In Re Howard Marshall Char. Remainder Annuity Trust

709 So. 2d 662, 1998 La. LEXIS 1101, 1998 WL 94426
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 8, 1998
Docket97-CC-1718
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 709 So. 2d 662 (In Re Howard Marshall Char. Remainder Annuity Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Howard Marshall Char. Remainder Annuity Trust, 709 So. 2d 662, 1998 La. LEXIS 1101, 1998 WL 94426 (La. 1998).

Opinion

709 So.2d 662 (1998)

In re HOWARD MARSHALL CHARITABLE REMAINDER ANNUITY TRUST.

No. 97-CC-1718.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

March 4, 1998.
Concurring Opinion March 10, 1998.
Rehearing Denied May 8, 1998.
Order Dissenting from Denial of Rehearing May 8, 1998.

William E. Shaddock, Henry A. McCall, Herman A. White, III, Lake Charles, for Applicant George School.

A.J. Gray, III, and Leslie Q. Knox, Lake Charles, for The Corporation of Haverford College.

Russell J. Stutes, Jr., Lake Charles, for Yale Law School.

Edwin K. Hunter, Richard D. Moreno, and Timothy O'Dowd, Lake Charles, for Finley L. Hilliard, Trustee of the Howard Marshall Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust.

Kenneth M. Wright, Lake Charles, and Mack E. Barham and Robert E. Arceneaux, *663 New Orleans, for Respondent E. Pierce Marshall, Executor of the Succession of J. Howard Marshall, II.

Concurring Opinion of Justice Lemmon March 10, 1998.

KNOLL, Justice.[*]

We granted writs in the instant case to determine whether Louisiana has jurisdiction over the succession of a Texas domiciliary, whose only property at the time of his death consisted of undisbursed income from two Louisiana inter vivos trusts. For the following reasons, we determine that Louisiana does not have jurisdiction over the succession of J. Howard Marshall, II.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Decedent, J. Howard Marshall, II, (Mr. Marshall) was an extremely wealthy attorney and businessman who was domiciled in Houston, Texas. He died on August 4, 1995. In the years preceding his death, Mr. Marshall transferred all of his personal assets into a series of inter vivos trusts in an attempt to avoid the necessity for probate. The vast majority of Mr. Marshall's assets were transferred to the J. Howard Marshall, II, Living Trust (Living Trust). In addition, Mr. Marshall created a second trust, the Howard Marshall Charitable Remainder Annuity Trust (Charitable Trust) to fund his charitable pledges and donations. The Charitable Trust was funded by an interest bearing note in the amount of $2,950,000, payable to J. Howard Marshall, II, by his son, E. Pierce Marshall.

Mr. Marshall was an income beneficiary under the terms of both trust agreements. The Living Trust provided: "During and throughout [Mr. Marshall's] lifetime, Trustee shall pay over to [Mr. Marshall] sufficient income to maintain [Mr. Marshall's] standard of living." The Charitable Trust states:

The Trustee shall pay to J. Howard Marshall, II (sometimes referred to as the Recipient) in each taxable year of the Trust during the Recipient's life an annuity in the amount of One Hundred Ninety-four Thousand Seven Hundred Dollars ($194,700).

Both trusts contained a provision authorizing the trustee to invade the corpus or principal of the trust if necessary to maintain the income streams provided for in the trusts.

The instant dispute concerns the distribution of the principal of the Charitable Trust. By the terms of the trust agreement, following the death of Mr. Marshall the principal was to be distributed as follows:

DISTRIBUTION TO CHARITY. Upon the death of the Recipient, the Trustee shall distribute all of the then principal and income of the trust (other than any amount due Recipient or Recipient's estate under ¶¶ 2 and 3, above) to Haverford College, Haverford Pennsylvania, George School, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, and Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut (hereinafter referred to as the Charitable Organizations) in the following proportions:

Haverford College          40.678%
George School              25.424%
Yale University            33.898%

Provided, however, that if any charitable pledge from the Donor exists to any of the Charitable Organizations, the Trustee shall make the distribution in such a manner to satisfy that pledge or pledges with the balance distributed in the proportions specified.

Following Mr. Marshall's death, the trustee of the Charitable Trust, Finley L. Hilliard, a resident of Lake Charles, Louisiana, took preliminary measures to distribute the corpus of the trust to the Charitable Organizations. Mr. Hilliard contacted the Charitable Organizations in an attempt to determine the extent of outstanding pledges, if any, which were due each organization by Mr. Marshall. George School responded that Mr. Marshall owed pledges in excess of $1.1 million dollars at the time of his death, and Haverford College reported between $3.8 and $5.3 million in outstanding pledges. Yale University responded that Mr. Marshall owed no outstanding pledges to that organization. The combined pledges of George School and Haverford College easily exceed the corpus of the charitable trust.

Mr. Hilliard then filed a "Petition for Instructions" in the 14th Judicial District Court in Calcasieu Parish, denying that the Charitable Trust was legally bound to George School and Haverford College for the claimed pledges. In his petition, Mr. Hilliard requested that the corpus of the Charitable Trust be distributed in accordance with the stated percentages without any privilege to the alleged pledges made by Mr. Marshall to Haverford College and George School. Mr. Hilliard further stated that it was Mr. Marshall's intention that the corpus of the trust would fully extinguish any and all pledges he had made to the Charitable Organizations.

George School, Haverford College, and Yale University responded to Mr. Finley's petition. Haverford College asserted that its pledges were valid, and further responded *664 that under the provisions of the trust, the outstanding pledges should be paid first, with only the remainder, if any, to be distributed according to the percentages. Haverford College further expressly reserved the right to enforce any pledges not extinguished by payment against Mr. Marshall's estate. Similarly, George School responded by averring the validity of its pledges, and by reserving the right to pursue the unpaid balance of remaining pledges against Mr. Marshall's estate. George School and Yale University did not oppose the distribution of the trust corpus in accordance with the percentages provided in the Charitable Trust.

In addition to the Charitable Organizations, Mr. Hilliard had named as a party defendant "The Succession of J. Howard Marshall, II, a succession being administered in Calcasieu Parish Louisiana in the 14th Judicial District Court docket number 32,699." (Louisiana Succession).[1] The Louisiana Succession had been opened when E. Pierce Marshall and Finley L. Hilliard, co-executors, filed a "Petition for Probate of Foreign Testament and Codicil" on August 8, 1995.[2] The executors averred that Mr. Marshall owned property in Calcasieu Parish at the time of his death, and that the 14th Judicial District Court therefore had jurisdiction to open Mr. Marshall's succession under La.Code Civ.P. art. 2811. The executors filed a detailed descriptive list of the property owned by Mr. Marshall at the time of his death. Because Mr. Marshall had allegedly transferred all of his property to his inter vivos trusts, the descriptive list stated that the only property in Mr. Marshall's estate consisted of the following income earned by the trusts, but undisbursed at the time of his death:

            PROPERTY SITUATED IN
          CALCASIEU PARISH LOUISIANA
    1.  Accrued but unpaid income due
          from the J. Howard Marshall,
          II, Living Trust, a Trust in the
          Parish of Calcasieu, State of
          Louisiana:                           $142,613.62
    2. 

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Bluebook (online)
709 So. 2d 662, 1998 La. LEXIS 1101, 1998 WL 94426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-howard-marshall-char-remainder-annuity-trust-la-1998.