in Re Trombly Estate

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 29, 2020
Docket350432
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Trombly Estate (in Re Trombly 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 Trombly Estate, (Mich. Ct. App. 2020).

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 ESTATE OF WILLIAM N. TROMBLY.

GARY W. TROMBLY, UNPUBLISHED December 29, 2020 Petitioner-Appellant,

v No. 350432 Macomb Probate Court JACQUELINE M. MACKENZIE, personal LC No. 2018-229112-DE representative of the ESTATE OF WILLIAM N. TROMBLY,

Respondent-Appellee.

Before: STEPHENS, P.J., and SERVITTO and LETICA, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In this dispute regarding an accounting of a trust, petitioner appeals as of right the probate court’s order denying his request for accounting and granting respondent’s request for sanctions. On appeal, petitioner argues the probate court erred when it concluded a decedent’s right to an accounting under a trust does not survive the decedent’s death. Petitioner also argues the probate court erred when it concluded petitioner did not have standing as an interested party to request an accounting. Lastly, petitioner argues the probate court erred when it sanctioned him for filing his petition. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

This appeal arises from a dispute between petitioner (Gary) and respondent (Jacqueline), who are siblings and the adult children of William N. Trombly and Carole A. Trombly. In 2006, William and Carole created separate revocable trusts, providing support for their spouse after their death and leaving the remainder to their children. In 2014, both William and Carole amended their trusts to provide that, upon the surviving spouse’s death, their family farm would be Jacqueline’s while Gary would receive their Florida condominium and $100,000, with any remainder being equally divided. William also executed an amendment to his will that poured over into his trust.

-1- Carole died first, on May 4, 2015. William died on December 16, 2017.

As detailed in the pleadings below, full understanding of the present action requires consideration of the separate legal proceeding arising from Carole’s trust in the same probate court before the same judge. On February 27, 2018, Gary, in his capacity as a beneficiary of his mother’s trust, filed a petition for trust supervision and requested an accounting related to Carole’s trust for the time between Carole and William’s deaths—the disputed period at issue here. The probate court granted Gary’s request for supervision and granted him an accounting, but only after William’s death. In so doing, the probate court concluded that, under the terms of Carole’s trust, only the current trust beneficiary was entitled to receive an accounting. In particular, the relevant language from Carole’s trust provides:

Following the Donor’s death, the Successor Trustee shall furnish, at least annually, to the current trust beneficiaries a complete inventory of trust property held in trust in which the current trust beneficiary has an interest, and shall furnish at least annually to each current trust beneficiary an accounting of all receipts, disbursements, and transactions in a manner required by Section 7303(3) of the Estates and Protected Individuals Code. [Emphasis added.]

Thus, Jacqueline, who was appointed to serve as the successor trustee of Carole’s trust after her mother’s death, was only required to provide a yearly accounting to William, the current trust beneficiary of Carole’s trust, until his death. Moreover, the probate court refused to exercise its discretion under MCL 700.7814(4)1 to require Jacqueline to provide an accounting to Gary regarding the disputed timeframe. Gary did not appeal the probate court’s order pertaining to Carole’ trust.

Instead, Gary served discovery requests on Jacqueline, seeking accounting information for the disputed period. Jacqueline did not respond to Gary’s request, relying on the probate court’s earlier ruling as to Gary’s entitlement to an accounting under Carole’s trust. Gary then moved to compel Jacqueline to respond. The probate court denied Gary’s request to compel. Gary did not appeal the probate court’s order.

After William’s death, Jacqueline sought Gary’s cooperation in executing a certificate authorizing her to proceed with the sale of William’s 2004 Mercury Grand Marquis, valued at $1,656. Although the car was bequeathed to Jacqueline via William’s will, the Secretary of State required Gary to relinquish any rights he had to that vehicle. Gary did not respond to Jacqueline’s request.

1 “If the terms of a trust direct that accounts and information be provided to less than all qualified trust beneficiaries, at the court’s discretion, the trustee shall provide statements of account and other information to persons excluded under the terms of the trust to the extent and in the manner the court directs.”

-2- After an additional failed inquiry, Jacqueline filed this estate case in November 2018, and was appointed the informal personal representative. On April 5, 2019, Gary filed a petition for accounting for the disputed timeframe, not as Carole’s beneficiary, but as William’s heir.

Gary claimed that as an heir to William’s estate, he had a right to request an accounting from Carole’s trust for the disputed period “to verify” that William had received the annual accounting that Jacqueline, as trustee of Carole’s trust and as power of attorney for William, had a duty to provide. In his request, Gary mentioned that he had not received the $100,000 bequeathed to him, and, at the very least, he was entitled to receive copies of the annual accounting that Jacqueline was required to provide to William in the disputed timeframe.2

Jacqueline responded that Carole’s trust was not an interested person in this estate proceeding and that the probate court had denied Gary’s earlier attempts to obtain an accounting pertaining to the disputed timeframe in the case involving Carole’s trust. Jacqueline requested dismissal and costs and attorney fees incurred in responding to Gary’s “frivolous and vexatious” petition.

At the hearing on Gary’s petition, the probate court noted that he had failed to provide legal authority for his request to revisit the question. The court directed the parties to brief the matter if they wished to proceed, cautioning Gary that, if it ruled against his position, it would consider imposing costs.

Post-briefing, the probate court issued a detailed opinion and order. The court rejected Gary’s argument that William’s right to an accounting survived his death because Gary failed to provide actual legal authority supporting that proposition. But, even if Gary had done so, the probate court determined that the estate’s personal representative, not Gary, was the party entitled to pursue the claim. And, finally, even if Gary was the proper party and William’s entitlement to an accounting survived his death, the probate court determined that Gary’s only action would have been for a breach of fiduciary duty—Jacqueline’s failure to provide William with an accounting. However, Gary failed to allege that Jacqueline had breached her duty by not providing William with an annual accounting or that William had never received an accounting from Jacqueline. For

2 According to Gary, when he inquired about the $100,000, Jacqueline told him that there was no money as it had been spent. Gary asked what the money was spent on and was told “we don’t have to tell you.” Gary noted that an inventory indicated over $100,000 of new farm equipment was purchased after Carole’s death. In the summer of 2015, when Gary asked William about this purchase, William told Gary and Gary’s wife that William did not know why Jacqueline was buying a new combine, “but I guess it’s her money . . .

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Bluebook (online)
in Re Trombly Estate, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-trombly-estate-michctapp-2020.