105 S.W.2d 814 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1937
Affirming. *672
On August 10, 1927, Marie T. Williams and the Fidelity Columbia Trust Company, trustee, entered into a trust agreement by which she placed in its hands $20,000 in trust to invest in such securities as were eligible for trust investments under the laws of Kentucky with power of sale and reinvestment. The material provisions of the trust agreement are as follows:
"(c) The Trustee shall pay to the Donor for her life, the entire net income from the trust estate and upon the death of the Donor, the principal of the trust estate shall pass in fee to Wistar Morris Williams, step-son of the Donor; provided however, that should the Donor die before Wistar Morris Williams attains the age of twenty-one (21) years, the said Wistar Morris Williams shall receive only the income from the said trust estate until he attains said age, at which time he shall receive the principal thereof. In the event Wistar Morris Williams should predecease the Donor, the principal of the trust estate shall, on the death of the Donor, pass in accordance with the provisions of her last will; and in the event Wistar Morris Williams should predecease the Donor, and the Donor should thereafter die without leaving a will, the principal of the trust estate shall pass in fee to the heirs at law of the Donor. * * *"
"(e) If, during the continuance of the trust estate herein created, the Trustee should deem it necessary or advisable to advance to the Donor, or, after the death of the Donor, to Wistar Morris Williams, any portion of the principal of this trust fund, the Trustee is hereby empowered to make such advancement or advancements to the Donor or to Wistar Morris Williams as often as it may see fit to do so and for any purpose or purposes which the Trustee may in its discretion determine."
On April 28, 1936, Wistar Morris Williams, one of the beneficiaries of the trust, executed a deed of assignment whereby he transferred to Marie T. Williams, the settlor, all of his right, title, and interest to the said trust fund created by the trust agreement of August 10, 1927. The settlor's stepson, Wistar Morris Williams, was about thirteen years old at the time of the creation of the trust, and about twenty-two years old at the time of the assignment of his interest to the settlor. *673 The settlor is a widow, and has never had a child of her own.
This action was brought by the settlor and Wistar Morris Williams against the Fidelity Columbia Trust Company, trustee, to obtain a decree terminating the trust. The trustee filed an answer putting the settlor on proof. In granting the relief prayed, the chancellor held (1) that the purpose of the trust was to protect the settlor's stepson during his minority, and the purpose had been accomplished; (2) that it was to the interest of the settlor that the trust be terminated; and (3) that the settlor's heirs took no interest under the trust agreement, and that by virtue of the assignment from her stepson she had become the sole beneficiary of the trust. The trustee has appealed for the sole purpose of discharging its duty to protect all the beneficiaries of the trust, including the settlor herself.
As pointed out in the able briefs of counsel, it is essential to the termination of a trust agreement, where no power of revocation is reserved, and no fraud or mistake is involved, that the whole object of the trust shall have been accomplished, that the termination of the trust will be advantageous to the beneficiaries, and that all the interested parties consent. Anderson v. Kemper,
Judgment affirmed.