Brown v. McMullin ( 1998 )


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  •              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    FILED
    SHERRY BROWN, as next friend            )            September 14, 1998
    and natural mother of her minor         )
    children, AMANDA DANETTE                )             Cecil W. Crowson
    MCMULLIN and ADAM MCMULLIN,             )            Appellate Court Clerk
    )
    Plaintiff/Appellee,              )
    )   Appeal No.
    )   01-A-01-9710-CH-00561
    VS.                                     )
    )   Lawrence Chancery
    )   No. 6489-93
    DORRIS MCMULLIN, LARRY                  )
    MCMULLIN, HELEN MCMULLIN,               )
    and THE ESTATE OF EUGENE                )
    MCMULLIN,                               )
    )
    Defendants/Appellants.           )
    APPEALED FROM THE CHANCERY COURT OF LAWRENCE COUNTY
    AT LAWRENCEBURG, TENNESSEE
    THE HONORABLE JAMES L. WEATHERFORD, JUDGE
    JANE M. JENNINGS
    231 Mahr Avenue
    Post Office Box 794
    Lawrenceburg, Tennessee 38464
    Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellee
    J. DANIEL FREEMON
    Freemon, Hillhouse & Huddleston
    327 West Gaines Street
    P. O. Box 787
    Lawrenceburg, Tennessee 38464
    Attorney for Defendants/Appellants
    AFFIRMED AND REMANDED
    BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE
    CONCUR:
    TODD, P.J., M.S.
    CAIN, J.
    OPINION
    The dispositive question in this appeal is whether a successor trustee
    of a revocable savings account trust has the power after the death of the original
    trustee to revoke the trust and claim the trust assets as his own. The Chancery court
    of Lawrence County ordered the trust assets paid into the Clerk and Master’s Office
    to be held for the original beneficiaries. We affirm.
    I.
    The essential facts have been stated in a former opinion of this Court.
    We quote from that opinion:
    The proceeds of a policy of insurance on the life of
    Donnie McMullin were paid to his mother, Edith McMullin,
    the named beneficiary, who, jointly with her husband,
    Eugene McMullin, deposited these funds in a trust
    account, having first executed a Discretionary Revocable
    Joint Trustee Agreement which designated them as joint
    trustees of the funds of their grandchildren, Amanda and
    Adam McMullin (children of their son, Donnie McMullin,
    the insured decedent) as beneficiaries. Edith and Eugene
    McMullin had two other sons, Larry and Dorris McMullin.
    Six years later, Edith McMullin died and Eugene
    McMullin continued to serve as trustee. The trust funds
    remained intact and productive until October 21, 1993,
    when they were paid out by the depository bank under
    unusual circumstances.
    The surviving trustee, Eugene McMullin, became
    mortally ill. He was being transported to a hospital on
    October 21, 1993 [one week before his death] by Larry
    McMullin and Helen McMullin (wife of Dorris), when they
    stopped en route at the depository bank. Eugene was too
    ill to leave the car. Larry and Helen entered the bank and
    prevailed upon the bankers to change the beneficiaries of
    the trust from Adam and Amanda McMullin (both minors)
    to Larry and Dorris McMullin, the brothers of the minors’
    deceased father. Not the least lacking in cooperation, the
    bank issued two cashiers checks, each in the amount of
    $49,945.53 to Larry and Dorris McMullin.
    It is not disputed that Eugene McMullin, the trustee,
    did not enter the bank on October 21, 1993, and did not
    communicate with a banker. He signed no instruments of
    any kind. The record offers little explanation of the
    somewhat remarkable banking practice evidenced from
    the foregoing recitation.
    Brown v. McMullin, No. 01A01-9603-CH-00113 (Nashville, August 16, 1996).
    -2-
    The opinion dealt with only one narrow issue: that Larry and Helen
    McMullin had no authority to revoke the trust. The court affirmed the lower court’s
    judgment on that issue and remanded the cause for further proceedings.
