In Re Edmund Talanda Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 23, 2022
Docket358074
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Edmund Talanda Trust (In Re Edmund Talanda Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Edmund Talanda Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re EDMUND TALANDA TRUST.

TIMOTHY J. WAALKES, Trustee of the EDMUND UNPUBLISHED TALANDA TRUST, CAMILLE FATH, and June 23, 2022 EDMUND MARK TALANDA,

Appellees,

v No. 358074 Kent Probate Court ANNETTE TALANDA BRENNAN, LC No. 20-207552-TV

Appellant,

and

KATHLEEN TALANDA POTTS, SUSAN MINEHART, also known as SUSAN TALANDA, KALAMAZOO COUNTY, and JOHNSON FAMILY,

Other Parties.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and RONAYNE KRAUSE and BOONSTRA, JJ.

Appellant, Annette Talanda Brennan, (Brennan) appeals the probate court’s July 20, 2021 order transferring ownership of a lakefront cottage from the Edmund Talanda Trust (the trust) to appellees Camille Fath (Fath) and Edmund Mark Talanda (Edmund).1 Brennan also appeals the probate court’s January 29, 2021 order granting summary disposition under MCR 2.116(C)(10) in

1 The settlor of the trust, Edmund Talanda (now deceased) has a son (and trust beneficiary) also named Edmund Talanda. To avoid confusion, we will refer to the deceased Edmund Talanda as “Edmund Talanda” and the living Edmund Mark Talanda as “Edmund.”

-1- favor of Fath and Edmund with regard to the cottage. We dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction.

I. PERTINENT FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

During their lifetimes, Edmund and Dorothy Talanda both established revocable living trusts: the Edmund Talanda Trust and the Dorothy Marie Talanda Trust. Each served as the initial trustee of their respective trusts until their deaths. This appeal pertains to the Edmund Talanda Trust; specifically, the transfer of real property from the trust to Fath and Edmund.2 With the exception of appellee Timothy Waalkes (Waalkes) (the trustee), parties are siblings who are beneficiaries of their father’s trust: Laraine Goetting (Goetting), Michele Kraft (Kraft), Fath, Edmund, Kathleen Potts (Potts), Susan Minehart (Minehart), and Brennan. Fath and Brennan acted as cotrustees of the trust after their father’s death; however, disagreements with regard to the distribution of assets arose, making it impossible to finalize the administration of the trust. The dispute resulted in a rift among the siblings with Fath, Edmund, Potts, and Minehart on one side, and Brennan, Kraft, and Goetting on the other.

In an effort to resolve their differences, the parties participated in a mediation to determine the disposition of the trust’s assets. After an extensive mediation, the mediator made a proposal for the resolution of the remaining issues. That proposal was adopted as a settlement agreement on October 29, 2019. As part of that agreement, Fath and Brennan agreed to resign as cotrustees, and Waalkes was appointed as the successor trustee in April 2020. Relevant to this appeal, the settlement agreement addressed the distribution of the lakefront cottage (the cottage) owned by the trust. The settlement agreement provided:

The interest of the Estates and Trusts in the Gourdneck Lake cottage property will be assigned to Ed Talanda, Camille Fath, Susan Talanda, and Kathleen Potts for the agreed upon price of $60,000. Ed Talanda, Camille Fath, Susan Talanda[3], and Kathleen Potts will take immediate and exclusive possession and pay all costs, fees, etc. Ed Talanda, Camille Fath, Susan Talanda, and Kathleen Potts have until November 28, 2019 to notify the Trust whether they want to consummate the transaction. In the event they decline, then the property will be immediately listed for sale on such terms as the Trustee of the Trust determines.

The cottage is located on Gourdneck Lake in Vicksburg, Michigan, and is landlocked by Prairie View Park, which is owned and maintained by Kalamazoo County. The trust owned a one- half interest in the cottage, while another family (the Johnson family) owned the other one-half interest. The cottage has been the subject of extensive litigation. In 1962, Kalamazoo County filed a condemnation lawsuit against the owners of the cottage, seeking to obtain ownership by eminent domain. The condemnation suit resulted in a settlement agreement, which was executed

2 There is also a dispute involving an undeveloped lake lot held by the Dorothy Marie Talanda Trust. That dispute is the subject of the appeal in Docket No. 356293 and will not be addressed in this opinion. 3 Susan Talanda is now Susan Minehart.

-2- on January 28, 1963. The agreement provided that the county would have the first option to purchase the cottage in the event that the owners wished to sell it.

The cottage was the subject of another condemnation lawsuit while the beneficiaries participated in mediation. The trust was represented by attorney Ronald Ryan in that litigation. After the mediation concluded, Fath contacted Ryan and informed him that she and Edmund would be taking possession of the cottage, and requested that Ryan contact them with regard to matters pertaining to the cottage. On November 15, 2019, Ryan sent the beneficiaries and their respective counsel an e-mail directing them not to transfer the cottage out of the trust. He explained that he did not want to give the county an argument that the 1963 settlement agreement was breached by transferring the cottage to Fath and Edmund. However, he recommended preparation of a “desk drawer” deed with Fath’s and Edmund’s names on it that would not be recorded until after the litigation ended. He also suggested an amendment to the trust naming Fath and Edmund as successor trustees of the cottage only.

Following Ryan’s advice, Fath and Brennan, who at the time were cotrustees of the trust, signed a deed prepared by Ryan transferring the trust’s interest in the cottage to a limited liability company, Point Gloria, owned by all the trust beneficiaries; however, this deed was never recorded. The beneficiaries continued to negotiate with respect to the distribution of trust assets. The mediator proposed an amendment to the settlement agreement that provided for Fath and Edmund to receive the cottage, but for it to remain in the trust until the litigation was concluded. However, that amendment was never agreed upon or implemented.

In June 2020, Fath, Edmund, and Potts filed a petition in the probate court to enforce the settlement agreement. Regarding the cottage, the petition asserted that Fath and Edmund had complied with the requirements in the settlement agreement and, therefore, were entitled to possession of the cottage. Fath and Edmund argued that the settlement agreement only required them to provide notice if they decided to opt out of purchasing the cottage, but that there was no doubt in any event that they had provided both actual and constructive notice to representatives of the trust of their intent to purchase the cottage. Fath, Edmund, and Potts then moved for summary disposition, arguing that there was no genuine issue of material fact regarding the transfer of the cottage from the trust. Brennan responded to the petition, noting that during the negotiation of the settlement agreement, Fath and Edmund had proposed that the cottage remain within the trust on the basis of Ryan’s advice. Brennan argued that this proposal was essentially a counteroffer to the settlement agreement language allowing Fath, Edmund, Potts, and Minehart to purchase the cottage. Brennan further argued that Fath and Edmund had not notified the trust that they wanted to consummate the transaction that was identified in the settlement agreement, and that the trust therefore was not obligated to transfer the cottage’s title to them. Goetting and Kraft moved for summary disposition, arguing that Fath and Edmund were not entitled to the cottage under the settlement agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Edmund Talanda Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-edmund-talanda-trust-michctapp-2022.