Estate of LAURA LYON WHITE, Deceased. RUTH B. WHITE, as Executrix, etc., Appellant,
v.
AMERICAN TRUST COMPANY (a Corporation) as Trustee, etc., Respondent.
California Court of Appeals. First Dist., Div. One.
Sterling Carr and A. Dal Thomson for Appellant. *751
Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison for Respondent.
WARD, J.
This is an appeal from a decree and order denying the cross-petition of Ruth B. White, as executrix of the will of Ralston L. White, deceased, overruling her objections to the tenth report and account of American Trust Company, trustee, formerly the Savings Union Bank and Trust Company, and directing the trustee to expend one-third of the trust property of the estate of Laura Lyon White, deceased, in the erection in San Francisco, California, of a public memorial, to her husband, of a monumental character, the design to be selected by the trustee and to be typical of banking development in the State of California.
Laura Lyon White, the wife of Lovell White and the mother of Ralston L. White, died testate. Her will was admitted to probate in the early part of 1916. A decree of partial distribution was made by the court in 1916, and a decree of final distribution in 1917. By the terms of her will the residue of her estate was bequeathed to the Savings Union Bank and Trust Company, the predecessor of the American Trust Company, and Ralston Lovell White, in trust, one-half of the net income thereof to be paid Ralston White during the period of the trust. In the event he had no issue the whole of the net income was to be paid to him. The whole of the income was so paid him inasmuch as he had no children. Other children of the Lovell Whites had died in infancy. Upon the death of Ralston Lovell White, which occurred on September 26, 1943, the trust was to terminate and the property vest in his "lawful" issue. In the event he died without leaving issue the will provided for the following disposition of the property: one-third to Edith White, niece of the deceased husband of testatrix; one-third in trust for the benefit of the sister of the testatrix, Margaret L. Whitcomb, and the nephew of testatrix, Bonner Whiteomb, with a vested remainder in the trust property, insofar as Margaret L. Whitcomb's interest was concerned, to Bonner Whitcomb or his heirs, and lastly: "One-third (1/3) thereof to the Savings Union Bank and Trust Company, to be expended by it for the erection of a public memorial of a monumental character, to my deceased husband, Lovell White, the design of said memorial to be selected by the said Savings Union Bank and Trust Company in its discretion, provided that it shall be erected in the City and County of San Francisco, and it is desired that preferably it *752 represent something typical of the banking development of the State of California." Ralston White died without issue so that the alternative provisions of the trust came into effect.
Ruth B. White, cross-petitioner and appellant, is the wife of Ralston White and his sole heir. She attacks the validity of that part of the trust appropriating funds for the erection of a monument. The reason for her contest appears in certain letters written by Ralston White. In 1935 he wrote her from Merano, Italy, as follows: "Dearest Ruth: It is my express wish that after I die, you shall, as soon as may be, commence suit to break, in your favor, the Laura Lyon White Trust, at American Trust Co. The terms of this Trust are, that if I shall die without issue, the capital sum of the Trust shall go to Margaret L. and Bonner Whitcomb, Edith White, and to a Memorial for my late Father, Lovell White."
"My mother established this Trust before her death in 1916, at a time when we, you and I, were possessed of a large and independent fortune of our own. My mother wished to provide for relatives that were not so fortunately situated financially, and to leave a fitting tribute to her husband's memory."
"But now the situation is entirely changed. We have lost our own fortune, and are now engaged in a struggle to pay off a debt of $47,000 incurred during the crash of 1929. Margaret and Bonner Whitcomb are both dead."
"I would wish to see Edith White get her share of the Estate, as provided. But the other two-thirds, (2/3's) should go to you, by every consideration of justice, equity, natural right, and the love that both my father and mother bore to you. The most fitting Memorial that could be established to my father's memory, and the one that he would most wish, would be to have ample provision made for his son's wife, whom in 1909 he welcomed to the family with the affection of a father for a daughter. And my mother, who loved you dearly, would wish, were she living to-day, to see you established as financially independent as her legacy could make you, and as is fitting for the nearest remaining member of her family."
