Day v. Seblatnigg ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • ***********************************************
    The “officially released” date that appears near the be-
    ginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will be pub-
    lished in the Connecticut Law Journal or the date it was
    released as a slip opinion. The operative date for the be-
    ginning of all time periods for filing postopinion motions
    and petitions for certification is the “officially released”
    date appearing in the opinion.
    All opinions are subject to modification and technical
    correction prior to official publication in the Connecticut
    Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the event of
    discrepancies between the advance release version of an
    opinion and the latest version appearing in the Connecticut
    Law Journal and subsequently in the Connecticut Reports
    or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the latest version is to
    be considered authoritative.
    The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the
    opinion as it appears in the Connecticut Law Journal and
    bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the
    Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not
    be reproduced and distributed without the express written
    permission of the Commission on Official Legal Publica-
    tions, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut.
    ***********************************************
    DAY v. SEBLATNIGG—CONCURRENCE
    MCDONALD, J., with whom PALMER, MULLINS,
    KAHN and ECKER, Js., join, concurring. I agree with
    and join the majority opinion but write separately to
    address two concerns. First, the unusual posture of this
    case as it ultimately was presented to this court required
    resolution of a narrow question that leaves several sig-
    nificant questions unanswered regarding the intersec-
    tion of trusts and conservatorships. This is unfortunate,
    and I take this opportunity to explain why these ques-
    tions, had they been properly presented in this case,
    might have compelled a different outcome than the one
    the majority reaches today. Second, this case reveals
    the need for legislative review of voluntary conservator-
    ships, which were not a focus of the 2007 legislative
    reforms. See Public Acts 2007, No. 07-116. I therefore
    take this opportunity to draw attention to this matter
    so that the legislature is on notice about these potential
    policy matters.
    I
    I begin by making clear what this court does and
    does not decide in the present case. The only question
    before this court is whether a voluntary conservatorship
    creates a relationship of joint authority, such that a
    voluntarily conserved1 person may continue to manage
    her affairs as she is able. It is on this basis that the
    defendant First State Fiduciaries, LLC, challenges the
    Appellate Court’s conclusion that Susan D. Elia lacked
    the legal authority to create the Delaware irrevocable
    trust. It is important to underscore that the Appellate
    Court’s holding, and, in turn, this certified appeal, rests
    on an unchallenged assumption, namely, that the former
    conservator of Elia’s estate, Renee F. Seblatnigg, had
    the authority to create the Delaware irrevocable trust,
    subject to meeting the conditions prescribed in General
    Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-655 (e). After all, if the
    conservator lacked such authority, there would be no
    issue of joint authority. If we were so permitted, there
    would be several reasons to question this assumption,
    which appears to be the sole impediment to Elia’s legal
    authority to create the irrevocable trust.
    The majority opinion recognizes that involuntarily
    conserved persons have the statutory right to retain
    exclusive authority over those matters that they are
    capable of managing, with or without support from
    a source other than a conservatorship. See General
    Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-650 (k) and (l) (now § 45a-
    650 (l) and (m), respectively). The statutory scheme
    suggests; see General Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-646;
    and logic dictates that voluntarily conserved persons
    similarly can obtain a limited conservatorship. They
    may do so by simply designating in their application
    for voluntary representation which specific matters
    should be delegated to the conservator, thus retaining
    exclusive authority over all undesignated matters.2 The
    standard Probate Court form for such applications pro-
    vides a field to make such limited designations. See
    Petition/Voluntary Representation by Conservator, Form
    PC-301, p. 2 (last modified January, 2021), available at
    www.ctprobate.gov/Forms/PC-301.pdf (last visited Jan-
    uary 20, 2022) (‘‘I would like a conservator appointed
    to assist me with the following financial matters’’). Elia
    did not make such a limited designation in her applica-
    tion.
    There would be no need for Elia to make such a
    limited designation, however, if her broad grant of
    authority to manage her estate did not include the
    authority to create the irrevocable trust and to fund it
    with a transfer of funds from her revocable trust. Two
    theories might support such a proposition.
