in Re Hamady Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 30, 2015
Docket319901
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Hamady Trust (in Re Hamady 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 Hamady Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re ERNEST W. HAMADY TRUST.

CHARLES HAMADY, UNPUBLISHED July 30, 2015 Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 319900 Genesee Probate Court BRUCE HAMADY, LC No. 12-193847-TV

Respondent-Appellee,

and

CAROLE HAMADY and CYNTHIA HAMADY,

Appellees.

In re SONA I. HAMADY TRUST.

CHARLES HAMADY,

Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 319901 Genesee Probate Court BRUCE HAMADY, LC No. 12-193846-TV

CAROLE HAMADY and CYNTHIA HAMADY

-1- Before: MARKEY, P.J., and MURRAY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner, Charles Hamady, appeals by right the probate court’s order interpreting the beneficiary trusts at issue in this case that a beneficiary’s request for distribution of principal under Article VII, § (C)(1) of the trusts are subject to the trustee’s discretion as guided by other provision in the trusts and “not limited by the power to postpone” under Article XIII, § (M). Because we find persuasive petitioner’s arguments based on the unambiguous wording of the trusts, and respondent’s arguments to the contrary unpersuasive, we reverse.

Petitioner and respondent are the sons of Ernest and Sona Hamady. In 1979, Ernest and Sona (the settlors) established separate revocable declarations of trust: The Ernest W. Hamady Trust (Ernest trust) and the Sona I. Hamady Trust (Sona trust) (collectively “the trusts”). The trusts, which are essentially identical, were amended and restated on January 26, 2007. The trusts were established for the benefit of Ernest and Sona during their lifetimes, for the benefit of the surviving spouse, and upon the deaths of Sona and Ernest, for the benefit of their four children: Bruce, Charles, Carole, and Cynthia. After the death of the settlors, the remaining principal of the trusts (after other obligations were satisfied) was to be divided into five equal shares, one for each of the four children, i.e., the beneficiary trusts, and one special benefits trust.1 The trust provision at issue in this appeal relates to the right of the child-beneficiaries to make written requests to withdraw principal from their beneficiary trust.

Ernest died on January 14, 2010, and was survived by Sona, who died shortly thereafter on March 24, 2010, survived by all four of the children. Pursuant to the amended trust documents, Bruce is the sole successor trustee for both trusts. 2

Article VII, § (C)(1) of the trusts, at issue in this appeal, provides as follows: 3

(C) Powers of Withdrawal. Subsequent to the Division Date and after the establishment of each separate trust named for a Child, the Trustee is authorized to distribute Trust property as follows:

1 The special benefits trust was established primarily for the benefit of one of the siblings because of anticipated additional health care needs. 2 The trusts only differ with respect to successor trustees. The Ernest trust appointed Sona as successor trustee, and upon her death, Bruce and the State Bank, as successor co-trustees. After Ernest died, Sona amended her trust to provide for Bruce as the sole successor trustee. Upon Sona’s death, the State Bank declined to accept its appointment as a successor co-trustee of the Ernest trust, leaving Bruce as the sole successor trustee of both trusts. 3 “Child” is defined in Article I, § C(2) as a child of Ernest and Sona: Charles, Bruce, Carol, and Cynthia. The “Division Date” is the date of death of the date of the survivor of Ernest and Sona. Article VI, § C.

-2- 1. Distribution to Child. At or after the Division Date, the Trustee is authorized (but not required based upon power to postpone distributions as herein set forth) to distribute to the Child such amounts of the principal of the Trust named for the Child, even to the extent of exhausting principal, as the Child may from time to time request by written instrument delivered to the Trustee during the life of the Child. [Emphasis Added.]

Other than in the table of contents, the words “postpone” or “postponement” appear in only one other place in the trust documents, Article VIII, § (M), which provides:

M. Postponement of Distribution for Benefit of Beneficiary. Notwithstanding any of the provisions of the Trust to the contrary (except provisions pertaining to the “Rule Against Perpetuities”), in addition to the provision of the paragraph entitled “Spendthrift”, Trustee of each Trust hereunder, other than any who is also a present or contingent beneficiary of that Trust, shall have the power to postpone any corpus distribution (including distributions pursuant to the exercise of a right of withdrawal) otherwise required to be made from that Trust to any one or more of its beneficiaries upon or after the beneficiary’s exercise of withdrawal right or attainment of a specified age or the death of a third person (and to postpone to that extent the termination of such Trust which might otherwise be required) if such Trustee, in the sole but reasonably exercised discretion of Trustee, determines that, in view of my apparent overall original intent, there is a compelling reason to postpone such distribution, such as a beneficiary’s serious disability, a pending divorce (including the possibility that the spouse of a beneficiary or some person other than the beneficiary will receive the benefits from a proposed distribution)[,] potential or pending creditor claims (possibly relating to such distribution), a serious tax disadvantage to such beneficiary (or his or her family) if such distribution were made, or similar substantial cause. Any such postponement of distribution may be continued by such Trustee, in whole or in part, from time to time, up to and including the entire lifetime of the beneficiary. Which such postponement continues, all of the other provisions previously applicable to such Trust shall continue in effect except (1) any power of appointment previously applicable to the otherwise distributable corpus shall be exercisable only with the approval of such Trustee and (ii) such beneficiary shall only receive distribution from time to time of such amounts from such corpus and the income there from as such Trustee, in the sole discretion of Trustee, deems appropriate in the best interest of such beneficiary. [Emphasis Added.]

On June 18, 2012, Charles filed a petition seeking to have his brother, Bruce, removed as the trustee, or, in the alternative, appointment of a co-trustee or special fiduciary. While that petition was pending, Charles, on September 23, 2013, through a letter his attorney wrote to Bruce’s attorney, exercised his “right of withdrawal” pursuant to Article VII, § (C)(1), and specifically, requested to withdraw $5,000.00 per month from his beneficiary trusts beginning October 1, 2013, and monthly thereafter until Charles provided notice to the trustee to stop or the trust was exhausted. Bruce responded by letter dated October 23, 2013, denying Charles’s written request for distribution. Bruce asserted that the beneficiary trusts had not yet been

-3- established by the allocation of assets among the various trusts. Bruce noted that monthly payments on an asset outside of the trust in which Charles held an interest would likely increase beginning in December 2013. Finally, Bruce asserted that Charles’s contention that he “has a right to make a withdrawal under his Beneficiary’s Trust and to withdraw his entire Trust share as stated in your letter is not correct. Any distributions from the Beneficiary’s Trusts are subject to the Trustee’s discretion under the Trust Agreements.”

On November 22, 2013, Charles petitioned the probate court pursuant to MCL 700.7201(3)(e)4, for an interpretation of the trusts regarding the “powers of withdrawal” under Article VII, § (C) of the beneficiary trusts.

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Bluebook (online)
in Re Hamady Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-hamady-trust-michctapp-2015.