In re Estate of Hubert

750 S.E.2d 511, 325 Ga. App. 276
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 22, 2013
DocketA13A1484, A13A1485, A13A1486, A13A2131
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 750 S.E.2d 511 (In re Estate of Hubert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Estate of Hubert, 750 S.E.2d 511, 325 Ga. App. 276 (Ga. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

McFadden, Judge.

These cases, which we have consolidated for appeal, involve a dispute between four siblings who are co-executors of their mother’s estate. The parties dispute how to achieve the intent of their mother, Ruth Swann Hubert (“Mrs. Hubert”), to equalize estate assets among them. Judith Hubert Manning brought a petition in probate court against Richard Hubert, Marilyn Hubert Kemper, and Deborah Hubert to enforce a mediated settlement agreement regarding the distribution of the estate. Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert counterclaimed for, inter alia, breach of fiduciary duty against Judith Manning. After a bench trial, the probate court entered an order of judgment in which she set forth how the estate was to be distributed, found that Judith Manning had not breached her fiduciary duty, ordered all of the siblings removed as co-executors, and ordered Richard Hubert and Deborah Hubert to pay attorney fees to Judith Manning. Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert appealed in Case Nos. A13A1484, A13A1485 and A13A1486, respectively, and the probate court ordered them each to post a bond pursuant to OCGA § 53-7-55, which allows a probate [277]*277court, upon good cause, to require additional security from the personal representative of an estate.

Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert argue that, in ruling on how the estate assets should be distributed among the parties, the probate court improperly modified the terms of the settlement agreement in her order. We agree, because the unambiguous terms of the settlement agreement require an accountant to complete certain determinations before the equalization of the estate assets can be calculated, and it is undisputed that the accountant has not yet completed those determinations. Accordingly, we reverse that part of the probate court’s order regarding the distribution of estate assets and remand the case for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. In light of this ruling, we also reverse the award of attorney fees against Richard Hubert and Deborah Hubert.

In addition, Richard Hubert challenges the probate court’s ruling that Judith Manning did not breach her fiduciary duty. He challenges the probate court’s admission of the testimony of Judith Manning’s husband on the value of certain real property that the husband owned. He challenges the probate court’s denial, as untimely, of his motion to recuse. And Marilyn Kemper and Deborah Hubert challenge their removal as co-executors. We find no error in any of these rulings, and we affirm them.

Because we affirm the dismissal of the parties as co-executors of the estate, Richard Hubert’s appeal from the bond order in Case No. A13A2131 is moot.

Accordingly, as detailed below, we affirm in part and reverse in part the probate court’s order in Case Nos. A13A1484, A13A1485 and A13A1486, and remand those cases with direction, and we dismiss as moot the appeal in Case No. A13A2131.

1. Facts and procedural posture.

The parties’ father, O. C. Hubert, died in 1986, leaving a substantial estate. Litigation over the estate ensued, resulting in a settlement agreement that, among other things, placed four pieces of real property into four qualified terminable interest property trusts (the QTIPs). See IRC § 2056 (b) (7). Each QTIP held the real property in trust for one of the four Hubert children, who served as trustee for that QTIP, and each QTIP designated Mrs. Hubert as the income beneficiary for her life. Under the settlement, Mrs. Hubert had general power of appointment over a trust containing other assets. See IRC § 2056 (b) (5). She placed some of those assets into three trusts (the GPA trusts) that she then contributed into the QTIPs associated with Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert, to equalize their asset value with that of Judith Manning’s QTIP, which contained more valuable real property.

[278]*278As part of Mrs. Hubert’s estate planning, the QTIP assets were contributed to limited partnerships affiliated with the Hubert family, giving the QTIPs ownership interests in the limited partnerships. This reduced the marketability of the QTIP assets, discounting their value for estate tax purposes. Initially, Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert each contributed the real estate in their QTIPs to Hubert Properties, LLLP. Subsequently, they contributed their ownership interests in Hubert Properties to Hubert Consolidated, LLLP. Judith Manning contributed the real estate in her QTIP to Manning Family Investments, LLLP.

Mrs. Hubert died in 2006, and the four Hubert children were named co-executors of her will. Her will pertinently expressed her intent “to equalize among [her] four children (and their respective lineal descendants) the bequests made by [her] deceased Husband pursuant to (1) his Last Will and Testament. . . , (2) the Settlement Agreement [pertaining to her husband’s estate], and (3) any gifts or other bequests [she] may have made during [her] lifetimef.]” The parties disputed how to accomplish this goal. A mediation facilitated by Judge Marion Pope on that issue led to the 2010 settlement agreement that is the subject of this case.

The 2010 settlement agreement designated an accountant to review the books and records of specified Hubert-related entities (including Hubert Properties, Hubert Consolidated, and Manning Family Investments) and to make certain determinations about the fair market value of assets and liabilities contributed to those entities. The accountant produced a draft report, aspects of which the parties disputed. The accountant also identified open issues about which he needed more information or had unanswered questions.

Judith Manning then filed a petition in the probate court seeking to enforce the 2010 settlement agreement. Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert counterclaimed for, inter alia, breach of fiduciary duty, essentially alleging that Judith Manning personally benefitted from the assets in her QTIP at Mrs. Hubert’s expense. The probate judge voluntarily recused, and the Honorable Adele Grubbs of the Superior Court of Cobb County, who was presiding over a related superior court matter, was designated to sit as the probate court in this case.

After a bench trial, the probate court entered an order holding that “[e]ach of the four children should receive $4,132,302 to equalize the estate.” This meant that Marilyn Kemper and Deborah Hubert would pay certain amounts to the estate, and the estate would pay certain amounts to Judith Manning and Richard Hubert. The probate court found no evidence to support the counterclaim for breach of fiduciary duty. The probate court ordered all four children removed as [279]*279executors and appointed a new executor. And the court ordered Richard Hubert and Deborah Hubert to pay $60,000 in attorney fees to Judith Manning under OCGA § 13-6-11 for stubborn litigiousness. The probate court denied motions filed by Richard Hubert and Deborah Hubert for, alternatively, a new trial or an amendment of its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Richard Hubert, Marilyn Kemper, and Deborah Hubert appealed, and the probate court ordered that each of them post a $5,000,000 bond pursuant to OCGA § 53-7-55.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
750 S.E.2d 511, 325 Ga. App. 276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hubert-gactapp-2013.