    First, certain matters cannot be delegated to the con-
    servator. See, e.g., 39 Am. Jur. 2d 113, Guardian and
    Ward § 117 (2008) (‘‘[a]s a general rule, a guardian may
    not waive legal rights on behalf of [the guardian’s] ward,
    surrender or impair rights vested in the ward or impose
    any legal burden thereon, or exercise purely personal
    elective rights of [the guardian’s] ward’’ (footnotes omit-
    ted)); see also, e.g., Newman v. Newman, 
    42 Ill. App. 2d 203
    , 213, 
    191 N.E.2d 614
     (1963) (‘‘certain powers,
    rights, or elections may be so personal that they cannot
    be exercised on behalf of an incompetent [by a conser-
    vator]’’); Estate of Townson ex rel. East Tennessee
    Human Resources Agency v. Estate of East ex rel.
    Cooley, 
    297 S.W.3d 736
    , 738 (Tenn. App. 2009) (conser-
    vator ‘‘has no authority to exercise an elective right or
    power of the conservatee’’ (internal quotation marks
    omitted)), appeal denied, Tennessee Supreme Court,
    Docket No. E2008-00689-SC-R11-CV (August 31, 2009).
    The execution of a testamentary instrument, desig-
    nating how and to whom the conserved person’s assets
    will be distributed upon his or her death, is one such
    matter. See generally 1 Restatement (Third), Trusts
    § 11, comments (a) through (d), pp. 160–62 (2003)
    (addressing testamentary capacity of persons under
    conservatorship). Authority to make testamentary dis-
    positions for the conserved person cannot be delegated
    to the conservator both because such rights are purely
    personal and because the conservator’s authority
    extends only to the lifetime interests (support and care)
    of the conserved person. See, e.g., Citizens State
    Bank & Trust Co. of Hiawatha v. Nolte, 
    226 Kan. 443
    ,
    449, 
    601 P.2d 1110
     (1979) (‘‘[A conservator’s duty] is to
    manage the estate during the conservatee’s lifetime. It
    is not his function, [or] that of the [P]robate [C]ourt
    supervising the conservatorship, to control disposition
    of the conservatee’s property after death.’’); In re Estate
    of Briley, 
    16 Kan. App. 2d 546
    , 549, 
    825 P.2d 1181
     (1992)
    (recognizing that right to change beneficiary of account
    ‘‘is a purely personal elective right of the conservatee’’
    and that ‘‘[t]he decision regarding distribution of the
    conservatee’s property after death belongs to the con-
    servatee’’); see also, e.g., In re Estate of Garrett, 
    81 Ark. App. 212
    , 218, 
    100 S.W.3d 72
     (2003) (stating that will
    making requires ‘‘ ‘personal performance’ ’’ and thus
    cannot be delegated).
    The majority properly declines to address whether
    Elia had the testamentary capacity to create the irrevo-
    cable trust because that issue was neither preserved3
    nor adequately briefed. See footnote 18 of the majority
    opinion and accompanying text. Review of the trial
    court record reveals that the irrevocable trust is not,
    strictly speaking, a testamentary trust. It was not cre-
    ated by a will; see, e.g., 1 Restatement (Third), supra,
    § 17, p. 250; see also, e.g., Public Acts 2021, No. 21-39,
    § 1 (effective January 1, 2022), to be codified at General
    Statutes (Supp. 2022) § 45a-499c (29); and it vested dis-
    cretion in the trustees to make distributions in any
    amount during Elia’s lifetime to Elia, her grandchildren,
    or any charitable institute. See, e.g., Cate-Schweyen v.
    Cate, 
    303 Mont. 232
    , 239–40, 
    15 P.3d 467
     (2000) (‘‘A
    testamentary trust . . . not only must comply with the
    statutory requirements for a will, but also must take
    effect only upon the testator’s death. . . . Therefore,
    a testamentary disposition is usually incompatible with
    a trust established by a trustor who retains a life inter-
    est, as a beneficiary of the trust, although a new benefi-
    ciary or beneficiaries acquire an interest upon the trus-
    tor’s death.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.)) Whether such a trust should be char-
    acterized for present purposes as a purely testamentary
    act, a partially testamentary act requiring concurrent
    action by the conservator and conserved person, or not
    a testamentary act at all is a difficult issue best left to
    a case in which it is the subject of adversarial briefing.
    The unfortunate effect of the present case is that Elia
    may have had testamentary capacity when she created
    the irrevocable trust and, yet, her trust assets will not
    be distributed in accordance with her wishes following
    her death, which occurred during the pendency of
    this appeal.
