Edwards v. Urice

2004 OK CIV APP 86, 99 P.3d 256, 75 O.B.A.J. 3061, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2004 WL 2365152
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 28, 2004
Docket100,031
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2004 OK CIV APP 86 (Edwards v. Urice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edwards v. Urice, 2004 OK CIV APP 86, 99 P.3d 256, 75 O.B.A.J. 3061, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2004 WL 2365152 (Okla. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

CARL B. JONES, Judge.

[ 1 This case involves a purported exercise of a power of appointment granted to Eloise Cooper Bowers (Bowers) by her mother, Eloise Powers Cooper, in the Eloise Powers Cooper Revocable Trust Agreement (Cooper Trust). The Cooper Trust gave Bowers, a current income beneficiary of the Cooper Trust, a limited power to appoint Trust A of the Cooper Trust to or for the benefit of Bowers' grandson, Robert Drew Bowers, an incapacitated person (Drew). In the event Bowers failed to exercise the power of appointment, Trust A would be held for the benefit of Plaintiff/Appellee/Cross-Appellee, Patricia Bowers Edwards, Bowers' daughter and the natural mother of Drew (Edwards). Edwards filed a motion for partial summary judgment claiming that Bowers' exercise of the power of appointment was invalid and ineffective to appoint Drew as beneficiary of Trust A of the Cooper Trust. The trial court agreed. In reversing that order, we hold Bowers effectively exercised the power of appointment.

T2 The pertinent facts are undisputed. In 1968, Eloise Powers Cooper created the Cooper Trust. Upon Eloise Powers Cooper's death, the trust estate of the Cooper Trust was divided into two separate trusts: Trust A and Trust B. Only Trust A is at issue here. Bowers was named as the current income beneficiary of Trust A. In addition, the Coo *258 per Trust granted Bowers a special power of appointment. Specifically, Article 4.83 of the Cooper Trust provided:

A current income beneficiary shall have the power, either by will at his death or during his lifetime after having reached the age of thirty (80) years by written instrument signed by such current income beneficiary and delivered to the Trustees during such beneficiary's lifetime, to direct Trustees to pay and distribute or to continue to hold in trust all or any part of the trust estate or estates with respect to which he is at the time a "current income beneficiary" to or for the benefit of (1) Drew .... as such current income benefi-clary may direct, provided that in exercising such special power, specific reference is made in the will or written instrument to the power of appointment and purports to exercise such power.

3 The Cooper Trust specified upon Bowers' death that if Bowers failed to effectively exercise the power of appointment, Edwards would become the successor current income beneficiary of Trust A.

1 4 In January, 2000, Bowers executed and created a Third Amended and Restated Trust Agreement (Bowers Trust). Article 7.11 of the Bowers Trust provided:

Powers of Appointment. Pursuant to the terms of that certain Eloise Powers Cooper Revocable Trust Agreement, dated March 18, 1968, entered into by and between Eloise Powers Cooper, as Settlor, and the then First National Bank and Trust Company of Oklahoma City, as Trustee, the Settlor is the current income beneficiary of said Trust and, in accordance with the provisions of Article 4.3 of said Trust, has a limited power of appointment with regard to the assets of Trust A which is a part of said Trust. Accordingly, in the event that the Settlor's daughter, Patricia Bowers Edwards, shall in any way contest, (1) the provision of this Trust, (i) the provisions of any other trust established by the Settlor and/or her late husband, Robert S. Bowers, (#) the establishment or funding of the Robert S. and Eloise C. Bowers Foundation or the appointment of any trustee thereof, or (iv) should the Settlor's daughter contest the appointment of John R. Duty or any other person to serve as guardian or co-guardian of her son, Robert Drew Bowers, the Set-tlor shall be deemed to have specifically and intentionally exercised said limited power of appointment, as contemplated by said Article 4.3, in favor of her grandson, Robert Drew Bowers, also known as Drew Cunningham, with the intention that the interest of the Settlor's daughter in the Eloise Powers Cooper Trust shall terminate.

