In re Masek Children's Trust

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 14, 2019
DocketA-18-408
StatusPublished

This text of In re Masek Children's Trust (In re Masek Children's 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 Masek Children's Trust, (Neb. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

IN RE MASEK CHILDREN’S 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 MASEK CHILDREN’S TRUST.

MARK A. MASEK ET AL., APPELLANTS AND CROSS APPELLEES, V.

BARRY M. MASEK, APPELLEE AND CROSS APPELLANT, AND COLLEEN A. EAMES, APPELLEE.

Filed May 14, 2019. No. A-18-408.

Appeal from the County Court for Gage County: STEVEN B. TIMM, Judge. Affirmed. Brian S. Koerwitz, of Endacott, Peetz & Timmer, P.C., L.L.O., for appellants. Douglas W. Ruge II for appellee Barry M. Masek. William E. Seidler, Jr., of Seidler & Seidler, P.C., for appellee Colleen A. Eames.

PIRTLE, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges. WELCH, Judge. I. INTRODUCTION Five siblings were cotrustees and beneficiaries of a trust whose sole asset was farmland located in Gage County, Nebraska. Three of the siblings, Mark A. Masek, Diane M. Yahiro, and Richard C. Masek (Petitioners), allege that the oldest brother, Barry M. Masek, represented that he would manage the trust, failed to manage the trust with sufficient care, and that his violation of that duty caused damages. Finding that there was insufficient evidence that Barry undertook the duty to manage the trust, and that Petitioners were in pari delicto with Barry, we find that

-1- Petitioners may not pursue a claim for breach of fiduciary duty against Barry in his capacity as trustee. For the reasons stated below, we affirm. II. STATEMENT OF FACTS 1. TRUST FORMATION AND MANAGEMENT PRIOR TO LAWSUIT Patricia and Charles Masek, parents of the parties to this action, owned a farm with several hundred acres of farmland in Gage County, Nebraska. After Charles died in 2000, Patricia gifted an equal and undivided interest in the farm to her children, Barry, Mark, Dianne, Colleen Eames, and Richard. In November 2000, the Masek children formed the Masek Children’s Trust to hold the farm and transferred the farm to the trust. Barry, who is a CPA, and Mark, who is a tax attorney, took the lead on working to prepare the trust with David Lepant, who had previously served as their parents’ attorney. When a draft of the trust was ready to send to Colleen and Dianne, Barry included a note which stated that the trust was being established for estate tax purposes. In the note, Barry also stated that he would take care of “miscellaneous trust administration: bank checks, pay bills, etc.” but that major transactions such as disbursements would require majority approval. Although Richard was a beneficiary and grantor, and was formally a trustee, he was left out of most conversations about the farm. Lepant stated that he was almost certain Richard had no input in the trust’s formation because Richard “just is not the type of a person that would have an opinion probably on this sort of thing . . . I am not sure that he has the mental capabilities to do that.” When the trust was formed, each sibling was named as a grantor, a trustee, and a beneficiary. The trust’s sole income was the rental income from the land. The trust allowed income to be paid out equally to the siblings during Patricia’s lifetime, but the principal was to be held in trust until after Patricia’s death, except that, upon the majority vote of the trustees, the principal could be “paid out [during Patricia’s lifetime] for the benefit of a charitable organization, including hospitals, nursing homes, or other organizations existing for the health and well-being of the aged.” Barry testified that the purpose of these provisions was to provide for Patricia in her old age. The trust conferred certain powers in the trustees, including the power to lease trust property. The trust also contained a “Right of Withdrawal” feature which allowed any of the beneficiaries to demand a withdrawal of their interest in the farmland which would then require all beneficiaries to withdraw their proportionate share of the farmland. In the early 2000s, Barry paid Patricia a $1,000-per-month management fee from the trust account. Email correspondence among the siblings, excluding Richard, demonstrates that Mark and Dianne were aware of these payments and had evidently discussed them with Barry in advance. Barry testified that, at some point, Patricia decided she did not need the management fee and would rather leave the money in the trust and continued to manage the farm without a fee. Near the end of 2013, the four siblings began to discuss withdrawing the land from the trust. Mark thought that separating it might be preferred and stated “If this is the collective view, then I suggest that any separation occur after Mom moves to Dianne’s in March.” Barry responded, expressing his reservation because “The farm is not ours until Mom is gone- physically or mentally. And she/we may need to sell some pieces if she needs the money [for a nursing home.]” The record does not demonstrate that anyone questioned or challenged Barry’s statements at the

-2- time. A few days later, in an email to Dianne, Mark expressed his view that Barry was not keeping them up to date on farm matters. He then said that “I want to get Mom and Rick to your house. Then in the summer have a joint call to collectively discuss rent and any other matter.” In 2014, Patricia moved from her home near the farm to live with Dianne. That same year, Barry, acting pursuant to Patricia’s direction, contacted long-term farmland tenants Ronald and Richard Zarybnicky and Brian Vitosh regarding rent for 2014, which yielded a small increase in revenue. The Zarybnickys and Melvin and Vitosh had been tenants of the farmland dating back many years before the farmland was gifted to the siblings and transferred to the trust. In 2014, the Zarybnickys paid $72 per acre of cropland and Vitosh paid a similar rate. None of the siblings did anything to raise rents for 2015. In May 2015, Mark asked about the rent they were charging per acre, and Barry provided the information. Mark made some rough estimates of the land’s rental value and determined that the trust had forgone roughly $300,000 in potential profits. Barry disagreed with Mark that there was a problem because he claimed the rents were set in accordance with their parents’ wishes. Mark hired an appraiser to determine the fair market rent value of the farm. After hearing from the appraiser, Mark wanted to charge $150 per acre for the farm’s better land and $135 per acre for the other cropland. Dianne agreed, but Barry and Colleen had reservations. In June 2015, Mark contacted the trust’s tenants and informed them that their oral leases would not be renewed for the 2016 season, and provided written leases with cropland prices of $135 and $150 per acre. Although both the Zarybnickys and Vitosh signed the leases, they were informed that the leases would not be final until signed by all trustees. Barry still had reservations, and in July, Barry suggested setting the rental rate at $25 per acre less than the rate Mark had negotiated and telling the tenants that the price would increase the following year. 2. PLEADINGS AND RENT HEARING In August 2015, the Petitioners brought an action to remove Barry as trustee and to recover for the trust’s losses that they alleged he had caused. The petition alleged that: Barry was a certified public accountant, represented he was qualified to manage the trust, and on that basis they agreed to allow him to be primarily responsible for managing the trust; despite the trust requiring approval of all trustees to lease land, Barry unilaterally leased the trust’s land at rates far below market value; and even after Mark confronted Barry about leasing the land at market value, Barry attempted to lease the land at below market value for the 2016 farming season.

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In re Masek Children's Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-masek-childrens-trust-nebctapp-2019.