    The second theory that might excuse the need for
    Elia to make a limited designation of authority to her
    conservator to reserve her right to create the irrevoca-
    ble trust would depend on whether such a right is
    encompassed in the authority to manage the conserved
    person’s ‘‘estate.’’ General Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-
    655 (a). If a conserved person’s present interest in a
    trust is not part of the conservatorship estate, a good
    argument could be made that Elia retained the authority
    to create and fund a trust, as long as she did not use
    assets of her estate to do so.4 In the absence of evidence
    that Elia lacked the mental capacity to make decisions
    with regard to her trusts, she would retain the legal
    capacity to revoke or modify the Connecticut revocable
    trust, to create the Delaware irrevocable trust, and to
    request that the trustee of her revocable trust—who
    also happened to be her conservator—transfer funds
    to the irrevocable trust.
    This theory finds some support in both the statutory
    text and case law.5 The only explicit discussion of trusts
    in the conservatorship scheme is in General Statutes
    (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-655 (e). That subsection prescribes
    conditions for ‘‘transfers of income and principal from’’
    the conserved person’s estate to a trust, existing or
    created by the conservator. General Statutes (Rev. to
    2011) § 45a-655 (e). The word ‘‘from’’ suggests that the
    transfer depletes assets of the estate by directing them
    to a source outside the estate. If an existing trust or a
    new trust created by the conservator into which income
    was transferred was part of the estate, the transfer
    would be ‘‘within’’ or ‘‘to’’ the estate, not ‘‘from’’ the
    estate.6
    This court’s decision in Dept. of Social Services v.
    Saunders, 
    247 Conn. 686
    , 
    724 A.2d 1093
     (1999), lends
    support to this view. The issue in that case was ‘‘whether
    the Probate Court was authorized to permit a conserva-
    trix to establish an irrevocable inter vivos trust funded
    with the net proceeds recovered in the settlement of a
    negligence action filed on her ward’s behalf, which
    would not be considered an available resource for the
    purpose of determining ongoing [M]edicaid eligibility.’’
    Id., 687. The Superior Court decision answering that
    question in the negative, which this court reversed on
    appeal, was in fact the impetus for the 1998 amendment
    to General Statutes (Rev. to 1997) § 45a-655 (e) expressly
    authorizing such an act. See id., 697, 702–704, 715. This
    court’s decision in Saunders is noteworthy for its recog-
    nition of the effect of the transfer on the estate and on
    the conservator’s control of the transferred assets. The
    plaintiff department characterized the transfer into the
    trust as an act that had ‘‘divest[ed] the estate by transfer-
    ring its assets to an inter vivos trustee’’; id., 709; and
    ‘‘eliminate[d] [the ward’s] estate in its entirety and trans-
    fer[red] it to a trustee.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Id. The court in Saunders accepted this premise
    but nonetheless viewed the Probate Court’s permission
    for the conservator to create the trust to be a proper
    exercise of that court’s authority because the trust
    assets were still available for the ward’s care and sup-
    port through his exclusive equitable interest and that
    court would have jurisdiction over both the trustee and
    the conservator. See id., 709–12. In Saunders, this court
    also rejected the plaintiff department’s argument that
    the transfer of the ward’s assets to the trust ‘‘would
    constitute an improper delegation of the Probate
    Court’s responsibility, acting through the conservator,
    to manage [the ward’s] estate’’ because the Probate
    Court has ‘‘plenary authority to manage a ward’s estate’’
    but only limited authority to ‘‘review actions of a trustee
    of an inter vivos trust . . . .’’ Id., 710. This court
    acknowledged that the conservator’s authority in rela-
    tion to the trust would be limited to the management
    of funds distributed by the trustees, who would actually
    manage the trust in accordance with the terms of the
    trust instrument.7 See id., 710–11; see, e.g., Ramsdell v.
    Union Trust Co., 
    202 Conn. 57
    , 70, 
    519 A.2d 1185
     (1987)
    (‘‘the duties of the conservator and those of the trustees,
    and the potential liabilities arising from the breaches
    of these duties, are completely distinct’’); see also, e.g.,
    1 Restatement (Second), Trusts § 175, comment (f), p.
    381 (1959) (‘‘[t]he duty of the trustee is not only to
    take and keep control, but to take and keep exclusive
    control’’); R. Folsom & L. Beck, Connecticut Estates
    Practice Series: Drafting Trusts in Connecticut (2d Ed.
    2021) § 1:15, p. 16 (explaining that statutes and legal
    principles ‘‘[suggest] that the [c]onservator should not
    have authority to exercise the [g]rantor’s right to revoke
    or amend the trust’’).