15 The parties do not controvert that a copy of the Bowers Trust was delivered to the trustee of the Cooper Trust during Bowers' lifetime.

16 On July 12, 2000, Edwards filed an action in the District Court of Oklahoma County, Case No. CJ-2000-5046, challenging the acts of the trustees of certain trusts created by Robert S. Bowers, deceased. In addition, on August 17, 2001, Edwards filed the instant action to dissolve the Robert S. Bowers and Eloise C. Bowers Foundation, a private foundation (Bowers Foundation) and to remove BaneFirst, a national banking association, as Trustee of the Bowers Trust for breach of fiduciary duty. Thus, it is uncon-troverted one or more of the conditions precedent described in Article 7.11 of the Bowers Trust were satisfied.

17 Bowers died on October 21, 2001. On November 19, 2001, Edwards dismissed with prejudice Bowers and her estate from the instant lawsuit. Upon Bowers' death, Drew was substituted as the income beneficiary of Trust A of the Cooper Trust and began receiving the income distributions formerly distributed to Bowers.

T8 In May 2003, Edwards filed a motion for partial summary judgment which urged Bowers' exercise of the power of appointment was invalid and ineffective because: 1) The purported exercise was not operative until Bowers' death; and therefore was a testamentary disposition that had to be exercised by will; 2) The purported exercise was not a valid inter vivos transfer because there were no income distributions to Drew prior to Bowers' death; and 8) the assets of the *259 Cooper Trust were never transferred to the Bowers Trust; therefore, any attempt to dispose of those assets through the Bowers Trust was ineffective.

T9 In response, Defendants/Appellants, Rex Urice, the lifetime trustee of the Bowers Foundation, and BaneFirst, as trustee of the Bowers Trust (Appellants), denied certain allegedly disputed facts and contended Edwards' arguments are without merit. Appellants also filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment urging Bowers' exercise of the power of appointment complied with the requirements for the exercise imposed by the donor and Oklahoma law; and the occurrence of the conditions precedent specified in Article 7.11 automatically triggered the exercise of the power of appointment thereby appointing Drew as the beneficiary of Trust A of the Cooper Trust. - Cross-Appellant, Lloyd D. McAlister, guardian ad litem for Drew (McAlister) filed a separate cross-motion for summary judgment urging that, as a matter of law, Bowers effectively exercised her special power of appointment in favor of Drew.

{10 After a hearing on the motions, the trial court sustained Edwards' motion and denied Appellants' and MeAlister's eross-motion for partial summary judgment. Appellants and McAlister appealed. This matter stands submitted without appellate briefs on the trial court record. See Rule 13, Rules for District Courts, 12 O.S.2001, Ch. 2, App. 1, and Rule 1.36, Oklahoma Supreme Court Rules, 12 O.S.2001, Ch. 15, App.

{11 This Court's standard of review of a trial court's grant of summary judgment is de novo. Hoyt v. Paul R. Miller, M.D., Inc., 1996 OK 80, ¶ 2, 921 P.2d 350, 351-52. Where the facts are not disputed an appeal presents only a question of law. Gladstone v. Bartlesville Independent School Dist. No. 30 (I 30), 2003 OK 30, ¶ 5, 66 P.3d 442, 446. This Court has the plenary, independent, and nondeferential authority to reexamine a trial court's legal rulings.

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Related

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF PIERCE
2017 OK CIV APP 25 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2016)
Edwards v. BancFIRST
2011 OK CIV APP 100 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2011)
Edwards v. Urice
2009 OK CIV APP 20 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2008)

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Bluebook (online)
2004 OK CIV APP 86, 99 P.3d 256, 75 O.B.A.J. 3061, 2004 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 67, 2004 WL 2365152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edwards-v-urice-oklacivapp-2004.