In Re Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 5, 2022
Docket356824
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs Trust (In Re Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs 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 Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re LOGAN BENJAMIN GARNER SPECIAL NEEDS TRUST.

KEYBANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, UNPUBLISHED May 5, 2022 Appellant,

v No. 356824 Shiawassee Probate Court BARBARA BAKEROMEROD, Successor Trustee, LC No. 13-035924-TT

Appellee.

Before: BOONSTRA, P.J., and M. J. KELLY and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Appellant, KeyBank National Association, appeals as of right the probate court order removing it as trustee and appointing appellee, Barbara BakerOmerod, as successor trustee. For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the court’s order removing KeyBank as trustee. However, because the court abused its discretion by appointing BakerOmerod as successor trustee, we vacate that order and remand for further proceedings.

I. BASIC FACTS

On March 5, 2008, the Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs Trust1 was established for the benefit of Logan Benjamin Garner. The Trust was funded with the proceeds of a settlement obtained for Logan’s benefit as a result of injuries he sustained at the hospital in the days after his birth. The sole purpose of the Trust is to provide for Logan’s “lifelong care.” KeyBank was

1 The Trust was originally entitled the Logan Benjamin Vankuren Special Needs Trust; however, it was reformed in 2013 after Logan’s stepfather legally adopted Logan.

-1- selected by Logan’s family to serve as the trustee. Initially, the Trust proceedings took place in Washtenaw County, but in 2013, the venue for the Trust was moved to Shiawassee County.

The probate court in Shiawassee County approved the 6th through 10th annual accounts without issue. However, at the hearing on the petition to approve the 11th annual account, the probate court raised questions concerning the attorney fees and fiduciary fees that KeyBank charged to the Trust. The accounting indicated that the trust had gained $29,892.78 in income, had incurred $41,313.19 in expenses, and had a remaining balance of $810,995.85. The court was concerned that the attorney fees of $1,117 and the fiduciary fees of $15,511.53 seemed high in relation to the size of the Trust. Because the lawyer for KeyBank could not explain the basis for the fiduciary fees, the court adjourned the hearing. When the hearing resumed, KeyBank’s lawyer assured the probate court that the bank was not “double dipping” by investing in its own products, noted that a trust officer regularly discussed the trust with the Garner family, and stressed that the Garners were “extremely happy” with KeyBank’s performance. The court stated that it would approve the accounting, but cautioned that it would be “keeping a close eye” on the matter because it was “really not convinced that you’re getting the best value for Logan’s money in terms of paying a law firm” and “[p]aying significant fiduciary fees.” The court added that it had experience with cases where large institutions abused trust funds and stated that it intended to watch Logan’s “money like it was mine.”

On April 13, 2020, KeyBank filed its 12th annual petition to allow accounts. The accounting indicated that the Trust had gained $55,507.94, had incurred $97,933.80 in expenses, and had a remaining balance of $768,569.99. This time the attorney fees and costs were $6,3554.63 and the fiduciary fees and expenses were $14,955.50. At the hearing on the petition, the court asked “what the bank did for Fifteen Thousand Dollars.” KeyBank’s lawyer stated that KeyBank provided “a myriad of services,” but the court did not allow further elaboration. Instead, the court suggested that KeyBank and the law firm involved saw a “big pot” and had decided to “just skim a little cream off of it and call it good.” It suggested that KeyBank was using the Trust’s money to invest in its own products, but also stated that there was “nothing that suggests that this Trustee management fee for money sitting in their bank is justified at all.” The court, therefore, did not allow the accounting and set an evidentiary hearing.

At the evidentiary hearing, KeyBank’s lawyer again assured the court that KeyBank was not double dipping. She explained that the fiduciary fees were governed by a presumptively reasonable fee schedule. Nevertheless, the court noted that it did not care that the fees were presumptively reasonable. Instead, it stated:

This is a court that requires each and every Ward, that gentleman right there in the red and white shirt [referring to Logan] is my priority in this case and that is whom I am protecting and not a presumptive right of the bank to take a cookie cutter fee whether or not they double dipped on it or not. Okay? I—I just don’t see competent performance by what this bank has been doing on this gentleman’s behalf.

The court adjourned the case and appointed a guardian ad litem (GAL) to offer “an opinion on the reasonableness of the fees charged by the banks, by the lawyers, and the distribution of money.”

-2- On October 19, 2020, the GAL submitted a report to the court. The report stated that KeyBank’s “annual fees for administration of irrevocable trusts accounts is at the rate of 1.55%,” that this rate was “slightly higher than most rates charged by financial institutions to act as Trustee,” but that the fees were not “excessive or unreasonable.” But the report also stated that KeyBank was charging fees for the Garners’ home, that “the 1.55% rate should not apply to the home,” and that “it would be reasonable to charge an hourly rate to maintain the home.” The report stated that attorney fees were charged at rates of $395 and hour and $275 an hour; that $395 was “excessive” while $275 was reasonable; that the paralegal fees of $190 per hour were excessive; and that travel time should be billed at $100 per hour instead of the usual hourly rate. Finally, the report stated that KeyBank “allowed excessive ‘wants’ rather than ‘needs’ as expenditures to Logan.”2 Overall, the report recommended that “the court consider modification of the Trustee of the Trust.”

On February 17, 2021, the court held another evidentiary hearing. Relevant to the issues raised on appeal, Roseann Reed, a trust officer employed by KeyBank, explained that KeyBank’s fees were charged pursuant to a flat rate that was determined by the size of the trust. Logan’s father testified that the family was pleased with KeyBank’s work as trustee and that the trust was more valuable than it was at its inception.

The court stated that it was not concerned with the family’s happiness with KeyBank’s performance. Instead, the court questioned whether the fees, which were standard for KeyBank, were reasonable for the Trust. The Court reiterated its concern that “this particular Trust” cannot afford KeyBank as a trustee. The court reasoned:

You know, the—the price of that new Mercedes convertible is reasonable. I just can’t afford it. Okay. That’s the—the issue here that—that, respectfully, nobody seems to get on behalf of KeyBank. . . .

I’m not saying the bank’s fees are unreasonable. I’m saying this Trust cannot afford you. Can’t afford a Four Hundred Dollar an hour lawyer. It can’t afford a bank that charges a flat rate regardless. And in excess, in—in the area of what they’re charging. There’s just too many other options to make their money last longer. [Emphasis added.]

Ultimately, the court found:

I can’t see the justification in paying what you’re paying to deal with niceties and friendly people. And, who—who do their job as best as they can. But, it’s—it’s just, you know, it’s a matter of being affordable. And I’m just not seeing it.

I’m going to—I’m going to approve the 12th Accounting and I’m not going to redact anything as it stands.

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Related

In Re Baldwin Trust
733 N.W.2d 419 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
In Re Logan Benjamin Garner Special Needs Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-logan-benjamin-garner-special-needs-trust-michctapp-2022.