    There may well be persuasive counterarguments. The
    questions of whether trusts are part of the estate, sub-
    ject to the conservator’s management, and, if not,
    whether Elia retained the legal authority to create the
    irrevocable trust are not, however, properly before this
    court. The defendant did argue before the Appellate
    Court that the assets in the revocable trust were not
    part of the conservatorship estate but made no argu-
    ment that this fact had any bearing on the question of
    Elia’s legal authority to create the irrevocable trust. See
    Day v. Seblatnigg, 
    186 Conn. App. 482
    , 506 n.10, 
    199 A.3d 1103
     (2018). The Appellate Court reasonably con-
    strued the defendant’s argument to be related exclu-
    sively to the question of whether Seblatnigg had the
    legal authority to transfer the revocable trust assets
    and determined that it was unnecessary to address that
    argument in light of its conclusion that Elia lacked legal
    authority to create the irrevocable trust. See 
    id.
     The
    defendant did not argue in its petition for certification
    to appeal to this court that the Appellate Court improp-
    erly had failed to reach this issue because it was directly
    connected to the question of whether Elia had authority
    to create the irrevocable trust.8 We therefore must leave
    to another day the questions of whether trusts are part
    of the conservatorship estate and, if not, whether a
    conserved person retains exclusive authority to create
    and fund trusts with assets that are not part of the
    conservatorship estate.
    II
    I also take this opportunity to highlight the possibility
    that the legislature may wish to consider revisions to
    the conservatorship scheme as it applies to voluntary
    representation, which was not directly considered in
    the 2007 reforms.
    As the majority explains, it is not uncommon for
    persons seeking voluntary representation to have the
    same degree of incapacity as involuntarily conserved
    persons, whether at the time the application is submit-
    ted or sometime thereafter. See, e.g., Conn. Joint Stand-
    ing Committee Hearings, Judiciary, Pt. 1, 1977 Sess., p.
    190, testimony of Probate Judge Bernard F. Joy; see
    also, e.g., Public Acts 1987, No. 87-87. This fact would
    suggest that some members of the former class may be
    equally vulnerable to some of the abuses that prompted
    the 2007 reforms. Yet, because the statutory definition
    of a ‘‘conserved person’’ includes only involuntarily con-
    served persons; see General Statutes § 45a-644 (h); it
    appears that protections available in involuntary con-
    servatorships are unavailable in voluntary conservator-
    ships. Those protections include the right to clear notice
    of the legal consequences of the appointment of a con-
    servatorship, including the fact that conserved persons
    ‘‘will lose some of [their] rights’’; (internal quotation
    marks omitted) General Statutes § 45a-649 (b); the right
    to appointed counsel, the right to have the Probate
    Court ascertain whether the applicant has the capacity
    to retain certain rights, and the right to periodic judicial
    review of the conservatorship to ascertain whether the
    court should modify or terminate the conservatorship.
    See General Statutes §§ 45a-649 (d), 45a-649a, 45a-650
    (m) and 45a-660 (c). The only right provided to the
    person in a proceeding for voluntary representation,
    other than to be present and heard, is that the court
    shall ‘‘[explain] to the [applicant] that granting the peti-
    tion will subject the [applicant] or the [applicant’s] prop-
    erty . . . to the authority of the conservator . . . .’’
    General Statutes § 45a-646.
    Perhaps not all of the procedural protections afforded
    to involuntarily conserved persons are necessary when
    the conservatorship is being requested, rather than
    imposed, and the voluntarily conserved person has the
    distinct right to terminate the conservatorship at will,
    with thirty days notice. See General Statutes § 45a-647.
    But the present case illustrates the pitfalls of the lack
    of any explicit procedural requirements. The Probate
    Court made no effort to ascertain what authority, if
    any, Elia wanted to retain or what limits, if any, she
    wanted to place on her conservatorship. The court’s
    explanation of the legal consequences of the appoint-
    ment of a conservator of Elia’s estate; see footnote 13
    of the majority opinion; could have misled Elia to
    believe that she retained authority over her entire estate
    and had given Seblatnigg authority only to act as her
    agent under a relationship of joint authority. Hopefully,
    this court’s opinion in this case will provide clearer
    direction on that matter.
