Himmelfarb v. Horwitz

536 A.2d 86, 1987 D.C. App. LEXIS 518, 1987 WL 33847
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 9, 1987
Docket86-206
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 536 A.2d 86 (Himmelfarb v. Horwitz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Himmelfarb v. Horwitz, 536 A.2d 86, 1987 D.C. App. LEXIS 518, 1987 WL 33847 (D.C. 1987).

Opinion

*87 NEBEKER, Associate Judge,

Retired:

This is an appeal from an order of the trial court denying summarily the plaintiffs’ and defendant Morton Himmelfarb’s dual motions for a final declaratory judgment. The plaintiffs, in their capacity as trustees of the trust at issue here, had sought a declaratory judgment invalidating a provision of the trust which made the beneficiaries’ entitlement to a share of trust income or corpus contingent on whether they “shall have married or be married to any person not of the Jewish faith or religion.” Defendant Morton Him-melfarb, a person within the class of lifetime income beneficiaries, moved for the same relief. He had been disqualified pursuant to this provision by virtue of his marriage to a woman not of the Jewish faith or religion. The trial court ruled against them, concluding that the disqualification clause constituted a valid, partial restraint on marriage. As we shall show in the following pages, we are confronted (as was the trial court below) with a record revealing no real contest between present interested parties. We recognize that the trial court might properly give guidance to trustees who are in doubt as to their duties; however, once it becomes apparent that none of the beneficiaries present a contest, the court should refuse to exercise its equitable jurisdiction. We hold that the trial court erred in making a sweeping ruling on the interpretation of the trust. We offer no opinion on the underlying merits of the trial court’s decision. It is sufficient for the trial court to refuse to exercise equitable jurisdiction because no interested beneficiary may thereafter be heard to challenge payments to Morton Himmelfarb.

The undisputed facts are that on December 30, 1938, Paul Himmelfarb (the “grant- or”) established an irrevocable inter vivos trust (the “trust” or “1938 trust”), to which was added a clarifying amendment on December 5, 1941. The trustees were directed to invest and reinvest the trust corpus during the life of the grantor, thereby accumulating income to be added to the corpus. The trust provided further that upon the death of the grantor, they were to distribute the current income of the trust in equal shares, with one share going to each of the grantor’s living children and one share to be distributed among the children (if any) of any deceased child of the grant- or, per stirpes. Upon the death of the last surviving child of the grantor, the trust was to be terminated and the trust corpus distributed per capita to the grandchildren of the grantor who were then living. 1

This action specifically concerns paragraph D(2) of the trust which provides as follows:

No share of the income or division of the corpus of the estate hereby created shall be made to any beneficiary hereunder if, at the time such payment or distribution shall, by the terms hereof, be due, such beneficiary shall have married or be married to any person not of the Jewish faith or religion.

(Emphasis added.)

The grantor died on January 16, 1968, and was survived by all eight of his children, as well as by numerous grandchildren. The trust’s disqualification clause of paragraph D(2) came into play because one of the grantor’s sons, defendant Morton Himmelfarb, had a spouse, Mary Himmel-farb, who was “not of the Jewish faith or religion.” Morton and Mary were married on September 7, 1966. As far as we know, they are still husband and wife today, and Mary Himmelfarb remains not of the Jewish faith or religion.

The litigation culminating in this appeal is actually rooted in a 1966 suit filed by Morton Himmelfarb in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Morton brought suit in the district court against, among others, Ada Naiman, Frances Wolf and Lillian Cooper, three of his siblings and children of Paul Himmelfarb, *88 the grantor of the trust at issue in this case. It appears that Naiman, Wolf and Cooper were named as defendants in that action individually, and in their capacity as trustees of both a 1948 and a 1965 trust of which Morton and his first wife, Reba, were grantors. The action was predicated in part on Morton’s claim that the trustees violated the terms of the 1948 trust, and the relief sought on this basis was, inter alia, a return of assets to this trust. In the same action, but apparently on other grounds, Morton requested the dissolution of his 1965 trust.

On September 26, 1975, the district court entered a consent judgment in the action which, with respect to Morton’s claims concerning the 1948 and 1965 trusts, was generally favorable to him. The consent judgment also contained the following provision pertaining to Paul Himmelfarb’s 1938 trust:

The trustees [Naiman, Wolf and Cooper] are also trustees under a certain trust agreement dated December 30, 1938, of which Paul Himmelfarb was the donor, which is commonly known as Paul Himmelfarb Trust No. 1, under which the donor’s children, including Morton and the trustees, are life income beneficiaries and the donor’s grandchildren, including Morton’s children who are parties to this agreement, are residuary beneficiaries. The trust contains a provision ... [disqualifying a beneficiary who “shall have married or be married to any person not of the Jewish faith or religion.”] Because of this provision, the trustees have declined to make payments therefrom to Morton since his marriage to Mary, who is not of the Jewish faith, but have accumulated such income pending judicial interpretation of the Trust. The trustees agree that they, in their capacity as trustees of Paul Himmelfarb Trust No. 1, will promptly file a civil lawsuit in a court of competent jurisdiction in proper form, to have said restraint on marriage declared to be void and unenforceable as to all beneficiaries, and for such other relief as will permit payment of his share of current and accumulated and future income to Morton during his lifetime, and will permit participation of the issue of Paul Himmel-farb as residuary beneficiaries in accordance with the terms thereof. The parties agree to consent to such an interpretation and declaration of the Trust, and further consent that all amounts now or hereafter due to Morton Himmelfarb from the Paul Himmelfarb Trust No. 1 may be paid directly to Morton personally and retained by him, free of any trust. *

Curiously, though, and contrary to the trial court’s understanding here of what took place in the district court, there is no indication that Naiman, Wolf and Cooper were also sued in their capacity as trustees of Paul Himmelfarb’s 1938 trust. The litigation in the district court, it seems, concerned only the 1948 and 1965 trusts of which Morton was a grantor. And this would explain why only some of the persons designated by class in the 1938 trust as lifetime or residuary beneficiaries were named as defendants in the district court action and appear as having consented to the judgment. Indeed, the persons so named appear to be only those with an interest also in Morton’s 1948 and 1965 trusts. 2

On August 3, 1976, Naiman, Wolf and Cooper, in their capacity as trustees of Paul Himmelfarb’s 1938 trust 3

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Bluebook (online)
536 A.2d 86, 1987 D.C. App. LEXIS 518, 1987 WL 33847, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/himmelfarb-v-horwitz-dc-1987.