In Re Edward and Elaine Jaye Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2022
Docket355321
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Edward and Elaine Jaye Trust (In Re Edward and Elaine Jaye 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 Edward and Elaine Jaye 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 EDWARD & ELAINE JAYE TRUST.

AMIR E. ABU-AITA, Trustee/Conservator, UNPUBLISHED February 24, 2022 Appellee,

v No. 355321 Eaton Probate Court BYRON P. GALLAGHER, JR., LC No. 16-052573-TV

Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

and

CHRIS JAYE, KLUG LAW FIRM, BUHL, LITTLE, LYNWOOD & HARRIS, PLC, RAYMOND G. BUFFMYER, PC, and FRASER, TREBILCOCK, DAVIS & DUNLAP, PC,

Appellees/Cross-Appellants.

Before: GLEICHER, C.J., and SERVITTO and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

The Estates and Protected Individuals Code (EPIC) prescribes the conditions under which a trust may be terminated and the procedures for doing so. Notice must be given to various parties and the settlor’s intentions respected. The probate court did neither here. The probate court hastily terminated the trust without notice and left the now legally incompetent settlor intestate. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I. BACKGROUND

Elaine Jaye and her late husband Edward set up a revocable living trust to provide for their care in old age and to direct the distribution of their estate upon their passing. The trust allegedly

-1- contained $5 million in assets, including businesses operated by Edward and the Jayes’ son Chris, and several pieces of real property. The Jayes’ estate plan provided for specific gifts to individuals who otherwise would not be deemed heirs. The Jayes also provided for their three children to each receive a third of their remaining assets, with the inheritance of their daughter Karen remaining in trust with periodic payments made to her. Edward passed away in 2013 in Nevada. In 2010, Chris successfully petitioned for guardianship of Elaine in a Nevada court.

At some point Elaine moved to Michigan to live with Karen and Karen was named as Elaine’s successor guardian and conservator. In 2016, Karen filed a petition to remove the trustees of her mother’s trust, including Chris. Karen accused Chris of spending large amounts of trust funds for his personal benefit and expending a suspicious amount of attorney fees in the Nevada guardianship action. Chris accused Karen of seeking control of the trust to use the proceeds for her own benefit.

The battle between the siblings dragged on for four years. On February 1, 2017, the parties entered a stipulated order for payment of various attorney and accountant fees from trust funds. They also agreed that the trust would cover the fees of the bankruptcy trustee connected with a business under the trust’s umbrella. These bills were not quickly paid, however. Given the contentious nature of these proceedings, the probate court struggled to find an independent person willing to serve as trustee. In mid-2018, the court appointed Byron P. Gallagher, Jr., to fill the role. The attorneys promised payment in the 2017 agreement then submitted their bills to Gallagher for consideration. By early 2019, the attorney fees submitted to the trustee for payment totaled over $100,000.

The appointment of the independent trustee did not calm the waters. Karen and Chris protested when Gallagher attempted to sell trust property to provide for Elaine’s care, despite that Gallagher secured offers well above the assessed values. Karen eventually won a dispute to move with Elaine into a Lansing home owned by the trust, but was denied the right of first refusal when the home would later be sold upon her mother’s death. Karen and Chris challenged the fee amounts requested by attorneys other than their own.

Karen ultimately sought to have Gallagher removed as trustee for breach of fiduciary duty and to have the trust “dissolved.” Karen believed that the trust was being used to control her mother’s assets, leaving insufficient funds for Elaine’s support. Chris asserted that Karen was trying to remove the protections of the trust so she could invade their mother’s assets. After several hearings, the parties finally reached a settlement in December 2019 regarding certain partnership interests owned by the trust, addressing various personal and real property issues, and describing how the accounting should be performed and funded. They agreed that all issues concerning the validity of the trust had to be raised by December 2020 or would be deemed waived. The court’s order entering the settlement specifically referenced the 2017 stipulated order regarding attorney fees and provided that all attorneys must “file a petition by December 30, 2019 stating their claim and then present evidence at an evidentiary hearing . . . establishing how their services benefitted the Trust, Guardianship, and/or Conservatorship and the reasonableness of the fees for their services.”

The attorneys all filed their petitions in a timely fashion, although they contended that this requirement violated the 2017 stipulation. Then the pandemic struck and delayed the proceedings

-2- by several months. A hearing was scheduled to consider those petitions in September 2020. Four other petitions were scheduled to be heard at the same time: a petition for fees filed by Karen’s attorney, Chris’s petition seeking contact with his mother, Chris’s petition for amendment of the December 2019 settlement, and an objection by Chris to the latest accounting.

At the September 30, 2020 hearing, the probate court expressed its frustration with the parties and the attorneys: “I have to say this is probably the worst trust case I’ve ever seen litigated . . . and to which I share in responsibility for allowing these things to go on and on.” The court described, “There really has been nothing to litigate and yet there has been years and tens of thousands, if not more, of bills that are seeking to be paid or have been paid as a result of a case primarily about not much at all.” The probate court noted that at one point there appeared to be a question of fact regarding Elaine’s competency when the trust was last amended, but the parties failed to bring forward evidence to support those claims. The court accused Gallagher of engaging in formal discovery against “the true owner of the Trust.” The court continued:

[I]t has been a debacle to say the least. I really feel like, although you all have been polite and followed the decorum of a courtroom, in terms of substance you’ve treated this court and me like a rube that can just continue to churn and churn and churn and churn. That’s ending today.

I find that there has been nothing of substance brought to this Court. There have been representations made that, oh, we’re so close to a settlement. . . . [T]hen I get this one[-]inch thick settlement agreement. And within months I get motions to modify the settlement. Objection to the settlement. It’s . . . been completely unnecessary.

The court then expressed concern for Elaine’s assets, noting that the $5 million trust had dwindled to $1.5 million “[a]nd nobody knows how the hell that happened.” The court described the current, continued dispute as a “frenzy on the money that’s left.”

Everybody is here now[,] when I’ve had enough of the case[,] to get paid. Okay. I guess we’ve taken [Judge] Dignan as far as we can possibly take him. Let’s cash in and get a check. . . . I warned everybody. Everybody politely acknowledged that [they] do not consider the corpus of the Jaye Trust a depository in which any future attorney fees are going to be held. That I will follow EPIC and the Trust Code . . . . But one thing is clear[,] that attorney fees have to have advanced the cause of the . . . trust. And, therefore, those of you who maybe represent contingent beneficiaries I - - I’m not quite [sure] I even understand where the standing is.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In Re Edward and Elaine Jaye Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-edward-and-elaine-jaye-trust-michctapp-2022.