In re: Trust Under Item Ten

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 31, 2024
Docket0737/23
StatusPublished

This text of In re: Trust Under Item Ten (In re: Trust Under Item Ten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Trust Under Item Ten, (Md. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In the Matter of the Trust Under Item Ten of the Last Will and Testament of Dorothea K. Lanier, Deceased, No. 737, Sept. Term 2023. Opinion by Tang, J.

APPEAL AND ERROR – DECISIONS REVIEWABLE – FINALITY OF DETERMINATION – INTERLOCUTORY AND IMMEDIATE DECISIONS – AFFECTING COLLATERAL MATTERS AND PROCEEDINGS An order denying a trustee’s fee petition in the context of the administration of a trust falls within the collateral order doctrine and thus was appealable, where no other proceeding was pending in the circuit court. The denial order conclusively determined the disputed question of whether the trustee was entitled to his attorneys’ fees, it resolved an important issue independent of the administration of the trust, and the order would have been effectively unreviewable if the appeal had to await the termination of the trust. TRUSTS – MANAGEMENT AND DISPOSAL OF TRUST PROPERTY – INDIVIDUAL INTEREST IN TRANSACTIONS – IN GENERAL Under the Maryland Trust Act, a trustee shall administer the trust solely in the interests of the beneficiaries. Md. Code, Est. & Trusts (“ET”) § 14.5-802(a) (1974, 2017 Repl. Vol.). ET § 14.5-802 outlines different types of prohibited divided-loyalty transactions by a trustee involving trust property. If a trustee engages in a self-dealing transaction under subsection (b), the transaction is voidable by the beneficiary affected, except under certain circumstances. Such a transaction is irrebuttably presumed to be affected by a conflict between personal and fiduciary interests.

If the transaction is not self-dealing but is entered into with persons with close business or personal ties to the trustee under subsection (c), it is presumptively voidable. The presumption can be rebutted if the trustee establishes that a conflict between personal and fiduciary interests did not affect the transaction.

Subsection (f), however, provides that certain divided-loyalty transactions are allowed if fair to the beneficiaries. One exception is the payment of “reasonable compensation” to the trustee. ET § 14.5-802(f)(2).

TRUSTS – ACCOUNTING AND COMPENSATION OF TRUSTEE – COMPENSATION – IN GENERAL – ALLOWANCE AND RECOVERY The trial court erred in interpreting ET § 14.5-802 to mean that the trustee’s self- employment as counsel to perform legal work for the trust presented a conflict of interest that strictly prohibited the trustee from payment of reasonable compensation for such services. Subsection (f)(2) excepts from prohibited divided-loyalty transactions the payment of “reasonable compensation” to a trustee “if fair to the beneficiaries[.]” ET § 14.5-802(f)(2). Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County Case No. 02-C-05-104637

REPORTED

IN THE APPELLATE COURT

OF MARYLAND

No. 737

September Term, 2023 ______________________________________

IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST UNDER ITEM TEN OF THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF DOROTHEA K. LANIER, DECEASED ______________________________________

Reed, Tang, Raker, Irma S. (Senior Judge, Specially Assigned),

JJ. ______________________________________

Opinion by Tang, J. ______________________________________

Filed: July 31, 2024

*Ripken, J., did not participate in the Court’s decision to designate this opinion for publication pursuant to Md. Rule 8-605.1. Pursuant to the Maryland Uniform Electronic Legal Materials Act (§§ 10-1601 et seq. of the State Government Article) this document is authentic.

2024.07.31 '00'04- 15:05:51

Gregory Hilton, Clerk This appeal examines whether a trustee, who is also an attorney, is entitled to

compensation when they hire themselves as counsel to provide legal services for a trust.

By order of the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County, Elliot N. Lewis, Esq.

(“Lewis”) was appointed successor trustee of a trust. Lewis hired himself to perform legal

work in connection with the administration of the trust. He later petitioned for his fees to

be paid from the trust funds. The court denied the fee petition after concluding that the self-

hiring posed a conflict of interest under the Maryland Trust Act, Md. Code, Est. & Trusts

(“ET”) § 14.5-802 (1974, 2017 Repl. Vol.).

Lewis timely noted an appeal and presents the following question, which we have

consolidated and rephrased: 1 Did the circuit court err in denying Lewis’s fee petition? For

the reasons below, we hold that it did. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the circuit

court with instructions to make findings of fact as to the fair and reasonable compensation

for legal services performed by Lewis for the administration of the trust.

1 Lewis phrases the questions presented in his brief as follows:

1. Are the attorneys’ fees rendered by and petitioned for by Successor Trustee and the law firm in which he has a contract of employment considered to be “. . . transactions involving investment or management of trust property . . .” so as to lead to the presumption that such services were affected by a conflict of interest between personal and fiduciary interests?

2. Assuming arguendo that there is a presumption of conflict of interest, does such presumption bar payment of attorneys’ fees for services rendered that benefited the Trust barring any evidence that such presumed conflict of interest was detrimental to and affected the services rendered by Elliot N. Lewis, Esquire, Elliot N. Lewis, P.A. and Goodman, Meagher & Enoch, LLP in regards to the Dor[o]thea K. Lanier Testamentary Trust? BACKGROUND

On October 9, 2002, Dorothea K. Lanier (the “Decedent”) died a resident of Florida.

Her Last Will and Testament (the “Will”) was admitted to probate in Florida in 2003. As

part of the Florida probate proceeding, Judith L. Goodwin (“Judith”), the Decedent’s

daughter, was appointed Personal Representative of the estate. Later, Judith applied for and

was appointed as the Foreign Personal Representative of the estate in Anne Arundel County

for the ancillary administration of property there.

Trust

Under “Item Ten” of the Will, the Decedent’s residuary estate was left in a trust (the

“Trust”) and divided into two groups (A and B). Group A consists of two parcels known as

4703 and 4705 Ritchie Highway in Anne Arundel County. Group B consists of the balance

of the Decedent’s residuary estate.

The Will requires the trustee to pay all net income from Group A assets to the

Decedent’s three children in the following proportions: Barry W. Lanier (“Barry”)–45%;

Judith–45%; and James T. Lanier, Jr. (“James”)–10%. If any of the children were not living,

then their children would receive their share of the net income. The trustee can sell the

property and distribute the proceeds at the trustee’s discretion if it is in the interest of the

living trust beneficiaries.

Group B assets, to the extent there are any, are to be administered in the same

manner as Group A assets, except that the income is paid to the Decedent’s three children

in equal shares if living. Otherwise, it will be paid to the remaining named beneficiaries.

2 Duration of Trust

The Will provides that upon the death of the last surviving child, the trustee shall

distribute all Group A and Group B assets proportionately to those beneficiaries then

entitled. It also provides that if, in the trustee’s judgment, the principal and accumulated

income of the Trust should be of such fair market value that it would be uneconomical or

otherwise inappropriate to continue the Trust, the trustee may, in their absolute discretion,

anticipate the termination of the Trust and distribute the remaining principal to the

beneficiaries.

Trustee

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