Bobby Reed v. Willie Kate Reed ( 2018 )


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  •                                                                                          02/13/2018
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT KNOXVILLE
    September 12, 2017 Session
    BOBBY REED v. WILLIE KATE REED ET AL.
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Greene County
    No. 20140158    Douglas T. Jenkins, Chancellor
    No. E2017-00273-COA-R3-CV
    This appeal involves the interpretation and construction of a trust agreement. John
    Marion Reed and his wife Willie Kate Reed, in the process of their estate planning,
    executed a revocable living trust agreement. They conveyed approximately 204.61 acres
    of real property to the trust. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Reed died testate. The trust was the
    sole residual beneficiary of his will. Mrs. Reed, the successor trustee, distributed all of
    the real estate in the trust to herself by way of a quitclaim deed. She then terminated the
    trust. Bobby Reed, her son and a beneficiary of the trust, filed this action alleging that
    Mrs. Reed exceeded her authority under the terms of the trust agreement. He asked the
    trial court to order an accounting of the assets of the trust that had been distributed by
    Mrs. Reed since her husband’s death. He sought the return to the trust of the assets
    wrongfully distributed. The trial court held that Mrs. Reed did not have the authority to
    transfer all of the real estate in the trust. Accordingly, the court voided the quitclaim
    deed, and granted the requested relief of Bobby Reed. We affirm the trial court’s
    judgment.
    Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court
    Affirmed; Case Remanded
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which D. MICHAEL
    SWINEY, C.J., and THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, J., joined.
    Cheryl E. LaNasa and Mark W. McFall, Johnson City, Tennessee, for the appellant,
    Willie Kate Reed, Executrix of the Estate of John Marion Reed and Trustee of the John
    Marion Reed and Willie Kate Reed Living Trust, and Cindy Kinley.
    Jerry W. Laughlin, Greeneville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Bobby Reed.
    1
    OPINION
    I.
    The Reeds executed the trust agreement on November 15, 2000. Mr. Reed
    executed his will the same day. On January 3, 2001, the Reeds conveyed a total of
    approximately 204.61 acres of real estate to the trust by four quitclaim deeds. Two of the
    deeds were executed jointly. Mr. and Mrs. Reed each executed one deed separately. Mr.
    Reed died on May 27, 2001. His will designates Mrs. Reed as executor and further
    provides in pertinent part as follows:
    I give any interest I have in all personal automobiles,
    clothing, jewelry, china, silver, books, pictures, and other
    works of art, household furniture and furnishings and all other
    items of domestic, household or personal use to wife, if she
    survives me.
    *      *        *
    All the rest, residue and remainder of my estate, both real and
    personal, . . . including all of my separate property, if any,
    and my share of the jointly held property of my wife and
    myself, I give, devise and bequeath to the individual or bank
    then acting as Trustee under the certain Trust Agreement
    designated as The John Marion Reed and Willie Kate Reed
    Trust, signed earlier this day and bearing the same date as this
    Last Will and Testament, of which my wife and I are Co-
    Trustors and Co-Trustees, to be combined with the other
    assets of the trust and held, administered and distributed as a
    part of that trust, according to the terms thereof and any
    amendments made to it prior to my death.
    On March 27, 2002, Mrs. Reed, purporting to act in her capacity as executor, transferred
    an additional 76 acres of real estate to the trust. A week later, she conveyed all of the real
    property held by the trust to herself individually. She then terminated the trust.
    Plaintiff brought this action on December 5, 2014, alleging that Mrs. Reed
    “wrongfully, and without authority, conveyed to herself all of the real estate in [the]
    Trust, worth hundreds of thousands of dollars.” Also named as a defendant was Cindy
    Kinley, his sister and holder of a power of attorney for Mrs. Reed. He further alleged that
    2
    [t]he Plaintiff, as one of the vested remainder beneficiaries of
    the Trust . . . is entitled to an accounting of the disposition of
    the assets of John Marion Reed at the time of his death as
    well as the assets then in The John Marion Reed and Willie
    Kate Reed Living Trust, and to the return to said Trust of any
    assets that have been wrongfully removed from said Trust by
    the Defendant Trustee, or her power of attorney[.]
    Mrs. Reed answered, arguing that the trust agreement provided her the authority to
    undertake the challenged actions.
