Frazer v. Millington

475 S.E.2d 811, 252 Va. 195, 1996 Va. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 13, 1996
DocketRecord 952115
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 475 S.E.2d 811 (Frazer v. Millington) 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
Frazer v. Millington, 475 S.E.2d 811, 252 Va. 195, 1996 Va. LEXIS 87 (Va. 1996).

Opinion

JUSTICE LACY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal involves issues relating to the exercise of a special testamentary power of appointment contained in a trust agreement and to a management/co-ownership agreement executed between beneficiaries of the trust.

Mildred W. Frazer executed a will and a Trust Agreement in 1984 which provided that all her property be placed into the Mildred W. Frazer Trust (the Trust) at her death. The Trust was a discretionary trust to be administered for the benefit of her two children, Dan L. Frazer and Shelle Frazer Millington. The relevant division date of the Trust was July 1, 1995.

Following Mildred Frazer’s death in 1986, disputes arose between the trust beneficiaries and the trustees. The resulting litigation was settled in 1992. As part of the settlement, the trustees agreed to name Shelle as trustee with Dan as the successor trustee in the event Shelle could not serve. Additionally, Dan and Shelle executed a Management/co-ownership Agreement which contained provisions regarding the division and distribution of the Trust assets and authorized Shelle to run the businesses which comprised the primary assets of the Trust.

Shelle died unexpectedly in 1994, leaving no children. In her will she named her husband, Austin Linwood Millington, as the executor and sole beneficiary of her estate. Shelle’s will also referred to a special testamentary power of appointment contained in Article V, Paragraph 3 of the Trust Agreement, and directed that “all property subject thereto shall pass to my husband.”

*198 Following Shelle’s death, Dan, acting as successor trustee, transferred some assets of the Trust to himself and directed that trust distributions be made only to him.

Millington, individually and as executor of Shelle’s estate, filed a bill of complaint seeking, inter alia, a declaratory judgment that either (1) he, individually, was a beneficiary of the Trust through Shelle’s exercise of the special testamentary power of appointment in his favor, or (2) Shelle’s estate was a beneficiary of the Trust because it succeeded to her contract rights in the Management/co-ownership Agreement. Millington also sought the appointment of an independent trustee.

Following a four-day hearing, the trial court ruled that provisions of both the Trust Agreement and Managemenl/co-ownership Agreement were ambiguous and, based on extrinsic evidence, concluded that Shelle’s exercise of the special testamentary power of appointment was ineffective to pass any interest in the Trust to Millington. The trial court further held that the Management/co-ownership Agreement was a valid contract and that, under Paragraph 20 of the Agreement, Shelle’s estate succeeded to her contract right to require distribution of the trust assets in accordance with the terms of the Agreement. The trial court appointed an independent trustee based on its determination that neither the Management/co-ownership Agreement nor the 1992 settlement agreement constituted a valid appointment of Dan as a successor trustee to Shelle. Finally, the trial court ruled that the Trust was liable for the attorneys’ fees and costs related to litigation filed by Dan which Shelle defended in her capacity as trustee of the Trust.

Dan appealed, challenging the trial court’s holding that Shelle’s estate could enforce contract rights under the Management/ co-ownership Agreement, the appointment of an independent trustee, and the payment of attorneys’ fees and costs by the Trust. Millington assigned cross-error, asserting that the terms of the Trust Agreement were not ambiguous and that Shelle had effectively exercised the special testamentary power of appointment granted in Article V, Paragraph 3 of the Trust Agreement. We awarded an appeal on all issues.

We begin, as the trial court did, by considering the provisions of the Trust Agreement applicable to the special testamentary power of appointment which Shelle attempted to exercise in favor of Millington. The relevant provisions of the Trust Agreement state in pertinent part:

*199 2. . . .
On the Division Date, the Trustee shall divide the Trust Estate into separate shares, one share for each of her children who is living on the Division Date and one for each of her deceased children who leaves a descendant living on the Division Date.
3. Each child who survives the Grantor shall have a special testamentary power to appoint all or any part of the undistributed income and principal of his share (when determined as of the Division Date) to any person, firm or institution other than his estate, his creditors or the creditors of his estate . . .; provided that he specifically refer in his will to this special power of appointment and his intent to exercise it. Should a child not fully exercise his special power of appointment, then the unappointed portion of his share remaining at his death shall pass free of trust per stirpes to his descendants who survive him. If no descendant survives him, then the unappointed portion of his share shall pass per stirpes, to the Grantor’s descendants who survive that child.

Dan asserts that the trial court correctly found that these two paragraphs were ambiguous and that, based on the parol evidence introduced, Mildred Frazer intended that Shelle or her descendant had to survive the distribution date of the Trust to obtain an interest in the trust. Because Shelle died before the division date and without a descendant, she had no interest in the Trust and therefore had no interest to transfer to Millington under the special testamentary power of appointment granted in Paragraph 3. We conclude that this construction of the Trust Agreement is incorrect.

In construing the terms of the Trust Agreement, we seek to effectuate the intent of the grantor. In ascertaining that intention, we must examine the document as a whole and give effect, so far as possible, to all its parts. Thomas v. Copenhaver, 235 Va. 124, 128, 365 S.E.2d 760, 763 (1988). A cardinal rule of will construction is that if “the words and language of the testator are clear, the will needs no interpretation. It speaks for itself.” McKinsey v. Cullingsworth, 175 Va. 411, 414, 9 S.E.2d 315, 316 (1940). Applying these principles, we conclude that the provisions of the paragraphs in issue are not ambiguous. They reflect the grantor’s intent to create a spe *200 cial testamentary power of appointment over a beneficiary’s interest in the Trust and do not condition effective exercise of that power on the beneficiary or a descendant of the beneficiary surviving the distribution date of the Trust.

The first sentence of Paragraph 3 can only be construed as expressing the grantor’s intent to provide for the exercise of a special testamentary power of appointment. A power of appointment is “a unique legal creature” which “concerns property but is not, itself, ‘an absolute right of property.’ ” Holzbach v. United Va. Bank,

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Bluebook (online)
475 S.E.2d 811, 252 Va. 195, 1996 Va. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frazer-v-millington-va-1996.