IMO: Raymond L. Hammond Irrevocable Trust Agreement, dtd 10.5.2007

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 28, 2016
DocketCA 10463
StatusPublished

This text of IMO: Raymond L. Hammond Irrevocable Trust Agreement, dtd 10.5.2007 (IMO: Raymond L. Hammond Irrevocable Trust Agreement, dtd 10.5.2007) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
IMO: Raymond L. Hammond Irrevocable Trust Agreement, dtd 10.5.2007, (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

IMO: ) RAYMOND L. HAMMOND ) IRREVOCABLE TRUST AGREEMENT, ) C.A. No. 10463-ML AND PNC BANK DELAWARE TRUST ) COMPANY, AS TRUSTEE, DATED ) OCTOBER 5, 2007 )

MASTER’S REPORT

Submitted: January 15, 2016 Final Report: January 28, 2016

W. Donald Sparks, II, Esquire, Chad M. Shandler, Esquire and Katharine C. Lester, Esquire, of RICHARDS, LAYTON & FINGER, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware; Attorneys for PNC Delaware Trust Company.

David E. Wilks, Esquire, of WILKS, LUKOFF & BRACEGIRDLE, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorney for Kyle Kozak.

Kathleen DeLacy, Esquire, of REGER RIZZO & DARNALL LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Attorney for Lisa Hammond.

LEGROW, Master The settlor of a qualified disposition trust reserved for himself a special

testamentary power of appointment that allowed him to appoint trust assets to

certain beneficiaries in his last will and testament, provided he specifically

referenced the trust in the will. If the settlor died without a surviving spouse and

without exercising the power of appointment, the trust assets were to pass to a

residuary trust for the benefit of four individuals.

Several years after he created the trust, the settlor divorced his wife, to

whom he had been married when the trust was created. During the separation and

divorce, he signed a property settlement agreement in which he agreed that his

wife would remain a beneficiary of the trust during her lifetime. After their

divorce, the settlor executed his last will and testament, in which he named his ex-

wife as the sole beneficiary of his estate. Nothing in the will, however, references

either the trust or the power of appointment. The settlor’s ex-wife takes the

position that he intended her to remain as a beneficiary of the trust during her

lifetime and that the trust should be interpreted consistent with that intent. One of

the individuals designated as a beneficiary of the residuary trust contends that the

settlor failed to exercise effectively the power of appointment and therefore the

trust assets pass to the residuary trust. The trustee has filed a petition for

instructions to resolve the interested parties’ dispute. The would-be residuary

1 beneficiary has filed a motion for judgment on the pleadings. For the reasons that

follow, I believe that motion should be granted.

I. BACKGROUND

Raymond L. Hammond (“Raymond”) married Lisa Hammond (“Lisa”) in

2004.1 They did not have any children as a result of their union, although Lisa had

a son, Kyle Kozak (“Kyle”), from a previous marriage. Three years later, in

October 2007, Raymond created a qualified disposition trust (the “Trust”) under 12

Del. C. §§ 3570-3576.2 Qualified disposition trusts are somewhat complicated, but

– in layman’s terms – an effective qualified disposition trust limits the remedies

that a creditor otherwise may have to reach the assets held in the trust, or avoid the

transfer of such assets into the trust, even if the settlor making the transfer also is a

beneficiary of the trust.3

For purposes of the issues presented in this case, the agreement governing

the Trust (the “Trust Agreement”) contains several important clauses. The Trust,

which is irrevocable as required by the Qualified Dispositions in Trust Act (the

“Act”),4 named Natcity Trust Company of Delaware as trustee.5 Natcity changed

1 I use individuals’ first names because there are multiple people sharing the same name and because that is how the parties identified themselves and various beneficiaries in their petitions and briefs. No disrespect is intended. 2 A copy of the Trust is attached to PNC’s Petition for Instructions. Pet. for Instrs. Ex. A. The Trust was funded with money Raymond received as a result of a work-related injury. 3 See 12 Del. C. §§ 3570(8), (10), (11); 3571, 3572 4 Pet. for Instrs. Ex. A at Art. 11. See 12 Del. C. § 3570(11)(b). 5 Id., Ex. A at Art. 1. 2 its name to PNC Delaware Trust (“PNC Delaware”) in 2009.6 By its terms, the

