Freeman v. Schmidt

6 Mass. L. Rptr. 303
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedNovember 18, 1996
DocketNo. 942514C
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Mass. L. Rptr. 303 (Freeman v. Schmidt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Freeman v. Schmidt, 6 Mass. L. Rptr. 303 (Mass. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

van Gestel, J.

The defendant Mary Schmidt as the Administratrix of the Estate of Ruth W. Freeman (“the Administratrix”) has moved for partial summary judgment dismissing Counts I, II, V, VI, VII and VIII of the plaintiffs Complaint. For the reasons that follow, the motion is denied with respect to Counts I and II, and granted with respect to Counts V-VIII.

BACKGROUND

This case involves, in part at least, a trust established in 1973 entitled The Julian S. Freeman Trust (“the Trust”) for the benefit of Ruth W. Freeman, wife of Julian S. Freeman (“the Wife”), his daughter, Reece Jane Freeman (“the Daughter”), and his son, Eliot Freeman (“the Son”). After Julian Freeman’s death in 1975, the Wife, along with the family attorney, Richard P. Houlihan, Jr., served as a Trustee of the Trust until her death in 1993.

The Complaint alleges a pattern of “imprudent, reckless and unauthorized transactions” resulting in payments and loans from the Trust to the Son which he used to finance real estate ventures that eventually soured with the market crash in the early 1990s. This left the Trust with approximately $2,960,000 of “assets” consisting of promissory notes for loans due from the Son and from development entities under his control. All of these obligations are and continue to be in default and the Trustees have brought suit against the Son for their collection. The remaining $2,145,000 of Trust assets are encumbered by liabilities of $2,370,000 representing funds the Wife and her co-Trustee borrowed in their fiduciary capacities to fund the loans the Trust made to the Son. The Daughter claims mismanagement of the Trust, including self-dealing and conflicts of interest, by the Wife (now deceased) and the family attorney.1 The Daughter has sued the Administratrix of the Wife’s estate, seeking recovery from the estate for the Wife’s mismanagement as Trustee and more direct recovery from the Administratrix herself for actions offensive to the Daughter in the course of administering the Wife’s estate.

The Administratrix has moved for partial summary judgment on Counts I and II resulting from the activities of the Wife as Trustee, and on Counts V-VIII relating to her own actions as Administratrix of the Wife’s estate. The two clusters of counts present decidedly different factual and legal issues and will be discussed separately hereafter.

Counts I and II relating to the mishandling of the Trust point, among other things, to borrowings of $1,000,000 from Mechanics Bank of Worcester to pay off an indebtedness of one of the Son’s entities to Guaranty Bank and Trust Company in connection with property known as the Tapley Building in Lynn, Massachusetts and a $900,000 loan to the Trust by Goldman, Sachs, the proceeds of which were also made available to and utilized by the Son in his real estate ventures. It is alleged that the borrowing from Mechanics Bank enabled the Wife and Mr. Houlihan, the family attorney, to be freed of certain personal obligations as guarantors of the indebtedness to Guaranty Bank. It is further alleged that Mr. Houlihan himself was an'investor to the extent of $100,000 in the Tapley Building. There are additional allegations that the Trust invested in the aggregate $830,000 in undeveloped land acquired by the Son in West Boylston, Massachusetts.2

The defendant-Administratrix focuses on the Trust instrument, noting particularly the very broad powers granted to the Trustees in its management. The essence of that part of the motion dealing with Counts I and II revolves around the section of the Trust which deals with the rendering of accounts. Section VIII of the Trust provides in material part as follows:

VIII. Accounts. Commencing at such time after the death of the Grantor when the Trust has assets [304]*304valued at $100 or more, . . . the Trustees shall render annually to the . . . beneficiaries ... an accounting of the administration of the trusts hereunder .... Any such beneficiary, directly, or through his legal representative shall file with the Trustees written objections to any item of such account to which he objects within sixty (60) days of such mailing [of the account to him]. In the absence of such objection all beneficiaries, whether or not in being or assertained, shall be barred from objecting thereto." (Emphasis added.)

The administratrix contends that the failure by the Daughter to provide appropriate written objections to the several accounts bars her from recoveiy for any mismanagement alleged in Counts I and II. It is not disputed either that the Daughter received the accounts or that she never filed with the Trustees any written objections thereto. Her response, rather, is to the effect that the accounts themselves failed to adequately disclose the nature and extent of the Trustees’ mishandling of the Trust’s assets and, more particularly, the Trustees’ personal involvements and consequential conflicts in the Son’s real estate ventures.

The other cluster of claims, in Counts V-VIII, charge the Administratrix herself with misconduct in the administration of the Wife’s estate. The essence of these counts is: that the Administratrix, without first obtaining judicial approval, changed the locks on the home at 28 Montclair Drive, Worcester (which .was devised in the Wife’s will to the Daughter and Son) without prior notice, thereby barring the Daughter from her residence; that there exists a pattern of conflicts of interest by virtue of the Administratrix acting as both a Trustee of the Trust and Administratrix of the Wife’s estate; and, that the Administratrix is hostile to the Daughter.

In her response to these charges, and as the basis for seeking partial summary judgment thereon, the Administratrix points to a decision in her favor by the Worcester Probate and Family Court on a “motion” by the Daughter to have her removed as Administratrix. It is the position of the Administratrix that the facts that underlie Counts V-VIII have already been litigated and determined by the Probate Court, after a six-day trial, and should not again be tried in this case.

The Daughter contends that an appeal has been noticed in the Probate Court and therefore argues that the findings of fact in that litigation are not final. Further, the Daughter argues that the legal standards to be applied in determining whether to discharge an administratrix are different from those that apply to the allegations in Counts V-VIII. Therefore, the Daughter argues that the findings by the Probate Court are not binding or conclusive here. The findings of the Probate Court, which are attached as Exhibit E to the Memorandum in Support of the Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and are incorporated herein by reference, are detailed and can fairly be said to describe conduct not supporting the allegations in Counts V-VIII.

DISCUSSION Counts I and II

In assessing the efforts of the Administratrix to defeat Counts I and II, the Court reflects first on 166 years of Massachusetts trust law. The requirement that a trustee, regardless of the latitude granted to him in the trust instrument, must act in a manner consistent with that of the prudent man has been with us since the decision in Harvard College v. Amory, 9 Pick. 446, 461 (1830). “It is well established that ‘even very broad discretionary powers are to be exercised in accordance with fiduciary standards and reasonable regard for usual fiduciary principles.’ Old Colony Trust Co. v. Sulliman, ante, 6, 10." Briggs v. Crowley, 352 Mass. 194, 200 (1967).

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Bluebook (online)
6 Mass. L. Rptr. 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-schmidt-masssuperct-1996.