In Re: Donald Hyde Trust

2014 SD 99, 858 N.W.2d 333, 2014 S.D. 99, 2014 S.D. LEXIS 148, 2014 WL 7454248
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 2014
Docket26985, 27007
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2014 SD 99 (In Re: Donald Hyde Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re: Donald Hyde Trust, 2014 SD 99, 858 N.W.2d 333, 2014 S.D. 99, 2014 S.D. LEXIS 148, 2014 WL 7454248 (S.D. 2014).

Opinion

*336 ZINTER, Justice.

[¶ 1.] Donald Hyde had a will and later created a revocable trust that he funded with real estate and a brokerage account containing stock. Hyde also executed five codicils before and after he created the trust. In one post-trust codicil, he bequeathed the stock to his siblings. However, the stock was in the trust, and under the trust, the stock was to be distributed to charities upon his death. During his life, Hyde also deeded trust real estate to siblings and loaned his sister money that he obtained from the trust brokerage account. Following Hyde’s death, the circuit court supervising the trust ruled that: (1) the post-trust codicil did not modify the trust to conform to the codicil’s disposi-tional provision bequeathing the stock to the siblings, (2) the trust should not be reformed to distribute the stock to the siblings, (3) the loan to the sister should be repaid to Hyde’s estate rather than his trust, (4) the deeds conveying property to Hyde’s siblings were delivered, and (5) the charities failed to meet their burden of proving that some of Hyde’s dispositions were the result of undue influence. One of Hyde’s siblings appeals the first three rulings, and the charities appeal the latter two rulings. We affirm.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶ 2.] Donald Hyde died on December 19, 2011. He never married and had no children, but he had five siblings — James Hyde, Jesse Hyde Jr., Ann Laughlin, Mary Riley, and Wilma Van Order. Hyde was an extremely frugal man. Due to his frugality, he often engaged in estate planning without the use of an attorney. Hyde was, however, generous in giving to Baptist charities. During his life, he donated over $640,000 to Baptist Children’s Home. He also provided for various Baptist organizations upon his death.

[¶ 3.] On December 6, 1999, Hyde-executed a will. The will specifically devised real property in Florida, Arizona, West Virginia, and South Dakota. Hyde’s Florida property was to go to Citranell Baptist Church; his Arizona property was to go to his siblings; his Spearfish residence was to go to Dianna Keester; his Spearfish Creek property was to go to the First Baptist Church in Spearfish; and the residue of his estate was to go to the First Baptist Church of West Virginia (25%), to Baptist’s Children’s Home (50%), and to Shepherd’s Ministries (25%). On August 15, 2003, Hyde prepared his first hand-written codicil. When Hyde died, these two documents were found together in an envelope that had the words “updated” and “outdated in 2006” written on it.

[¶ 4.] In September 2006, Hyde had executed a revocable trust. The trust was prepared by Spearfish attorney Reed Richards to avoid probate. Richards testified that he explained the difference between a trust and a will to Hyde, and Richards gave Hyde a letter explaining the steps (like funding the trust) that were needed to make the trust effective. According to Richards, Hyde seemed to understand the difference between a will and a trust.

[¶ 5.] Unlike the will, the trust provided that upon Hyde’s death, all real estate and personal property in West Virginia, a five-acre tract in Arizona, and the Spearfish Creek property in South Dakota was to be distributed to Jesse Jr., James, Mary, and Wilma. Ann was to receive Hyde’s Spearfish residence and the personal property at the residence. One parcel of Florida land was to be distributed to the Faith Baptist Church in Florida. Land near the Spearfish airport was to be distributed to Baptist Children’s Home Family Ministry. And, as is particularly relevant to the first issue in this appeal, Hyde’s Charles *337 Schwab brokerage account (containing 10,-000 shares of Unisource Energy stock) was now to be distributed to Baptist Children’s Home (75%) and Shepherd’s Ministries (25%). Finally, $2,000 and the residue of the trust were to be distributed to all five siblings. Hyde reserved the “right and power at any time and from time to time while living to revoke in whole or in part [the trust] ... or to alter or amend any term or provision of the [trust].”

[¶ 6.] One month after executing the trust, Hyde conveyed his residence, the Spearfish Creek property, and the airport property to the trust. Hyde also transferred his Charles Schwab account containing the stock into the trust. Six months later, he executed a second codicil. The codicil provided that Wilma was to receive the Spearfish Creek property in exchange for administering his estate in West Virginia and Florida. The codicil specifically indicated that “[t]he lot as previously mentioned in my will shall be eliminated.” As previously mentioned, that property was in the trust.

[¶ 7.] Hyde traveled to Florida for the winter in 2008. The following spring he started having difficulty eating and maintaining weight. Ann and Hyde’s nephew drove Hyde to West Virginia where he began living with his sister Mary. Two or three days after Hyde arrived, Wilma visited Hyde. He informed Wilma that he wanted her to have the airport and Spearfish Creek properties, and he wanted Ann to have his residence. This was the same intent that Hyde had expressed to three friends in the summer of 2008. Wilma, who was engaged in a real estate business in West Virginia, obtained the legal descriptions of those properties and prepared three quitclaim deeds conveying the properties to Wilma and Ann. 1 Hyde reviewed and executed the deeds, which conveyed the properties from the trust. Hyde then gave Wilma the deeds stating “here you go.” Wilma put the deeds in her briefcase and then in her safe. Afterward, Hyde told two friends he had conveyed the properties to Wilma and Ann.

[¶ 8.] During that same conversation at Mary’s house, Hyde also indicated that he wanted to give his Florida property to James, Mary, Wilma, and Ann. Wilma recommended going to an attorney for this transaction because there was concern about Jesse Jr.’s exclusion from the disposition. Hyde contacted a West Virginia attorney who prepared Hyde’s third codicil. The codicil indicated it was a substitute for the paragraph in the will devising the property to Faith Baptist Church. (Citranell Baptist Church was the beneficiary under Hyde’s will and Faith Baptist Church was the beneficiary under Hyde’s trust). On June 5, 2009, the same day Hyde executed the three deeds conveying the Spearfish properties from the trust, he executed this codicil in front of two witnesses and a notary.

[¶ 9.] Later that day, Hyde told Wilma he wanted his siblings to have the 10,000 shares of Unisource Energy stock that were in his Charles Schwab account. Wilma used the West Virginia attorney’s codicil as a template to make this disposition. This fourth codicil bequeathed the stock to Hyde’s siblings. 2 However, the stock was *338 in the trust, and under the trust the stock was to be distributed to Baptist Children’s Home and Shepherd’s Ministries. Hyde executed this codicil (hereinafter the “June 5, 2009 codicil”) in front of a notary and two witnesses.

[¶ 10.] Hyde stayed with each of his sisters for a period of time while in West Virginia. In January 2010, he became very ill and was hospitalized. After his release and rehabilitation, Hyde stayed in an apartment that Wilma acquired. She paid the rent and utilities.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 SD 99, 858 N.W.2d 333, 2014 S.D. 99, 2014 S.D. LEXIS 148, 2014 WL 7454248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-donald-hyde-trust-sd-2014.