    The chancellor ordered the defendants to pay the money they had
    withdrawn from the trust into the office of the Clerk and Master. In subsequent
    proceedings, the chancery court decreed that the funds should be held by the Clerk
    and Master for the benefit of the original beneficiaries and that withdrawals would be
    made only for income tax payments or emergency expenses.
    II.
    The document creating the trust was entitled, “Discretionary Revocable
    Trust Account” and it provided that
    (1)     The trustees are authorized to hold, manage,
    invest, and reinvest said funds in their sole discretion;
    (2)     The undersigned grantors reserve the right to
    revoke said trust in part or in full at any time, and any
    partial or complete withdrawal by the original trustees, if
    they be both of the grantors, shall be a revocation to the
    extent of such withdrawal, but no other revocation shall be
    valid unless written notice by both of such trustees is
    given to the institution named on the reverse side of the
    card;
    (3)     In the event of the death, resignation, removal or
    incompetence of both of said trustees, DORRIS
    McMULLIN is appointed successor trustee . . . and such
    successor trustee shall have the powers of the original
    trustees;
    (4)     This trust, subject to the right of revocation, shall
    continue for the life of the grantors and thereafter until the
    beneficiary is TWENTY-FIVE years of age and then the
    proceeds shall be delivered to the beneficiary; . . . .
    Similar trusts have been upheld against a charge that they are
    testamentary in nature and invalid because they do not comply with the Wills Act.
    Leader Federal S & L Association v. Hamilton, 
    330 S.W.2d 33
    (Tenn. App. 1959);
    -3-
    Peoples Bank v. Baxter, 
    298 S.W.2d 732
    (Tenn. App. 1956). And in Bumbaugh v.
    Burns, 
    635 S.W.2d 518
    (Tenn. App. 1982) this court held that the corpus of a savings
    account trust, described as a “joint discretionary revocable trust,” did not become a
    part of the settlor/trustee’s estate at her death and, absent some provision in the trust
    itself, the trust could not be revoked by the settlor/trustees’ will. We think these cases
    lead to the inescapable conclusion that the trust created by a savings account
    instrument is a continuing trust and that upon the death of the settlor(s) the beneficial
    interest in the remaining funds vests in the beneficiaries according to the trust’s terms.
    In this case, the beneficial interests of Adam and Amanda McMullin vested at the
    death of Eugene McMullin, the last surviving grantor.
    This conclusion is supported by two separate statements of the general
    law. The first is the Restatement of Trusts § 58 which provides:
    Tentative trusts of savings deposit: “Where a person
    makes a deposit in a savings account in a bank in his own
    name as trustee for another person, intending to reserve
    a power to withdraw the whole or any part of the deposit
    at any time during his lifetime, and to use as his own
    whatever he may withdraw, or otherwise to revoke the
    trust, the intended trust is enforceable by the beneficiary
    upon the death of the depositor as to any remaining on
    deposit on his death if he has not revoked the trust.”
    The second is a part of our banking law, Tenn. Code Ann. § 45-2-704.
    It provides in part:
    (a)(1) Whenever any deposit shall be made in any bank
    by any person in trust for another, and no other or further
    notice of the existence and terms of a legal and valid trust
    shall have been given in writing to the bank, the bank is
    entitled to deem the following with respect to such
    deposit, that:
    (A) The person designated as trustee is the owner
    of the deposit account;
    (B) The owner retains the right during the owner’s
    lifetime to withdraw, assign or pledge the balance of such
    deposit account, in whole or in part, as though no survivor
    beneficiary had been named, and to delete or change a
    survivor beneficiary; and
    (C) The interest of a person designated as
    beneficiary shall not vest until the death of the owner, or
    -4-
    in the case of joint owners, until the death of the last
    surviving owner, and such interest shall be subject to any
    lien, assignment, pledge, right of offset or other claim
    which the bank could have asserted against the owner.
    (2) No change in the designation of the survivor
    beneficiary is valid unless executed on a form and in a
    manner prescribed by the bank.