    A trial took place on December 14, 2016. The parties entered eleven stipulated
    exhibits at the beginning of the hearing. These exhibits, the parties’ affidavits, and their
    discovery answers provided the framework of the undisputed facts in the case. At trial,
    plaintiff’s counsel began his opening statement. The trial court asked several questions
    regarding the terms of the trust agreement. Following this, the court said, “I don’t think
    we need any proof . . . I don’t think she can do it as a matter of law.” The court entered
    an order holding that the quitclaim deed from Mrs. Reed, in her capacity as trustee, to
    herself individually “was executed without authority by the Trustee under the terms of
    the said Trust, and consequently is void and should be set aside.” The trial court further
    ordered Mrs. Reed to “provide to the Plaintiff a written accounting for any and all
    personal property of the Trust that she has distributed to anyone since the date of the
    death of John Marion Reed.” Mrs. Reed timely filed a notice of appeal.
    II.
    The issues presented are as follows:1
    1. Whether the trial court denied the defendants due process
    of law by failing to conduct a full evidentiary hearing.
    1
    Before the trial court and in her appellate brief, Mrs. Reed challenged plaintiff’s
    standing to bring this action. However, at oral argument, her counsel conceded plaintiff’s
    standing. Mrs. Reed included in her statement of issues the issue of whether the trial court erred
    in ordering her to provide plaintiff an accounting for personal property she distributed as trustee.
    The sole sentence in her brief touching upon this issue states, “Plaintiff’s rights to a remainder
    interest are therefore contingent, and he has no vested, present right to an accounting of the
    Trust.” Mrs. Reed has waived this issue by including no argument, citation to the record, or
    citation to legal authority supporting her contention that the trial court erred by ordering an
    accounting. Newcomb v. Kohler Co., 
    222 S.W.3d 368
    , 401 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006) (“The failure
    of a party to cite to any authority or to construct an argument regarding his position on appeal
    constitutes waiver of that issue.”).
    3
    2. Whether the trial court erred in concluding that Mrs. Reed
    lacked the authority under the trust agreement to divest the
    entire principal of the trust by quitclaim deed to herself
    individually.
    III.
    “The interpretation of a trust instrument is a question of law for the court” that we
    review de novo, with no presumption of correctness. Holder v. First Tenn. Bank N.A.
    Memphis, No. W1998-00890-COA-R3-CV, 
    2000 WL 349727
    , at *3 (Tenn. Ct. App.,
    filed Mar. 31, 2000). There are no disputed issues of fact on this appeal.
    IV.
    Mrs. Reed contends on appeal that she was denied due process by the trial court’s
    ruling that no further proof was needed for the court to determine that plaintiff, as a
    matter of law, was entitled to the relief requested. Mrs. Reed, however, failed to object to
    the ruling or to raise this issue at the trial level. Consequently, this issue is waived. City
    of Cookeville ex rel. Cookeville Regional Med. Ctr. v. Humphrey, 
    126 S.W.3d 897
    , 905-
    06 (Tenn. 2004) (“As a general rule, questions not raised in the trial court will not be
    entertained on appeal”), quoting Lawrence v. Stanford, 
    655 S.W.2d 927
    , 929 (Tenn.
    1983) (internal quotation marks omitted). The only issue that is properly before us is
    issue number two in Mrs. Reed’s brief.
    We construe and interpret a trust agreement in accordance with well-established
    principles:
    Trust instruments are interpreted similarly to contracts, deeds,
    or wills. Marks v. Southern Trust Co., 
    203 Tenn. 200
    , 205,
    
    310 S.W.2d 435
    , 437–38 (1958). Determining the settlor’s
    intent is important and may be easily done by looking to the
    four corners of the trust instrument. 
    Marks[,] 310 S.W.2d at 438
    .
    In re Estate of Marks, 
    187 S.W.3d 21
    , 28 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005). As we further
    observed in Holder,
    The trust must be interpreted so as not to frustrate the intent
    of the grantor. See Henshaw v. Flenniken, 
    191 S.W.2d 541
    ,
    546 (Tenn. 1945). Though one clause may contradict or be
    4
    inconsistent with another clause within the trust, the court
    must adhere to and give effect to the intention of the grantor
    to determine which clause will prevail. See 
    Marks, 310 S.W.2d at 438
    . The grantor’s intention is to be ascertained
    from the particular words used, from the context and from the
    general scope and purpose of the instrument. See Daugherty
    v. Daugherty, 
    784 S.W.2d 650
    , 653 (Tenn. 1990).
    
    2000 WL 349727
    , at *3.
    The trust agreement before us provides that, upon the death of one spouse, the
    surviving spouse will be designated as the trustee and “shall divide the trust estate of the
    Deceased Spouse . . . into two (2) separate trusts, as designated TRUST A and TRUST
    B.” (Capitalizations in original.) The agreement further provides as follows regarding
    Trust A and Trust B:
    1. TRUST B Assets. There shall be placed in TRUST B that
    amount of the Deceased Spouse’s interest in the community,
    quasi-community and separate property included in the trust
    estate which, after taking in to [sic] account all allowable
    deductions and all allowable credits, other than the unified
    credit against federal estate tax, equals the exemption
    equivalent of the unified credit against federal estate tax . . . .