    1
    For consistency with the majority opinion, I also refer to a voluntarily
    represented person as ‘‘voluntarily conserved,’’ mindful that such persons
    do not fall within the definition of a conserved person and have not been
    found by a court to be incapable of managing their affairs. See General
    Statutes § 45a-644 (g) and (h); General Statutes (Rev. to 2011) § 45a-646.
    2
    The exercise of such authority may nonetheless be rendered void if it
    is demonstrated that the voluntarily conserved person lacked the requisite
    mental capacity to undertake the act in question. See, e.g., 1 Restatement
    (Third), Trusts § 11, comment (e), pp. 162–63 (2003).
    3
    As the majority notes, the defendant had cast the question before the
    Appellate Court as a question of Elia’s capacity to contract, and that court
    viewed it as such. See footnote 18 of the majority opinion. I note that there
    is authority indicating that the creation of a trust is not contractual in nature.
    See, e.g., Tunick v. Tunick, 
    201 Conn. App. 512
    , 525–26, 
    242 A.3d 1011
    (2020), cert. denied, 
    336 Conn. 910
    , 
    244 A.3d 561
     (2021); see also 
    id.
     (citing
    authorities).
    4
    The defendant pointed out in its memorandum in support of its motion
    to strike the complaint filed by the plaintiff, Margaret E. Day, coconservator
    of Elia’s estate, that the schedule to the trust instrument recited that $1
    was the property conveyed to the irrevocable trust at the time of its establish-
    ment, and that the complaint made no allegation that this sum came from
    conservatorship estate assets. The trial court did not rule on this motion,
    filed well after the plaintiff filed her motion for summary judgment, and the
    defendant’s appellate briefs appear to assume that the irrevocable trust was
    funded by a transfer from the revocable trust.
    5
    There is an indication in the trial court record that Elia and the Probate
    Court judge who granted her application for representation did not view
    the revocable trust to be part of the estate. One of the defendant’s filings
    in opposition to the motion for summary judgment recited an exchange that
    purportedly occurred at a Probate Court hearing at which Elia’s children
    unsuccessfully sought to have Elia found incapable of managing her affairs
    and involuntarily conserved. At that proceeding, a question was raised about
    the omission of Elia’s revocable trust from Seblatnigg’s inventory of the
    estate. Both the judge and Elia’s counsel made comments indicating that
    they understood the revocable trust to be outside the conservatorship estate
    and, thus, properly excluded from the inventory required under § 45a-655
    (a). The defendant did not renew this argument in its Appellate Court brief,
    and nothing in the record indicates how or whether the plaintiff responded
    to this argument before the trial court.
    6
    The trial court concluded that the revocable trust assets were part of
    the conservatorship estate, pointing to the conservator’s duty under § 45a-
    655 (a) to include ‘‘equitable present interest[s]’’ in an inventory of the
    conserved person’s estate and the uncontested fact that Elia held an equita-
    ble interest in the Connecticut revocable trust. Even if we assume that the
    conservator has the duty to include trust assets in the inventory, I do not
    view that fact as dispositive of the question of whether the trust is part of
    the estate, subject to the conservator’s management. Cf. In re Conservator-
    ship of Addison v. Touchstone, 
    242 So. 3d 926
    , 935–36 (Miss. App. 2018)
    (‘‘joint accounts created prior to the [ward’s] incapacity [are] not subject
    to being marshalled by the conservator, although the funds may be used if
    necessary to pay for the care and expenses of the ward during his lifetime’’
    (internal quotation marks omitted)). If trusts are part of the estate, however,
    that would raise the question of whether a transfer of funds from one trust
    to another would be a transfer ‘‘from’’ the estate.
    7
    I am not suggesting that the conservator would lack authority to request
    a distribution from the trust for the conserved person’s support in accor-
    dance with the terms of the trust or to file an action on the conserved
    person’s behalf to compel the trustees to meet their fiduciary obligations.
    8
    The defendant petitioned this court for certification of two issues: (1)
    whether the Appellate Court correctly determined that Elia did not retain
    any control over her estate; and (2) whether ‘‘the trial court err[ed] when
    it concluded that [General Statutes (Rev. to 2011)] § 45a-655 (e), a statute
    directed solely to the conduct of conservators, applied to the conduct of a
    voluntarily conserved person.’’ (Emphasis added.) We granted certification,
    limited to the first issue. See Day v. Seblatnigg, 
    331 Conn. 913
    , 
    204 A.3d 702
     (2019); see also footnote 5 of the majority opinion (reframing certi-
    fied question).