in Re Raymond E Vandamme Irrevocable Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 2021
Docket351517
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Raymond E Vandamme Irrevocable Trust (in Re Raymond E Vandamme Irrevocable 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 Raymond E Vandamme Irrevocable Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

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 RAYMOND E. VANDAMME IRREVOCABLE TRUST 10/22/13.

KEITH FOWLER and MARK FOWLER, UNPUBLISHED May 13, 2021 Petitioners, and

YVONNE M. ZISLER, Personal Representative of the ESTATE OF DENNIS FOWLER,

Appellant,

v No. 351517 Macomb Probate Court JANET L. CZAJKOWSKI and KENNETH R. LC No. 2018-226851-TV VANDAMME,

Appellees, and

MITCHELL VANDAMME, ALANNA VANDAMME, and ERIAN R. SOLAIMAN,

Other Parties.

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

PER CURIAM.

Appellant, Yvonne M. Zisler, as personal representative of the estate of Dennis Fowler, appeals as of right the probate court’s opinion and order granting in part and denying in part a motion for sanctions and costs. We conclude that the probate court erred in awarding attorney fees

-1- and deposition costs, but properly awarded other costs. We therefore affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for entry of an order in conformance with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

This matter concerns an award of attorney fees and costs after a jury trial regarding the validity of a trust. Because the matter involves various family members, we will use first names in this opinion to avoid confusion.

Raymond E. VanDamme, the decedent, was the settlor of two trusts: a September 20, 2000 revocable living trust, and an October 23, 2013 irrevocable trust. Raymond died around Christmas in 2016. Raymond had three children: Teresa Fowler, Kenneth VanDamme, and Janet Czajkowski. Teresa was married to Dennis Fowler, and had two sons, Keith Fowler and Mark Fowler. Teresa died on December 20, 2010, six years before Raymond’s death.

After Raymond’s death, Keith and Mark filed a petition to contest his two trusts. Regarding the October 23, 2013 irrevocable trust, Keith and Mark alleged it should be set aside because: (1) Raymond lacked the required mental capacity to create a trust; (2) Raymond was unduly influenced by appellees; and (3) the trust was the result of fraudulent behavior. The petition also sought an accounting of the trust assets and distributions, and removal of appellees as trustees. After filing the initial petition, Mark and Dennis learned the September 20, 2000 revocable living trust had been amended on January 11, 2011, approximately three weeks after Teresa died, and that Raymond had replaced Teresa with Dennis as a trust beneficiary in the amendment. The probate court ordered an amendment to the case caption to refer only to the October 23, 2013 irrevocable trust, granted Dennis leave to intervene, and allowed a separate petition to be filed regarding the September 20, 2000 revocable living trust, as amended on January 11, 2011.

Dennis, Keith, and Mark filed an amended petition regarding the October 23, 2013 irrevocable trust, as well as petitions regarding the September 20, 2000 revocable living trust and decedent’s estate. The probate court ordered consolidation of the three cases and appointed Martin J. Brosnan as a special fiduciary. At the direction of the probate court, Brosnan was responsible for investigating Raymond’s assets and determining whether the estate had a claim for the return of funds. Brosnan released a report detailing Raymond’s assets, and indicated that he “saw no unusual activity regarding the use or disposition” of Raymond’s assets except for a transaction related to the irrevocable trust. Brosnan explained:

Mr. Van Damme was a widower with three children. At the beginning of 2010, his estate plan consisted of a trust which provided for equal distribution among his children and an annuity beneficiary designation for each child with three distinct annuities. Mr. Van Damme’s daughter died in 2010. Her widowed husband replaced her as the presumptive beneficiary of 1/3 of Mr. Van Damme’s estate.

In 2013, Mr. Van Damme, with the aid and assistance of counsel, effectively changed his estate plan by creating an irrevocable trust. Essentially[,] all of Mr. Van Damme’s assets were removed to this trust. The trust changed the disposition scheme of the estate by providing that Mr. Van Damme’s two surviving children

-2- [Kenneth and Janet] would receive 48% shares each with 1% each to two grandchildren [Keith and Mark]. His widowed son-in-law [Dennis] would take nothing.

The probate court scheduled a jury trial to begin on April 30, 2019. Before trial, the parties filed competing motions for summary disposition. Appellees asserted that summary disposition was proper: (1) under the doctrine of election because Mark and Keith accepted the benefits of the irrevocable trust and, without returning the funds received, claimed it was invalid; and (2) the allegations of mental incapacity, undue influence, and fraud were conclusory, speculative, and contradicted by the evidence. The probate court granted in part, and denied in part, appellees’ motion for summary disposition, concluding that Keith and Mark were “estopped from challenging the trust under the doctrine of election,” but finding that genuine issues of material fact existed regarding the validity of the October 23, 2013 irrevocable trust. The probate court denied the motion for summary disposition filed by Dennis, Keith, and Mark. Before its decision on the dispositive motions, the probate court entered an order discharging Brosnan as special fiduciary, granting his request for fees totaling $3,804.50, and dividing payment of the fee equally between Janet, Kenneth, Dennis, Keith, and Mark.

During the jury trial, appellees moved for a directed verdict at the close of petitioners’ case. The probate court denied the motion, concluding that sufficient evidence existed to submit the case to the jury. At the close of the trial, the jury found in favor of appellees. That same day, based on the jury’s findings, the probate court entered an order denying the amended petition in Case No. 2018-226851-TV. The order stated: “This Order does close the file.” On May 13, 2019, the probate court amended the order to read, “This Order does not close the file.” On May 22, 2019, the probate court, consistent with its earlier verbal ruling, entered an order denying appellees’ motion for directed verdict in Case No. 2018-226851-TV.

Relying on MCR 1.109, MCR 2.626, and MCL 600.2591, appellees moved for sanctions and costs against Dennis. Appellees asserted that Dennis failed to produce evidence demonstrating that Raymond was mentally incapable of creating the October 22, 2013 trust, and that Dennis could not establish any undue influence or fraud. Appellees pointed to Dennis’s testimony that he had no personal knowledge or evidence of undue influence, and that he lacked evidence regarding fraud. Appellees also argued that Dennis and his attorneys contested “the most basic facts” and litigated “every legal point . . . to conclusion,” regardless of whether the positions were supported by fact or law. On these grounds, appellees asserted that the probate court should award them attorney fees and costs.

The same day they moved for sanctions and costs, appellees filed a taxation of costs form outlining the various costs they sought, including: (1) $40 related to motions resulting in dismissal or judgment; (2) $218.70 related to service fees and mileage; (3) $2,276.35 related to the cost of taking depositions; (4) $659.58 related to witness fees; and (5) $1,520.80 related to the special- fiduciary fees for Brosnan. In total, respondents sought $4,715.43 in costs.

After Dennis objected to the taxation of costs form and responded to the motion for sanctions, the probate court held a hearing on appellees’ motion.

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