Fletcher v. Fletcher

480 S.E.2d 488, 253 Va. 30, 1997 Va. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 10, 1997
DocketRecord 960693
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 480 S.E.2d 488 (Fletcher v. Fletcher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fletcher v. Fletcher, 480 S.E.2d 488, 253 Va. 30, 1997 Va. LEXIS 16 (Va. 1997).

Opinion

JUSTICE COMPTON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this chancery proceeding arising from a dispute over an inter vivos trust, we consider the extent of a trustee’s duty to furnish information about the trust instrument and about other documents relating to the trust.

The facts are presented on appeal by a Rule 5:11 agreed statement of facts. During their lifetimes, J. North Fletcher and Elinor Leh Fletcher, his wife, residents of Fauquier County, accumulated substantial assets.

*32 Following Mr. Fletcher’s death in 1984, Mrs. Fletcher executed a revocable, inter vivos “Trust Agreement” in December 1985 in which she placed all her assets. The ten-page document, containing nine articles, named her as both “Grantor” and “Trustee.” In August 1993, the Grantor modified the Trust Agreement by executing a “Trust Agreement Amendment.” The five-page Amendment replaced Article Six of the Trust Agreement with a new Article Six.

The Trust Agreement as amended (the Trust Agreement) contains, among other things, specific provisions for the establishment of a number of trusts upon the Grantor’s death, including three separate trusts for the respective benefit of appellee James N. Fletcher, Jr., an adult child of the Grantor, and his two children, Andrew N. Fletcher, bom in 1972, and Emily E. Fletcher, bom in 1976 (sometimes collectively, the beneficiaries). The three separate trusts were to be in the amount of $50,000 each. The Trust Agreement appointed appellant Henry L. Fletcher, another adult child of the Grantor, and appellant F & M Bank-Peoples Trust and Asset Management Group, formerly Peoples National Bank of Warrenton, as successor Trustees to act upon the Grantor’s death.

Under the Trust Agreement, the Trastees are authorized, in their discretion, to expend for the benefit of James N. Fletcher, Jr., such amounts of the net income and principal of the $50,000 trust as may be necessary to provide him adequate medical insurance and medical care during his lifetime, or until such time as the trust is depleted. In the event the trust is still in existence at Fletcher’s death, then the Trustees are required to transfer and pay over to his surviving children his or her proportionate share of die balance of the remaining principal and income.

Under the Trust Agreement, the Trustees also are authorized, in their discretion, to expend for the benefit of Fletcher’s children such amounts of the income and principal of each of the $50,000 trusts as they deem advisable.

The Grantor died in June 1994. Upon her death, the Trust Agreement became irrevocable, and the successor Trustees assumed their duties. They established the three $50,000 trusts, and the beneficiaries have benefited from them.

In June 1995, beneficiary James N. Fletcher, Jr., instituted the present proceeding against the Trustees. In a bill of complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the December 1985 instrument recites that the Grantor “transferred, assigned and set over certain cash and securities which were . . . described in a schedule entitled ‘A’ attached to *33 the trust agreement.” The plaintiff further alleged that, upon his mother’s death, he was advised that the assets had been transferred to “a new trust” with the defendants as Trustees.

The plaintiff also asserted that he “requested details from the defendants of both the December 3, 1985 trust and the trust created with the assets of that trust upon his mother’s death,” and that the Trustees have refused to comply with his request. He further asserted that he has been provided with only pages 1, 8 and 9 of the 1985 instrument and “two pages” from the Amendment. The plaintiff also asserted that “[w]ithout a listing of the precise terms of both trust agreements or a complete listing of the assets of these trusts,” he is “unable to determine whether or not the trust estate is being properly protected.”

Plaintiff also alleged that Trustee Henry L. Fletcher “has repeatedly made a point of justifying his failure to disclose the requested information ... by stating that it was his mother’s request that the trust terms and dealings be kept confidential, even from the beneficiaries.” Further, the plaintiff asserts that Trustee Fletcher “has failed to produce any written direction from [their mother] with respect to the confidentiality.” This situation, along with other facts, according to the allegations, has resulted in “an extremely strained relationship between” the brothers.

Concluding, the plaintiff alleged that because he lacks the “relevant information” sought, “he is unable to determine whether or not either trustee is properly performing their duties as a trustee[] according to law.” Thus, he asked the court to compel the Trustees “to provide full and complete copies of all trust instruments in their possession that relate to the two trusts referred to herein.”

In a demurrer, the Trustees asserted that the bill of complaint failed to state a cause of action. In an answer, the Trustees denied that any “new trust” was created upon the Grantor’s death, and asserted that the Trust Agreement remained in effect following the death. The Trustees asserted, however, that upon the death, “separate trusts were created under the express terms of the Trust Agreement,” and that the plaintiff has been provided with “all provisions of the Trust Agreement relating to him and his children, along with regular accountings relating to his interest under the Trust Agreement.” In sum, the Trustees denied the plaintiff is entitled to the information sought.

*34 In October 1995, pursuant to an agreed order, the Trustees filed the Trust Agreement under seal with the court, to be examined only by the court.

Subsequently, the trial court heard argument on the demurrer and, during the hearing, ruled that the plaintiff was entitled to see all provisions of the Trust Agreement. The court noted that the plaintiff’s “interests as a child of” the Grantor and as “a beneficiary of her trust outweighed the arguments advanced” by the Trustees.

Accordingly, in a January 1996 final order, the court said it was of opinion that the plaintiff “has an absolute right to complete copies of the Trust Agreement and all amendments referred to in the pleadings and associated documents.” Thus, the court ordered the Trustees to provide the plaintiff with “full and complete copies of the Trust instruments that are referred to in the Bill of Complaint filed in this cause.” The Trustees appeal.

The Trustees contend the trial court erred in finding that the plaintiff had an absolute right to review complete copies of the Trust Agreement and in ordering them to provide plaintiff with such copies. Emphasizing that the trust instrument established three separate trusts, the Trustees argue the trial court’s order “ignores the fiduciary duty of confidentiality between the Trustees and other beneficiaries under the . . . Trust Agreement.” Noting the use of revocable trusts in planning disposition of assets upon death, the Trustees say that following a grantor’s death, “the trustees handle the trust assets for the various beneficiaries, in accordance with the grantor’s instruction, in a manner appropriate for each beneficiary taking into account the unique circumstances applicable to each beneficiary.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
480 S.E.2d 488, 253 Va. 30, 1997 Va. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fletcher-v-fletcher-va-1997.