in Re Poston Estate

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 25, 2017
Docket331772
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Poston Estate (in Re Poston Estate) 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 Poston Estate, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re Estate of POSTON.

KEVIN D. POSTON, Trustee Personal UNPUBLISHED Representative of the Estate of THELMA July 25, 2017 LILLIAN POSTON,

Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

v No. 331772 Saginaw Probate Court CRAIG POSTON, LC No. 14-132118-DE

Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

and

CARL POSTON and KEITH POSTON,

Appellees.

Before: SERVITTO, P.J., and MURRAY and BORRELLO, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner, Craig Poston, appeals as of right a February 9, 2016 opinion and order denying his petition to remove respondent, Kevin D. Poston, as trustee of the Thelma L. Poston Revocable Trust. Respondent has filed a cross-appeal as of right also challenging the February 9, 2016 opinion and order, as well as separate orders, entered on March 7, 2016, granting petitioner’s petition for payment of attorney fees, and denying respondent’s motion for case evaluation sanctions. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the February 9, 2016 opinion and order in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We also affirm the orders granting the petition for payment of petitioner’s attorney fees, and denying respondent’s motion for case evaluation sanctions.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This matter arises from a dispute between brothers regarding the administration of their mother’s estate and trust. On October 24, 1994, Thelma L. Poston established the Thelma L. Poston Revocable Trust. Thelma acted as trustee until she and her husband, Carl C. Poston, Jr., appointed their son, respondent, successor trustee on March 28, 2011. The Trust provides that,

-1- upon Thelma’s death, if Carl, Jr., is no longer alive, the trustee shall divide the net income of the Trust into separate and equal shares for Thelma’s then-surviving children.

Thelma died on May 22, 2014, and was not survived by Carl, Jr. Respondent filed an application for informal probate of Thelma’s estate on July 30, 2014, and was appointed personal representative of the estate the same day. Respondent listed himself, the Trust, and his brothers – petitioner, Carl Poston III, and Keith Poston – as the estate’s heirs and devisees.

After learning of respondent’s application through his attorney, petitioner filed a petition to compel relief pursuant to MCL 700.1308, and for registration of the Trust, on January 12, 2015. He asserted that respondent: (1) breached his fiduciary duties by failing to provide an accounting of the Trust to the trust beneficiaries upon Thelma’s death; (2) may have unduly influenced Thelma and Carl, Jr., to deed him a survivorship interest in real property at 910 Morris in Saginaw, at a time when they may have lacked the capacity to do so; (3) advised petitioner that he charged the Trust a 1% fee for each year from 2007 to 2014, totaling $107,323.33, in violation of MCL 700.7814(2)(d), which requires a trustee to notify beneficiaries in advance of any change in the trustee’s compensation; (4) improperly converted Trust assets and acted in a self-dealing manner when he transferred Trust funds into bank accounts owned by him and his wife, Kathy Poston; and (5) failed to comply with a February 25, 2015 stipulated order requiring that he provide all interested parties a proper accounting of the Trust. On the basis of these allegations, petitioner requested that the probate court order an accounting of the Trust, remove respondent as personal representative and trustee under MCL 700.1308, if necessary, deny trustee fees and restore the fees to the Trust, and award attorney fees and sanctions.

On December 15 and 16, 2015, the probate court conducted a hearing on the petition to compel relief. Respondent testified that, as trustee, he transferred Trust funds held under his parents’ names in accounts with the Catholic Federal Credit Union, ING, Ameris, and Maier and Associates, to a UBS account that he and Kathy owned jointly, and later to other accounts he and Kathy held jointly at Main Street Bank. According to respondent, his parents’ financial advisor Wayne Maier, suggested that he make the transfer, and his parents agreed. However, they always refused to go to the bank and sign the required documents themselves.

Respondent also admitted that he and Kathy had borrowed from the Trust funds in those personal accounts. Kathy admitted the same. However, they both testified that they had repaid much of the money borrowed.

Loans were also made from Trust funds to Carl III and petitioner. In 2008, Carl III asked Carl, Jr., and Thelma for a loan, and received $370,277.59 from the Trust. The loan was reflected in the Third Amendment to the Trust. Petitioner received $150,000, a little over $100,000, and $55,000 from the Trust. These loans were reflected in the Fourth, Fifth, and Sixth

-2- Amendments to the Trust. Respondent said that petitioner also received loans from the Trust for $20,291.67 and $57,260.56.1

Petitioner did not dispute that he received money from the Trust, or the amounts testified to by respondent. However, he said that he viewed them as advancements on his inheritance rather than as loans from Trust funds, despite the fact that he signed advancement documents subjecting the distributions he received to a 4% interest rate.

According to petitioner, until he received a letter from respondent on July 10, 2014, regarding the Trust, he had no idea that respondent was going to charge a 1% trustee fee.2 He had also never seen a spreadsheet listing Trust assets like the one attached to the letter, and was never notified that Trust funds were transferred from his parents’ accounts to accounts held by respondent and Kathy.

Kathy, an accountant, confirmed that Trust funds were transferred from accounts held by respondent’s parents to a UBS account owned jointly by her and respondent. The funds were then transferred again, in September 2011, to MSB. She clarified that four MSB accounts exist, but that only three contain Trust funds. After the Trust funds were transferred from UBS to MSB, she and respondent removed $15,000, of which $10,000 had been repaid. They had also been borrowing $3,500 per month beginning in February 2012. Although they deposited money back into the account every month, it was not always the full amount borrowed.

At the close of the hearing, the probate court found that respondent breached his fiduciary duties for failing to properly account and for self-dealing, but declined to remove respondent as trustee, choosing to deny respondent a trustee fee instead. In so doing, the probate court stated, “Mr. Kevin Poston has an attorney who can help get this matter closed with the proper accounting and the proper payments at this point in time, so I will not remove him but will provide guidance later in this order.” The probate court denied petitioner’s conversion claim based on its findings that all Trust funds remained intact, and that petitioner failed to prove the elements of conversion, and also denied petitioner’s claims of undue influence.

The court further found that all Trust funds given to Thelma’s sons were loans and not advancements, and that Thelma and Carl, Jr., intended to impose a 4% interest rate on those loans. Finally, it awarded attorney fees to both parties out of the administrative expenses of the Trust.

On January 25, 2016, respondent filed a motion for entry of an order pursuant to MCR 2.602(B)(4), and each party submitted proposed orders. Petitioner’s proposed order contained the following language: “IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Trustee with his attorney shall

1 It is not clear that these numbers are accurate.

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