In re Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Revocable Trust

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 2017
DocketA-15-1014, A-15-1015
StatusPublished

This text of In re Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Revocable Trust (In re Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Revocable Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Revocable Trust, (Neb. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

IN RE HENRY B. WILSON, JR., REVOCABLE TRUST

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

IN RE HENRY B. WILSON, JR., REVOCABLE TRUST DATED JUNE 27, 2002.

LOU ANN GODING, APPELLANT, V.

ROGER A. WILSON AND ROSEANN M. WILSON, COTRUSTEES OF THE HENRY B. WILSON, JR., REVOCABLE TRUST DATED JUNE 27, 2002, APPELLEES.

IN RE ESTATE OF HENRY B. WILSON, JR., DECEASED.

ROGER A. WILSON AND ROSEANN M. WILSON, COPERSONAL REPRESENTATIVES OF THE ESTATE OF HENRY B. WILSON, JR., DECEASED, APPELLEES.

Filed November 21, 2017. Nos. A-15-1014, A-15-1015.

Appeals from the County Court for Sherman County: TAMI K. SCHENDT, Judge. Judgment in No. A-15-1014 affirmed as modified. Judgment in No. A-15-1015 affirmed. Nicole K. Seckman Jilek, Jeffrey J. Blumel, and Thomas J. Malicki, of Abrahams, Kaslow & Cassman, L.L.P., for appellant. Larry W. Beucke, of Parker, Grossart, Bahensky, Beucke, Bowman & Symington, L.L.P., for appellees.

-1- MOORE, Chief Judge, and RIEDMANN and BISHOP, Judges. BISHOP, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION Lou Ann Goding (Lou Ann) appeals from orders entered by the county court for Sherman County in two consolidated cases; one concerns the administration of her father’s trust, and the other her father’s estate. Lou Ann succeeded in removing her two siblings as cotrustees of their father’s trust and obtaining a surcharge against them for $73,675.88. An accounting was ordered for the trust and Lou Ann was awarded $20,000 for attorney fees. Lou Ann did not obtain the relief she requested in the estate case. Lou Ann appeals from the orders entered in both cases. We affirm the trust case as modified, and affirm the estate case. II. FACTUAL BACKGROUND Henry B. Wilson, Jr. (Henry) passed away on December 23, 2010. His wife, Eleanor Wilson (Eleanor), predeceased him, but he was survived by three children: Lou Ann, Roger A. Wilson (Roger), and Roseann M. Wilson (Roseann). Lou Ann resides and works in Omaha, Nebraska. She received a certified public accountant’s certification shortly after graduating from college, and subsequently became a consultant for a large family business. Lou Ann is also an elected official and was appointed to serve as a trustee for an employee retirement fund. Roger lives in Tucson, Arizona, and is an active duty member of the military. His military service has taken him overseas a number of times, including a tour in Afghanistan from May 2012 through August 2013. Roseann lives in Loup City, Nebraska, and is a self-employed farmer and rancher. After attending the University of Nebraska School of Technical Agriculture, Roseann “came back home to help dad and mom on the farm and ranch” in 1988. She was initially treated as an employee, but she subsequently started getting her own cattle and buying her own land. She continued to operate the farm and ranch with Henry, but “[i]t was pretty much whatever dad wanted.” Roseann and Henry commingled their operations in various ways, for example, they would sometimes feed Roseann’s corn to Henry’s cattle and vice versa, or Henry would pay some bills and tell Roseann to pay others regardless of ownership. In 2002, Henry and Eleanor created revocable trusts: the “Henry B. Wilson, Jr. Revocable Trust Dated June 27, 2002” (Henry’s Trust), and the “Eleanor M. Wilson Revocable Trust Dated June 27, 2002” (Eleanor’s Trust). Henry and Eleanor transferred all of their real property to themselves in their capacity as trustees of their respective trusts as equal tenants in common. Both Henry’s Trust and Eleanor’s Trust had an assignment schedule which transferred “[a]ll my interest in personal household furniture and furnishings, wearing apparel, collectibles and antiques, personal effects and other articles, tools, and equipment or personal or household or yard use or ornament which I presently own or may hereafter acquire” to their respective trusts. Henry became trustee of Eleanor’s trust upon her death in March 2008. Eleanor’s Trust provided that if Henry survived her, he would become trustee of her trust and would distribute a fractional share of the trust property to his trust (for tax purposes), and any of Eleanor’s Trust assets not transferred to Henry’s Trust were to be administered as Trust “A.” Trust “A” was to pay income to Henry and to support Henry during the remainder of his life. Henry subsequently

-2- transferred all interests in land held by Eleanor’s trust to himself in his capacity as the trustee of Trust “A.” Henry’s Trust, Eleanor’s Trust, and Trust “A,” provided that, upon the death of the last surviving spouse, real property interests within each trust be distributed directly to three separate and unequal subtrusts in the name of each of their children: the Lou Ann Goding Trust, the Roger Wilson Trust, and the Roseann Wilson Trust. Henry’s Trust and Eleanor’s Trust also provided for the distribution of the residue of their respective trusts in equal shares to their three children. The three separate and unequal subtrusts created by Henry’s Trust and Eleanor’s Trust had identical language regarding trust management. In relevant part, the instructions for the Lou Ann Goding Trust directed the trustee of the subtrust, “[u]ntil the death of my said daughter, LOU ANN GODING, the trustee shall pay the net income from the trust in convenient installments (at least annually) to my said son [sic] so long as my said son [sic] shall live.” When Henry died, the terms of Henry’s Trust, as amended, appointed Roseann and Roger as the cotrustees of Henry’s Trust. Although Roseann and Roger were cotrustees, Roseann was the primary actor in gathering assets and managing the Trust after Henry’s death. Roseann kept Roger informed of her actions by phone and email. The Trust owned approximately 4,200 acres of land. Pursuant to Henry’s Trust, the cotrustees transferred real estate from Henry’s Trust and from Eleanor’s Trust “A” to the subtrusts on December 30, 2011. In addition to his Trust, Henry drafted a will and devised all of his personal and household effects to his Trust. Article Fourth of Henry’s will disposed of the estate residue, stating: “[a]ll the residue of my estate I devise to the trustee of the Trust to be added to the Trust and administered as a part of and pursuant to all terms and conditions thereof.” The will nominated Roseann and Roger as copersonal representatives of Henry’s estate upon his death. The attorney who prepared Henry’s estate plan drafted Henry’s will and Henry’s Trust. The attorney explained the pour-over will was like “a backup document that in case you didn’t get all the assets into the trust or identified with the trust at time of death, it would . . . pour those assets into the trust to be distributed under the terms of the trust.” The result was to send everything to the trust. On January 14, 2011, the attorney sent a letter to the cotrustees of Henry’s Trust and Eleanor’s Trust “A,” indicating he had been hired on their behalf to settle Henry’s Trust and estate, “and Eleanor’s.” The letter explained how the trust worked and under what circumstances an estate proceeding might be necessary. The goal was to avoid probate, but the attorney explained in Henry’s case, some assets were discovered which were not identified with the trust or did not have a beneficiary or were not payable on death to the trust.

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Bluebook (online)
In re Henry B. Wilson, Jr., Revocable Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-henry-b-wilson-jr-revocable-trust-nebctapp-2017.