    (3) The following terms shall be deemed to apply to such
    account, unless the owner notifies the bank otherwise:
    (A) The interest of the beneficiary in the account
    vests, only if the beneficiary survives the last surviving
    owner;
    (B) Multiple beneficiaries surviving the last
    surviving owner shall be entitled to equal shares of the
    account; and
    (C) If no beneficiary survives, the account shall
    remain in the estate of the last surviving owner;
    It can be seen that this Act plugs the gaps that remain (and with which
    the courts have had to struggle), when a deposit is made in a bank in trust for a third
    party and there are no other provisions that govern how the bank may deal with the
    funds. Admittedly, the trust instrument in this case is more complete (it allows
    revocation in whole or in part and it directs the remaining funds to be held until the
    beneficiaries reach the age of twenty-five) but a gap still remains as to when the
    interest vests. The Act fills that void by providing that the interest vests in the
    beneficiary only if he/she survives the last surviving owner.
    The only claim by the successor trustee named in the trust instrument
    is based on the fact that the trust provides that he shall have all the powers of the
    original trustees. He construes that provision as passing on to him the power to
    revoke the trust -- for his own benefit if he so decides. We think this construction of
    the trust would defeat the obvious intent of the settlors to provide a benefit for their
    grandchildren whose father provided the funds through insurance on his life. It is true
    that the settlors reserved the right to encroach on the corpus of the trust -- and to that
    extent effect a partial revocation -- but the remaining funds vested in the beneficiaries
    -5-
    at the death of the surviving settlor. The successor trustee’s powers could not then
    be exercised in a way to defeat the trust purposes.
    In addition, we think the successor trustee’s contention amounts to a
    claim that some beneficial interest in the trust corpus passed to him at his father’s
    death. In our view, that result could only be accomplished by a valid will.
    The provision giving the successor trustee the same powers as the
    original trustees should be read as a part of the whole instrument. One of the reasons
    for having a successor trustee was the incompetence of the settlors. In that event,
    while the settlors still lived, the successor trustee would have had the power of
    encroachment/revocation for their benefit. But we are still of the opinion that at the
    death of the last surviving grandparent the beneficial interest in the remaining funds
    vested in the children. Only the enjoyment of the benefit was postponed until they
    reached the age of twenty-five.
    III.
    After remand, the trial judge overruled a motion made by the successor
    trustee and the other family members to assert a claim against the bank. The trial
    judge reasoned that any claim the original defendants had against the bank could be
    asserted in a separate action and should not delay a final resolution of the issues in
    this case.
    -6-
    We think that whether to add the bank as a party to this action was a
    decision resting within the discretion of the trial judge. The bank was not a necessary
    party in this action, Rule 19, Tenn. R. Civ. Pro., and the permissive joinder of a party
    is subject to the trial judge’s authority to “make other orders to prevent delay or
    prejudice.” Rule 20.02, Tenn. R. Civ. Pro.
    IV.
    The appellants also argue that the parties should be placed in status
    quo; that the trust should be reinstated instead of placing the funds in the custody of
    the Clerk and Master. We think, however, that the power of the chancery court to
    remove a trustee when the trustee has threatened to violate his trust, Tenn. Code
    Ann. § 35-1-106(a)(2)(B), or for other good cause, 
    id. (2)(F), is
    authority for the court’s
    decision not to return to the status quo. In addition, the trial court’s action is in
    substance a continuation of the trust with the Clerk and Master serving as the trustee.
    The only duty imposed on the trustee is the investment of the funds and the payment
    of the corpus to the beneficiaries when they reach the age of twenty-five.
    The judgment of the court below is affirmed and the cause is remanded
    to the Chancery Court of Lawrence County for any further proceedings necessary.
    Tax the costs on appeal to the appellants.
    ____________________________
    BEN H. CANTRELL, JUDGE
    CONCUR:
    -7-
    _______________________________
    HENRY F. TODD, PRESIDING JUDGE
    MIDDLE SECTION
    _____________________________
    WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 01A01-9710-CH-00561

Filed Date: 9/14/1998

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014