Audette v. Brown

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 7, 2005
DocketHANcv-04-23
StatusUnpublished

This text of Audette v. Brown (Audette v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Audette v. Brown, (Me. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT HANCOCK, SS. CIVIL ACTION Docket No. CV-04-23 '", " w , - . ' " i l q' . 8 Jennifer Audette et al., Plaintiffs

Order (Motion for Summary Judgment)

Ralph Brown et al., Defendants

Pending before the court is the summary judgment motion filed by defendants Ralph Brown and Diana B. Brown. The court has reviewed the parties' submissions on the motion. The plaintiffs in this action are the children of Russell Brown, who is Ralph Brown's brother. The plaintiffs sought a judgment confirming their interest in real property located in Castine. Through the motion at bar, the movants seek an adjudication as a matter of law that the plaintiffs have no such interest and that they (the movants) alone hold title to the property. A party is entitled to summary judgment when the record shows that there is no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. M.R.Civ.P. 56(c); see also Darlings v . Ford Motor Co., 2003 ME 21, g 14, 817 A.2d 877, 879. The motion court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party. Benton Falls Associates v. Central Maine Power Company, 2003 ME 99, 10,828 A.2d 759,762. The questions of title are generated by a series of transactions among members of the parties' family affecting ownership interests. For purposes of this action, the first material transaction occurred in 1976, when John Brophy conveyed title to Merial Brown (mother of Russell and Ralph), Elizabeth Brophy (Merial's sister), Ruth Wilson (another sister) and Ralph.' Each of the grantees, who were tenants in common, thereby acquired an undivided 25% interest in the property. Ruth died in 1977, and her heirs, Carolyn Wilson and Robert Wilson (Ruth's children) inherited her 25% interest. In 1981, Ralph conveyed his 25% interest to Merial, who thus came to own an undivided 50% interest. The following year, Merial and Elizabeth created a trust, into which they conveyed their interests in the property, which amounted cumulatively to a 75% interest. (Ruth's heirs continued to hold the remaining 2596.) Merial and Elizabeth were the beneficiaries (designated as "trustors" in the Declaration of Trust), and they and Russell were named as the trustees. Under the Declaration of Trust, the trustees were to maintain the corpus "for the use of the Trusters['] family." The instrument also recited that the family desired "to continue to own and use the property for the benefit of the family members and to ultimately pass the property to the descendents of the Brown (Brophy) family." The terms of the trust reserved to Merial the right to convey the 25% interest she had inherited "in order to provide for her support and maintenance, or to redirect the beneficial interest therein." If that interest remained in the trust when she died, then half of that 25% interest would be held for Russell's benefit, and the other half of that interest would be held for Ralph's benefit. Additionally, the 25% interest that Merial acquired from Ralph would be held in trust for Ralph's benefit alone. Those respective interests to be held for the benefit of Ralph and Russell each would "continue to be held in trust so that the property may be administered as a whole for the benefit of the family during the life of Ralph D. Brown and Russell S. Brown and until their children are mature as hereinafter provided." The Declaration of Trust also provided that upon Elizabeth's death, the 25% interest she conveyed into the corpus would be held for Ralph's benefit for the same family-related purpose associated with maintenance of the interest flowing from Merial. Merial died in 1997, and Elizabeth died in 2000. The instrument then addressed the disposition of the property when both Ralph and Russell die and when the youngest of all of their children is 25 years old. At that point, the trust would terminate; the interest held for Ralph's benefit would be distributed

1 The trust instrument, executed in 1982, suggests that the 1976 conveyance was part of an inheritance from the John Brophy's estate. to his children; and the interest held for Russell's children would be distributed to his children. Alternatively and preferably, the children were authorized to create a new trust "to hold and manage the property for the benefit of the Brown family." However, the creators of the trust articulated their acknowledgement "that the passage of time and circumstances may change and that it may not be feasible and therefore this desire is expressed as a wish, not as a command." Notwithstanding the dispositional features of the Declaration of Trust, it also provided, "Nothing contained herein shall prevent family members from acquiring beneficial interests of other family members or from transferring such interests to other family members, i.e., RALPH D. BROWN or RUSSELL B. BROWN may hereafter wish to acquire the interest of RLVH B. WILSON and place it into this Trust to complete ownership of the trust property." Subsequent to the creation of the trust in 1982, there were additional transactions that purported to transfer ownership interests in the property. Ralph and Diana contend that as a result of those transactions, they are now the sole owners of the property. The motion opponents challenge the effectiveness of some of those transactions. In July 1991, Merial and Elizabeth transferred a 50% interest in the property (which can only be an interest that was part of the trust's corpus) to Ralph. If effective, Ralph then owned a 50% interest in the property; the trust retained a 25% interest; and the remaining interest stayed with Ruth's heirs. Ralph then purported to convey his 50% interest to his children, who are parties-in-interest Leslie Chalmers, Matthew B. Brown and Christopher Brown. If this conveyance was effective, each of those grantees acquired a 116 interest in the property (113 of Ralph's 50%). In 2000, however, Leslie, Matthew and Christopher released their interests back to Ralph. Two years later, Carolyn Wilson and Robert Wilson conveyed to Ralph the 25% interest they had inherited from their mother, Ruth. And in 2003, Russell purported to convey his beneficial interest in the trust property to Ralph. Ralph and Diana then engaged in a series of conveyances that resulted in the acquisition by the Brown Family Revocable Trust of the interests that Ralph contends he had acquired. The motion opponents do not dispute that in 2002 Ralph acquired the 25% undivided interest that Ruth owned and that her children conveyed directly to him. However, the motion opponents contest the validity of the transactions that, Ralph argues, resulted in his acquisition of the remaining 75% ownership interest that had passed through the trust. Therefore, the motion draws focus on, first, the 1991 conveyance when Ralph contends he acquired a 50% interest in the property; second, the nature of the interest he acquired when Merial and Elizabeth died; and, third, on the 2003 conveyance from Russell to Ralph allegedly transferring a 25% interest. The second and third transaction, however, are subject to the same analysis here, because they both raise the question of the nature of the interest that Ralph and Russell acquired upon the deaths of Merial and Elizabeth. In the end, the court cannot conclude as a matter of law that these three events were effective to convey to Ralph absolute undivided ownership interests. Section 5.07 of the Declaration of Trust states that members of the Brown family, which includes the parties at bar and all others involved in transactions germane to this proceeding, are free to transfer beneficial interests to other family members. Section 2.01 authorized the trustors, when acting simultaneously, to "alter or divest the interest of the beneficiaries. . .

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Benton Falls Associates v. Central Maine Power Co.
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Bluebook (online)
Audette v. Brown, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/audette-v-brown-mesuperct-2005.