In Re Estate of Johnson

340 S.W.3d 769, 2011 WL 535104
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 18, 2011
Docket04-08-00079-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 769 (In Re Estate of Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas 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 Johnson, 340 S.W.3d 769, 2011 WL 535104 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by:

CATHERINE STONE, Chief Justice.

Appellants’ motion for rehearing is denied. This court’s opinion and judgment dated December 1, 2010 are withdrawn, and this opinion and judgment are substituted. Our prior opinion contained an incorrect reference to Laura Johnson serving as co-trustee of a foundation as opposed to Laura Johnson serving as co-trustee of a management trust. We substitute this opinion to delete the erroneous factual reference which does not affect this court’s prior analysis.

This appeal arises from a probate proceeding in which a jury found Belton Kle-berg Johnson (“B”) executed certain wills and trusts as a result of undue influence. The jury further found that the reasonable and necessary fees and expenses for the services of Plaintiffs’ attorneys in connection with both the will contest and the trust contest were in excess of $6.1 million, plus additional attorneys’ fees in the event of an appeal. The trial court entered judgment on the verdict, denying probate of certain wills and admitting B’s 1997 will to probate. Additionally, the judgment invalidated certain trust documents. On appeal, the independent executor of B’s estate, B’s widow, and a co-trustee of a trust created by B, challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s finding of undue influence. They also raise numerous issues relating to the attorneys’ fee award. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

A. The Family Members

B was a descendent of famed King Ranch heritage. He and his first wife, Patsy, whom he divorced in 1987, were the parents of three children: Cecilia McMur-rey (“Ceci”), Sarah Pitt (“Sarah”), and Kley Johnson (“Kley”). Kley, who died in a car accident in 1991, was married to Cecilia Hager (“Hager”). Alice Truehart *774 Johnson and Henry Kleberg Johnson are Kley and Cecilia’s children. Sarah married Steven Pitt, and Sarah Spohn Kleberg Pitt, Stephen McCarthy Pitt, Jr., and Allegra Elizabeth McCarthy Pitt are their children. Ceci married Mark McMurrey, and Harry Bennett McMurrey, Belton Kleberg McMurrey, and Estella Lewis McMurrey are their children.

Lynne Johnson was B’s second wife. They were married in February of 1991, and Lynne died of cancer in January of 1994.

Laura Johnson was B’s third wife. B met Laura in Hong Kong in January of 1994 within days after Lynne’s death. At the time, Laura was still married to her first husband, who also was her business partner; however, they had been separated for several years. Laura’s divorce from her first husband was final in January or April of 1996, and she married B on November 8,1996.

B. The Estate Planning Documents

Over the course of at least four decades, B engaged in extensive estate planning activity with the aid of various professionals. The following individuals were involved at varying times in B’s estate planning: (1) Ed Copley — an estate planning attorney B hired in 1991; (2) Robert Phelps — a generational planning specialist with J.P. Morgan who was also an attorney; (3) Stacy Eastland — another estate planning attorney B hired in 1997; and (4) Peter Milton — a loan officer with J.P. Morgan who subsequently became an investment advisor for B’s foundation.

Following B’s death in 2001, Copley obtained an order admitting to probate B’s 1999 will and 2000 Codicil and was named as the independent executor of B’s estate. B’s children and grandchildren challenged that order in the suit giving rise to this appeal. A review of B’s estate planning documents for the decade preceding his death is helpful to understanding the parties’ claims.

B’s 1991 will created a life estate for his second wife, Lynne, with the remainder going into trust for B’s grandchildren. The 1991 will listed three specific charities as contingent beneficiaries in the event all of B’s descendants predeceased him. B’s 1993 will was similar to his 1991 will; however, a subsequent codicil changed the remainder beneficiaries from B’s grandchildren to his children. B’s 1995 will left $1 million net of tax in trust to each grandchild with the remainder going to five specific charities.

B’s 1997 will left his estate to a 1997 Management Trust. In the 1997 Management Trust, $1,000,000 net of tax was left in trust for each grandchild. The remainder of the estate was to be held in trust for Laura for her life. Laura had a power of appointment and could leave up to one-half of the remaining estate to any or all of B’s descendants, and the other one-half of the remaining estate (or the entire remainder if Laura did not exercise the power of appointment) was to be distributed to the same five specific charities listed in the 1995 will.

In 1989, B created Johnson Properties. B was the general partner of Johnson Properties, and the trusts of B’s children were limited partners. Johnson Properties owned a limited partnership interest in SA-2000, which owned the Hyatt Hotel on the San Antonio River Walk. Upon the dissolution of Johnson Properties in 1998, B and the trusts individually owned the partnership interests in SA-2000. B formed a new family limited partnership, BKJ Interests, to which he transferred his King Ranch royalties and the interest in SA-2000 which he formerly owned through Johnson Properties. The record is replete with evidence that the effect of the dissolu *775 tion of Johnson Properties on B’s estate plan was intentionally kept secret from Ceci and Sarah until B’s death.

Around the same time as the Johnson Properties dissolution, B created the 1998 Family Trust, which eventually obtained a portion of B’s interest in BKJ Interests. B’s 1998 will left his estate to a 1998 Management Trust. In the 1998 Management Trust, an aggregate of $7 million was left in trust for B’s grandchildren; however, that amount was offset by the fair market value of the assets held in the 1998 Family Trust. The remainder of the estate was held in trust for Laura for her life. Laura then had a power of appointment similar to the power contained in the 1997 will, except the remaining one-half (or the entire remainder if Laura did not exercise the power of appointment) was distributed to the Belton Kleberg Johnson Foundation. Although the trust lists some organizations which B desired to be the primary focus of distributions from the foundation, the trustee of the foundation ultimately controlled the distributions.

B’s 1999 will left his estate to the 1998 Management Trust as amended and restated in 1999. The 1998 Management Trust as restated no longer mentioned a distribution in trust for the grandchildren. The entire estate is instead held in trust for Laura for her life, and the provisions upon her death regarding the remainder were unchanged from the 1998 Management Trust.

C. The Attorneys and the Claims

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 769, 2011 WL 535104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-johnson-texapp-2011.