In re the Trust of Brown

380 N.W.2d 911, 1986 Minn. App. LEXIS 3971
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedFebruary 11, 1986
DocketNo. C9-85-1568
StatusPublished

This text of 380 N.W.2d 911 (In re the Trust of Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Trust of Brown, 380 N.W.2d 911, 1986 Minn. App. LEXIS 3971 (Mich. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinions

[912]*912OPINION

RANDALL, Judge.

G. Burton Brown signed a will and trust agreement in 1974. He died in 1984. The trustee, Norwest Bank Midland, N.A., petitioned the trial court for instructions concerning the proper funding of the marital trust created by the trust agreement. The trial court issued an order instructing the trustee as requested by Norwest Bank Midland, from which Phyllis Brown, Burt Brown’s widow, appeals. We affirm.

FACTS

Burton Brown signed his will and “insurance trust agreement” on the same date in 1974. The trust agreement was between Burton Brown and Norwest. It named Norwest as trustee. Burton Brown made the trustee beneficiary of various life insurance policies and employment benefits. These constituted the bulk of Burton Brown’s estate. The trust is divided into two shares, a “marital trust” and a “G. Burton Brown Family Trust.”

The will is a “pour-over” will. Upon the testator’s death it pours over into the trust assets held by the testator in his own name before his death. The bulk of Burton Brown’s assets passed into the trust before Brown’s death. In that manner, the bulk of his estate was excluded from the probate estate. The will specified certain assets to the marital trust and certain assets to the family trust.

The controversy concerns interpretation of the trust, primarily language in article two:

Upon the death of the Grantor, if PHYLLIS M. BROWN shall be his surviving wife, the Trustee may receive from the Grantor’s probate estate assets which qualify and are set aside for the maximum marital deduction therein, which assets shall be held by the Trustee in trust and may for convenience be called the “MARITAL TRUST.”

(emphasis added.) The probate assets amount to only 5% of the gross estate1 and Phyllis Brown therefore is left with relatively little in the marital trust. Burton Brown’s gross estate was worth approximately $876,994.80. Of this, Phyllis Brown received $149,223.34 of assets which passed directly to her because they were held in joint tenancy and $11,851.63 of probate assets which poured over into the marital trust. The family trust holds the remaining assets.

The trial court instructed the trustees:
1) That the marital trust be funded only with assets received from or allocated to the trustee by the personal representative of the estate of G. Burton Brown.
2) That all other assets received by the trustee or otherwise held by it as trustee should be allocated to the G. Burton Brown Family Trust.

Appellant, Phyllis Brown, claims alternatively that (1) the dominant intent of the trust agreement requires the marital trust to be “fully funded” with nonprobate assets; (2) the terms of the trust agreement are ambiguous and require construction with the aid of extrinsic evidence and this evidence requires funding the marital trust with nonprobate assets; (3) the trial court erred by ignoring evidence of surrounding circumstances; and (4) if the trust terms are not ambiguous, they should be reformed. Respondent, Norwest, claims that the funding language is unambiguous and permits the marital trust to be funded only with probate assets and forbids the trustee from adding nonprobate assets in the trust to the marital trust. The living beneficiaries apparently agree with Phyllis Brown’s interpretation. The trustee opposes them in order to protect contingent unidentified remaindermen of the family trust.

ISSUES

1. Are the terms of the trust agreement ambiguous?

[913]*9132. Does the trial court’s interpretation of the trust agreement contravene the set-tlor’s dominant intent?

3. Did the trial court err in not reforming the trust?

ANALYSIS

Where “the critical evidence is documentary, there is no necessity to defer to the trial court’s assessment of the meaning and credibility of that evidence. * * * ‘we are as able as he to determine credibility, and so we may disregard his finding.’ ” In Re Trust Known as Great Northern Iron Ore Properties, 308 Minn. 221, 225, 243 N.W.2d 302, 305 (1976) (citations omitted). The critical evidence here is the trust agreement and the will, and therefore this court need not defer to the trial court’s decision.

I.

Ambiguity

Appellant cites references to “maximum marital deduction,” which allegedly create ambiguity in article two’s direction to fund the marital trust from probate estate assets. Article eleven of the trust authorizes certain reallocation of assets:

Since the value of the Grantor’s adjusted gross estate and the assets therein cannot be finally determined for tax purposes until his Federal Estate Tax Return is audited and accepted by the Internal Revenue Service, the Trustee is authorized, after such audit shall have been made and final tax values established, to re-allocate assets to the MARITAL TRUST or the G. BURTON BROWN FAMILY TRUST, as the case may be, so that assets of the MARITAL TRUST will be the maximum marital deduction allowable and no more when taken in the aggregate with all other marital deductions allowed.

Appellant claims that this provision shows that Burton Brown intended the marital trust to qualify for the maximum marital deduction allowable. This would not be possible unless the trustees are permitted to allocate nonprobate assets to the marital trust. We agree with the trial court that this provision is designed merely to realign assets after the audit of the federal estate tax return by the Internal Revenue Service if the values used are altered by the audit process. The provision authorizes minimal adjustments. It does not refer to funding and cannot be said to create an ambiguity in the funding language of article two. It provides a mechanism for adjusting funding once the audit is completed and final values are ascertained.

Appellant also cites a reference to “maximum marital deduction” in the will. The will divides the residuary estate into two shares, one being “fifty per centum (50%) of the value of [the] adjusted gross estate, but no more than the maximum marital deduction allowable.” Appellant claims that this shows Burt Brown’s intent to obtain what was, at that time, maximum marital deduction of 50% of his entire gross estate. However, this provision disposes only of probate assets because it is placed in the will. It cannot govern division of the nonprobate assets in the trust.

The article two provision funding the trust is not ambiguous. We will not read an ambiguity into the instrument in order to draft for the beneficiaries an estate plan which minimizes taxes.

Had ambiguity, latent or patent, existed in the instrument, extrinsic evidence would have been admissible to resolve the ambiguity. In Re Tweedie’s Will, 234 Minn. 444, 450, 48 N.W.2d 657, 660 (1951) (citation omitted). Because the will is not ambiguous, we affirm the trial court’s refusal to consider extrinsic evidence.

II.

Interpretation of trust agreement as a whole

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Related

In Re Trust Known as Great Northern Iron Ore Properties
243 N.W.2d 302 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1976)
In Re Trusteeship Under Will of Tweedie
234 Minn. 444 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1951)
In Re Trusteeship Created by Fiske
242 Minn. 452 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1954)
Thayer v. American Financial Advisers, Inc.
322 N.W.2d 599 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1982)
In Re Trusteeship Under Will of Jones
277 N.W. 899 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1938)
In Re Trusts Under Will of McCann
3 N.W.2d 226 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1942)
In Re Trust Under Will of Comstock
17 N.W.2d 656 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1945)
Whiting v. Whiting
44 N.W. 1030 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1890)
Johrden v. Pond
148 N.W. 112 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1914)
Fay v. Strader
48 N.W.2d 657 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1951)
Peters v. Ueland
65 N.W.2d 906 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1954)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
380 N.W.2d 911, 1986 Minn. App. LEXIS 3971, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-trust-of-brown-minnctapp-1986.