Darlene Ann Hoffpauir v. Robert P. Cormier

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 19, 2019
Docket09-18-00358-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Darlene Ann Hoffpauir v. Robert P. Cormier (Darlene Ann Hoffpauir v. Robert P. Cormier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darlene Ann Hoffpauir v. Robert P. Cormier, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00358-CV __________________

DARLENE ANN HOFFPAUIR, Appellant

V.

ROBERT P. CORMIER, ET AL, Appellees __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 60th District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-201,069-A __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Robert P. Cormier, individually, and Robert P. Cormier and David Olson, in

their positions as co-trustees to the Paul J. Cormier Family Trust for the benefit of

Robert P. Cormier and the Paul J. Cormier Family Trust GST Exempt for the benefit

of Robert P. Cormier, filed a Petition for Modification of Trust Agreement.1 Robert

1 Because multiple individuals have the surname “Cormier,” we refer to Robert P. Cormier, Paul J. Cormier, and Carlene Cormier by their first names. In the record, Robert is referred to alternatively as “Bobby.” 1 sought to modify the terms of the trust agreement created by Paul Cormier on

November 12, 1993, and each of the subtrusts created thereunder pursuant to Texas

Property Code section 112.054(a). See Tex. Prop. Code Ann. § 112.054(a) (West

Supp. 2018). Co-trustees of Trusts for the benefit of Carlene Cormier subsequently

intervened seeking modification consistent with Robert’s requested relief and sought

a declaratory judgment to that effect. Following a hearing, the trial court granted the

requested modification. Darlene Ann Hoffpauir, a beneficiary of the trusts, appeals

the trial court’s Order Directing the Modification of Trust Agreement. We affirm the

trial court’s Order Directing the Modification of Trust Agreement.

Background

On November 12, 1993, Paul Cormier created the “Paul J. Cormier Family

Trust.” Paul established the trust for the benefit of his three children, Carlene Ann

Swensen, Darlene Ann LeFleur (Hoffpauir), and Robert P. Cormier. Paul named

Robert and W.T. Edgar co-trustees. The original trust agreement divided the initial

Trust Estate into three equal shares, “one for the benefit of each Beneficiary.” The

terms of the original trust agreement provided that ten years after the end of the

month in which Paul died, the principal and income of the trust should be delivered

to the beneficiaries. Paul died on October 30, 2009, and thereafter, additional assets

were added to the corpus of the Trust and the Trust Estate was split into six separate

2 subtrusts for tax purposes in satisfaction of the trust terms. These subtrusts are as

follows:

1. Paul J. Cormier Family Trust fbo Robert P. Cormier;

2. Paul J. Cormier GST Exempt fbo Robert P. Cormier;

3. Paul J. Cormier Family Trust fbo Carlene A. Cormier;

4. Paul J. Cormier GST Exempt fbo Carlene A. Cormier;

5. Paul J. Cormier Family Trust fbo Darlene Hoffpauir; and

6. Paul J. Cormier GST Exempt fbo Darlene Hoffpauir.

In their Petition for Modification of Trust Agreement, Appellees contended

there were two specific and material purposes of the Trust. First, they argued that

the Grantor created the trust to provide spendthrift and creditor protection for the

trust estate. They point out that those provisions are designed to ensure the assets

held by the Trustees are safeguarded from creditor claims and are available to

provide for the support, maintenance, medical care, education and welfare of the

primary beneficiaries, initially being the Grantor’s children.

Second, Appellees argued that the Grantor created the Trust, and in particular

directed an extended ten-year term for the Trust after death of the Grantor, for the

purpose of continuing business operations and the management of the Trust’s real

estate investments. Specifically addressing the issue of the need for a period of

3 continued joint management after Grantor’s death, Appellees pointed to Section 2.2

of the Trust Agreement providing that “[t]en years after the end of the month in

which the Grantor dies[,] the Trustee shall convey and deliver to any child of Grantor

then living the principal and accumulated income of his trust.” 2 Appellees also

asserted in their Petition that the same section of the Trust Agreement further

provides specific instructions and language describing the overriding intent of the

Grantor:

It is the desire of the Grantor that a child who receives distribution of his trust hereunder continue to operate any business being operated by the Trustee prior to termination, with respect to business assets thus distributed, as a partner in partnership with the Trustee and/or with his brother and sisters, or in such other form as may be appropriate for the operation of such business enterprise. Grantor has devoted a great deal of effort in establishing business enterprises and accumulated assets therefor during his lifetime and such business enterprises have supported the family well. It is the hope of Grantor that the trustee can carry on such business enterprises and that after the termination of all trusts herein created the descendant of Grantor can continue to carry on such business enterprises for their mutual benefit and profit.

Thus, Appellees contended in their Petition for Modification of the Trust Agreement

that the Grantor anticipated the need for an extended period of joint cooperation and

management of the Trust’s investment assets and each of the other trusts created

under the Trust Agreement for the benefit of his children. Appellees asserted that the

2 The parties refer to this as the Termination Date. 4 Grantor assumed a period of ten years would be needed to substantially complete

the management and liquidation of the Trust estate and the Trust terms of Section

2.2 reflect this assumption. Appellees also pointed out that unless modified by the

Court, the Trust was scheduled to terminate on October 31, 2019, and substantial

loss would be incurred by the corpus of the trust.

The Appellees argued in their Petition that unanticipated circumstances

necessitated the modification. Specifically, they pointed to a number of property

interests it held as Cow Bayou Holdings LLC and Cormier Family Partnership and

argued that liquidating those assets required management and could not be profitably

sold under current market conditions. Appellees also argued that if the Trust

terminated on October 31, 2019, it would create a severe hardship on Robert and

Carlene, because Robert had significant business interests apart from the Trust to

attend to and Carlene had limited real estate management experience. Finally,

Appellees contended that Hoffpauir was adjudged partially incapacitated and subject

to a guardianship of her estate to protect her financial assets. Therefore, any assets

distributed to either trust for the benefit of Hoffpauir would be subject to dependent

administration likewise creating a hardship on the court and her guardian. According

to Appellees, those circumstances would significantly increase costs and expenses,

causing a waste of resources which would negatively impact all three primary

5 beneficiaries and could not have been foreseen by Paul when he created the Trust

Agreement in 1993.3

The co-trustees of the Paul J. Cormier Family Trust for the benefit of Carlene

Cormier and the Paul J.

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