    If the Deceased Spouse’s said interest in the trust estate is less
    than such equivalent exemption amount, the Deceased
    Spouse’s entire said interest shall be placed in TRUST B.
    The assets placed in TRUST B shall not be subject to an
    election to be treated as qualified terminable interest property
    and no person shall have any power to make such an election.
    2. Trustee Assets. There shall be placed in TRUST A the
    balance, if any, of the Deceased Spouse’s interest in his or her
    separate and joint property included in the Trust Estate.
    Mrs. Reed allocated all of the trust’s assets into Trust B. Trust A was never funded.
    The trust agreement further provides, under the heading “irrevocable provisions,”
    the following:
    Upon the death of either John Marion Reed and Willie Kate
    Reed, the first Co-Trustor to die, . . . the then surviving Co-
    5
    Trustor, hereinafter called “Surviving Spouse,” with respect
    to the property of the Deceased Spouse, shall have the power
    to amend, revoke and/or terminate TRUST A (the marital
    deduction Trust) only, and TRUST B (the exemption
    equivalent Trust), hereinafter established, may not be altered,
    revoked or terminated.
    (Emphasis added.)
    The trust agreement provides certain rights and privileges to the trustee. For
    instance, it states that “[a]t any time, even after the death of one Co-Trustor, [the] Co-
    Trustee may withdraw his or her separate property, including his or her share of jointly
    held property, without the consent or concern or concurrence of the other Co-Trustor.”
    The agreement also allows the trustee to invade the principal of the trust in certain
    amounts and under certain conditions, providing as follows:
    1. Distribution of Income. On the death of the Deceased
    Spouse, the Trustee shall pay to or apply for the benefit of the
    Surviving Spouse the net income of TRUST B in quarter-
    annual or more frequent intervals.
    2. Invasion of Principal.
    (a) In the event of any illness affecting the Surviving Spouse,
    or if such Surviving Spouse should be in need of funds for
    support in the standard of living to which he or she is
    accustomed at the date of the death of the Deceased Spouse,
    and if the income of this trust shall be deemed insufficient by
    the Trustee to provide for such reasonable health, support
    and maintenance as set forth herein, the Trustee may, as often
    as it deems necessary, pay to or apply for the use and benefit
    of such Surviving Spouse such part of the principal of
    TRUST B, up to and including the whole thereof, as is
    necessary to provide for such reasonable health, support and
    maintenance.
    (b) Additionally, the Trustee may pay to the Surviving
    Spouse such part of the principal of TRUST B as such
    Surviving Spouse shall request in writing from time to time;
    provided, however, that the amount distributed to such
    Surviving Spouse during a calendar year shall not exceed the
    6
    greater of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00) or Five Percent
    (5%) of the value of the trust, and such right of withdrawal
    shall not be cumulative, but shall lapse at the end of each
    calendar year not so exercised.
    (Emphasis added.) Mrs. Reed has consistently cited and referenced section 2(a) above in
    support of her argument that she had the authority to distribute all of the real property in
    the trust to herself, but she never alleged or stated that she had an illness or that her
    income was insufficient to provide for her reasonable health, support and maintenance.
    She was well aware that this was a potential issue, and had numerous opportunities to
    allege these facts, including in her answer, responses to discovery requests, and affidavit.
    She did not. The trial court’s finding that “the Defendants have not asserted that Willie
    Kate Reed was unable to maintain the standard of living to which she was accustomed
    from the income of the Trust and the other sources of income available to her” is correct
    and fully supported by the record.
    Regarding section 2(b) quoted above, Mrs. Reed argues that because she had the
    authority to draw down the principal of the trust at the rate of 5% per year, she could
    have eventually taken the entire principal over time, and therefore she was authorized to
    do it all at once. We disagree. The agreement expressly precludes her from distributing
    to herself more than $5,000 or 5% of the value of the trust per year, which is exactly what
    she did in this case. This argument is without merit.
    There is no other provision in the trust agreement giving the trustee authority to
    distribute the entire principal of the trust to herself, all at once. We affirm the trial
    court’s construction of the trust agreement and its decision to void the quitclaim deed
    from the trustee to herself individually. We do so without prejudice to Mrs. Reed’s
    continuing ability to exercise her rights as trustee to distribute the assets of the trust but
    only if she does so in accordance with the terms of the trust.
    V.
    The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. Costs on appeal are assessed to the
    appellants, Willie Kate Reed and Cindy Kinley. This case is remanded to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with the edicts of this opinion.
    _______________________________
    CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
    7