.,
The Texas Trust Code expressly gives a trustee the power to partition real property. Tex.Trust Code Ann. § 113.009(1) (West 1984). The provisions of the Trust Code, however, are default rules that govern only in the absence of contrary provisions in the trust agreement itself. Tex.Trust Code Ann. § 111.002(a) (West 1984).
The five trusts in this case contain spendthrift provisions. A spendthrift provision prohibits the beneficiary from anticipating or assigning his or her interest in, or income from, the trust. Tex.Trust Code Ann. § 112.035(a) (West 1984);
Hines v. Sands,
The Trustee’s first point of error, that the trial court erred in enforcing the partition agreement because his children’s trusts were spendthrift trusts, misconstrues the effect of a spendthrift provision. A spendthrift provision clearly limits the power of a trust’s beneficiaries. A spendthrift provision does not, however, limit the power of a trustee to administer trust property. The Dierschke trusts are no different. The spendthrift provision from the Cheryl Lynn Dierschke trust 2 reads as follows:
The beneficiary of this trust is hereby restrained from anticipating, encumbering, alienating or in any other manner assigning or disposing of her interest in either principal or income of such trust estate and is without power to do so; nor shall such interest be subject to her liabilities or obligations or to judgment, garnishment or other legal process, or bankruptcy proceedings, or any claims of creditors or other parties.
(emphasis added). Since this provision does not mention the trustee, the provision cannot limit the trustee. The “spendthrift” that the provision pertains to is not the trustee, but the beneficiary of the trust.
Nor do other provisions in the trusts prohibit the trustee from partitioning land. The Trustee points to paragraph (g), which prohibits the trustee from selling, purchasing, exchanging, or otherwise dealing with or disposing of all or any part of the corpus or
We fail to see any conflict. Nothing in the record indicates that the exchange of the trusts’ undivided one-half interest in the land for the full interest in half of the acreage pursuant to the surveyor’s plan was an exchange “for the less than an adequate consideration.” Thus, paragraph (g) does not conflict with the trust provision granting the trustee the powers granted by the Trust Code, which in turn grants the trustee the power to partition real property. Tex.Trust Code Ann. § 113.009(1) (West 1984).
The Trustee, however, argues that it is inequitable for the beneficiaries to be protected from themselves but not from breaches of fiduciary duty by the trustee. The Trustee’s argument essentially is that the trust agreement is void because as trustee he violated his fiduciary duty to the beneficiaries by partitioning the property. Even if we had found that the Trustee had acted beyond those powers granted by the trust, this argument lacks merit. The Trustee confuses his duty to act as trustee with his capacity to act as trustee. If the Trustee had acted beyond his capacity as trustee in making an agreement, the agreement might be voidable. However, a breach of a fiduciary duty by the Trustee would not render the agreement voidable, but would only potentially subject the Trustee to a suit by the beneficiaries.
The Trustee also contends in his first point of error that the partition agreement was not binding because it was made “without notice to, consent of, or ratification by [the] beneficiaries.” However, the fact that the beneficiaries did not join in the partition agreement does not affect the validity of the agreement because the agreement did not affect any interest of the beneficiaries. A trustee holds legal title to trust property under a fiduciary duty to deal with it for the benefit of the beneficiaries, who hold equitable title.
Perfect Union Lodge
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10 v. InterFirst Bank,
Additionally, the beneficiaries
were parties
to the partition agreement by way of their representation by the Trustee.
Ruff,
The cases cited by the Trustee are not contrary to our conclusion. The Trustee cites court of appeals decisions which state that a voluntary partition of land must be based upon the agreement of all parties with a
possessory interest in the land. See Joyner,
In his second point of error, the Trustee argues that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to protect the interests of the beneficiaries in enforcing the partition agreement, thereby “resulting in economic loss to [the] beneficiaries.” We fail to see how the beneficiaries were harmed by the partitioning of the property. As a cotenant, the Bank could have
compelled
partition of the land. Tex.Prop.Code Ann. § 23.001 (West 1984);
Ware,
Further, the trusts retain the same amount of land. The Trustee is correct in noting that the trusts no longer retain the right to possess an undivided interest in the entire property, but the beneficiaries never had this right of possession; the right of possession was lodged with the trustee’s legal title.
Jameson,
CONCLUSION
Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The five trusts are the Grant Steve Dierschke Trust, the Christy Ann Dierschke Trust, the Dana Joy Dierschke Trust, the Cheryl Lynn Dierschke Trust, and the Brian William Dierschke Trust. Brian William Dierschke and Cheryl Lynn Dierschke were parties to the lawsuit below, but do not join in this appeal. The beneficiaries of the other three trusts received individual notice of the suit and were represented in the suit by Dierschke in his capacity as trustee.
. The spendthrift provisions in the five trusts have identical wording.