"Therefore, my dearly beloved and most loyal and devoted wife, I counsel you, that upon my death, you shall at once engage the services of an excellent lawyer, one familiar with the practice regarding wills and testaments, and file a suit contesting the distribution of the Trust as at present provided, and claim for yourself at least a 2/3 share thereof. I feel sure that no court in the land will, under the changed circumstances, deny your just and equitable claims to a fair share *753 of your natural inheritance. Your loving husband Ralston L. White." The following year Ralston White wrote from Munich as follows: "To American Trust Co. San Francisco, and to the Honorable, the Court having jurisdiction in the execution of the last Will and Testament of my mother, the late Laura Lyon White:-- ... May I invoke your attention to the consideration that no more fitting Memorial could, under the circumstances, be offered to my father's memory than a Trust Fund in the name of and for the benefit of his daughter-in-law, Ruth B. White. ..." Less than six months before his death a second letter of similar import was written to the trustees and the court.
Ralston White made plain his desire that the memorial fund should be diverted into a maintenance fund for his wife. The particular provision of the will directing the memorial in question was not to become effective until the death of Ralston White, and then only in the event he left no lawful issue. His parents, brother and sisters predeceased him and he left no children. In this connection it is argued that Ruth B. White, his widow and sole heir at law, is also the "issue" of Ralston L. White. This contention is based upon Civil Code, section 1334, in force at the time of the decree of distribution in his mother's estate. The section then read: "A testamentary disposition to 'heirs,' 'relations,' 'nearest relations,' 'representatives,' 'legal representatives,' or 'personal representatives,' or 'family,' 'issue,' 'descendants,' 'nearest' or 'next of kin' of any person, without other words of qualification, and when the terms are used as words of donation, and not of limitation, vests the property in those who would be entitled to succeed to the property of such person, according to the provisions of the title on succession, in this code." In 1931 section 1334 was reenacted as Probate Code, section 108, and the reference to "issue" and "descendants" omitted. It is interesting to note that in the July, 1931, number of the State Bar Journal the draftsman of the Probate Code, referring to the omission of the two words, stated: "It is not conceivable that by either of these words a person could mean ancestors or collateral relatives, altho they might be his heirs."
[1] The word "issue" as used in the will is not without words of qualification. The word is definitely used in the sense of descendants. An examination of the will shows that certain property should go to the only son of the testatrix during his natural lifetime, with the remainder over to the oldest *754 surviving son (a grandson), if existent, otherwise to his issue or, if none, to his heirs at law. The same idea is carried out in a provision relative to the property held in trust for the benefit of Ralston L. White and his "issue." One-half was to be accumulated and distributed to the oldest child of Ralston L. White, and in the event of his death during minority, to the other children. It was provided that upon the death of Ralston L. White the trust should cease and the property should vest in his "lawful issue." If there were no issue a portion of the property was to vest in the relatives therein named. These provisions show an intent to differentiate between "lawful issue" and "heirs at law." The use of the words "lawful issue" indicates that upon the happening of a contingency the property should go to the legitimate lineal descendants. Under the facts of this case the use of the word "lawful" is unimportant.""
[2] The word "issue" has been given a limited or a contrary meaning, depending upon the evident intent of the word as used. Even in an enlarged sense, so far as we have been able to ascertain, it has never covered a surviving spouse. In this state in Estate of Cavarly,
Appellant argues that the trial court should have provided for Ruth B. White as "issue" in succession to the property but, if she is not issue, there is intestacy with respect to the property of decedent Laura Lyon White directed to be used for the purpose of a memorial because that trust is void. In finding against appellant on this point the trial court based its decision upon the fact that the decrees of partial and final distribution were conclusive on the validity of the trust. The decrees followed the language of the will.