Trust is to be governed, construed, and administered according to Delaware law.7

Because the Trust is administered by a Delaware trustee and contains a Delaware

choice of law provision, Delaware law governs the Trust.8

Article 3 of the Trust identifies the beneficiaries and their interests.

Raymond, his spouse, and his issue were the beneficiaries of the Trust during

Raymond’s lifetime.9 To be a beneficiary, Raymond’s spouse was required to be

living with Raymond or “separated from Raymond for reasons other than marital

discord.”10 Upon Raymond’s death, the trustee was permitted to pay his funeral

expenses and estate taxes. Any remaining principal or accrued income was to be

distributed by the trustee or held in further trust, as Raymond directed pursuant to

the special testamentary power of appointment (the “Power of Appointment”) in

the Trust Agreement.11 The Power of Appointment, which is at the heart of the

parties’ dispute, provides:

Raymond shall have a special testamentary power to appoint the remaining principal and any accrued or undistributed [i]ncome outright to, or in further trust for, anyone (including, without limitation, [c]harity), other than Raymond, Raymond’s estate, or the

6 Pet. for Instrs. ¶ 2. 7 Id. Ex. A at Art. 12. 8 12 Del. C. § 3332. That is not to say that a court in another jurisdiction could not exercise jurisdiction over the trust. That issue need not be resolved at this point and nothing in this report should be construed as expressing an opinion on that issue. 9 Pet. for Instrs. Ex. A at Art. 3(A). 10 Id. 11 Id. at Art. 3(B). 3 creditors of either, as Raymond shall direct by specific reference to this trust in Raymond’s Will, provided, however, that no portion or amount may be appointed to a spouse of Raymond who is not a Qualified Spouse.12

If Raymond did not exercise the Power of Appointment, or does not exercise

it completely, the distribution scheme was decidedly more complex. First, if

Raymond was survived by a spouse, whether or not a Qualified Spouse, a

“Qualifying Trust” was to be set aside for that person. The amount set aside in the

Qualifying Trust was to be “the smallest amount (which may be zero) necessary to

reduce the Federal estate tax in Raymond’s estate to the lowest possible amount

(which may be zero).”13 If no Qualifying Trust was funded, or if there were funds

remaining in the Trust after the Qualifying Trust was funded, such funds were to

be retained in a “Residuary Trust.” The beneficiaries of the Residuary Trust are

Raymond’s Qualified Spouse during her lifetime, followed by four individuals:

Kyle, Shamira Hammond (“Shamira”), Zyniah Hammond (“Zyniah”), and Soncera

Hammond (“Soncera”).14

The Trust Agreement does not define the term “spouse,” but defines a

“Qualified Spouse” as:

a person who was lawfully married to such individual at the time of such individual’s actual death, survived such individual by at least ten (10) days[,] and was residing with such individual at the time of such 12 Id. at Art. 3(B), p. 3 (emphasis added) (other emphasis removed). 13 Id. at Art. 3(B), p. 4. 14 Id. at Art. 3(B), p. 6-7. As indicated above, Kyle is Lisa’s son from a previous marriage. Shamira and Soncera are Raymond’s nieces, and Zyniah is Raymond’s great-niece. 4 individual’s actual death or was then separated from such individual for reasons other than marital discord.15

Lisa concedes that she is neither a Qualified Spouse nor a “spouse” as those terms

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IMO: Raymond L. Hammond Irrevocable Trust Agreement, dtd 10.5.2007, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imo-raymond-l-hammond-irrevocable-trust-agreement-dtd-1052007-delch-2016.