[4] When an estate of a deceased is distributed to trustees appointed under a will, the decree is an adjudication of the validity of the trust. In Cook v. Cook,
[5] Prior to the additions found in Probate Code, section 1120 (1931), the Supreme Court, construing former section *756 1699 of the Code of Civil Procedure in McAdoo v. Sayre (1904),
Appellant contends that although Ralston L. White could not have attacked the trust during his lifetime, it may be attacked by his widow on the theory that Probate Code, section 1120, which reenacted Code of Civil Procedure 1699 with some modifications, creates a means of determining to whom trust property shall pass in the event that issue has not previously been determined.
[7] Ralston White could have attacked the provision in the will relative to the "memorial." Instead of doing so, he accepted, as one of the trustees named in the will of Laura Lyon White, the responsibility of the trust and filed reports and accounts. A decree of distribution is conclusive upon one who was in a position to attack the application for distribution. (Crew v. Pratt,
Appellant is unable to conceive of any interest Ralston L. White could have had in assailing the provision of the trust here considered during his life. He enjoyed the income from the entire residue for life and appellant states that the trust *757 provision attacked "was to come into being only upon his death." It is true that if successful in an attack upon the provisions of the trust Ralston White could not have enjoyed the property during his lifetime. He would, however, have become the owner of the remainder interest with power of testamentary disposition and would thus have been in a position to have provided for his wife.
The Probate Code provides that upon final settlement of an account, due notice of the application therefor having been given, the court "must" distribute the residue of the estate, and that "any person interested" may resist the application. (Prob. Code, 1020.) The decree of distribution determines whether trust property designated in the will shall pass. The court retains jurisdiction to determine "to whom the property shall pass" for certain "purposes hereinafter set forth." (Prob. Code, 1120.) The purposes are set forth in the next nine sections. Probate Code, section 1121, gives to any beneficiary the right to apply for a citation directed to a trustee to file an account. (Estate of Rey,
The first sentence of Probate Code section 1120 provides: "When a trust created by a will continues after distribution, the superior court shall not lose jurisdiction of the estate by final distribution, but shall retain jurisdiction for the purpose of determining to whom the property shall pass and be delivered upon final or partial termination of the trust, to the extent that such determination is not concluded by the decree *758 of distribution, of settling the accounts and passing upon the acts of the trustee and for the other purposes hereinafter set forth." In Thomas v. Superior Court,
In Estate of Smead,
[8] Appellant argues that where there is a contingent remainder after termination of a life estate in trust, a different rule applies. California has held to the contrary. In the distribution of a decedent's estate the court, acting in its probate capacity, may pass upon the equitable interest in the property. (Estate of Scrimger,
[9] A life beneficiary who has obtained the interest of a remainderman may not terminate a trust against the interest of the unborn, but he may request the court to define and decree the validity of a charitable bequest that may affect the remainderman's disposition of property. "However, appellant's interest as the sole heir at law of his father if an intestacy exists under the terms of the will, or may arise by the lapse of any bequest, gives him the right to urge that any uncertainty in the will in this regard should be construed by the decree of distribution. When there is any question as to *759 the effect of a will, the probate court should construe it and define the interest of each devisee. (Estate of Scrimger,
In Estate of Hinckley,
In view of the conclusion that the terms of the trust cannot now be attacked, it is not necessary to consider appellant's argument that the trust is void in that no charitable trust is created and therefore is violative of the rule against perpetuities. This point was not considered by the trial judge and therefore is not a part of the record on appeal.
The suggestion that it is impossible to design or erect a public memorial of monumental character to Lovell White, typical of California banking development cannot now be *760 passed upon. That problem is in the hands of the trustee subject to appropriate future judicial action in the event the trustee should attempt to erect a memorial not in accordance with the provisions of the trust.
The order denying the cross-petition of the executrix and overruling objections to the account of the trustee is affirmed.
Peters, P. J., and Bray, J. pro tem., concurred.
