In The Matter of the Crider Family Share Trust and The Estate of Lawrence Edwin Crider, Deceased: Nathan D. Ricklin and Megan R. Woolwine, In Their Capacity as Remaindermen of The Crider Family Share Trust v. Haidee Oppie Sheffield, Trustee of The Crider Family Share Trust and Juliette Hu Crider, Income Beneficiary of The Crider Family Share Trust

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2024
Docket2022-CA-00191-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of In The Matter of the Crider Family Share Trust and The Estate of Lawrence Edwin Crider, Deceased: Nathan D. Ricklin and Megan R. Woolwine, In Their Capacity as Remaindermen of The Crider Family Share Trust v. Haidee Oppie Sheffield, Trustee of The Crider Family Share Trust and Juliette Hu Crider, Income Beneficiary of The Crider Family Share Trust (In The Matter of the Crider Family Share Trust and The Estate of Lawrence Edwin Crider, Deceased: Nathan D. Ricklin and Megan R. Woolwine, In Their Capacity as Remaindermen of The Crider Family Share Trust v. Haidee Oppie Sheffield, Trustee of The Crider Family Share Trust and Juliette Hu Crider, Income Beneficiary of The Crider Family Share Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In The Matter of the Crider Family Share Trust and The Estate of Lawrence Edwin Crider, Deceased: Nathan D. Ricklin and Megan R. Woolwine, In Their Capacity as Remaindermen of The Crider Family Share Trust v. Haidee Oppie Sheffield, Trustee of The Crider Family Share Trust and Juliette Hu Crider, Income Beneficiary of The Crider Family Share Trust, (Mich. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2022-CA-00191-SCT

IN THE MATTER OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST AND THE ESTATE OF LAWRENCE EDWIN CRIDER, DECEASED: NATHAN D. RICKLIN AND MEGAN R. WOOLWINE, IN THEIR CAPACITY AS REMAINDERMEN OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST

v.

HAIDEE OPPIE SHEFFIELD, TRUSTEE OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST, AND JULIETTE HU CRIDER, INCOME BENEFICIARY OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/16/2021 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MARK ANTHONY MAPLES TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: G. CHARLES BORDIS, IV MICHAEL E. WHITEHEAD EDWARD C. TAYLOR NATHAN LAMAR PRESCOTT LAUREN REEDER MCCRORY KATIE RYAN VAN CAMP FREDERICK T. HOFF, JR. HENRY LAIRD HAIDEE LEAH OPPIE SHEFFIELD PAUL M. NEWTON, JR. COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: HENRY LAIRD FREDERICK T. HOFF, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: PAUL M. NEWTON, JR. HAIDEE LEAH OPPIE SHEFFIELD JAMES H. HEIDELBERG NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/08/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: CONSOLIDATED WITH

NO. 2022-CA-01225-SCT

IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF LAWRENCE EDWIN CRIDER, DECEASED: NATHAN D. RICKLIN AND MEGAN R. WOOLWINE

HAIDEE SHEFFIELD, TRUSTEE OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST, AND JULIETTE HU CRIDER, INCOME BENEFICIARY OF THE CRIDER FAMILY SHARE TRUST

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 11/30/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. MARK ANTHONY MAPLES COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS: HENRY LAIRD FREDERICK T. HOFF, JR. ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES: JAMES H. HEIDELBERG PAUL M. NEWTON, JR. HAIDEE LEAH OPPIE SHEFFIELD NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - WILLS, TRUSTS, AND ESTATES DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 02/08/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE KITCHENS, P.J., COLEMAN AND GRIFFIS, JJ.

COLEMAN, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Before the Court is an issue of first impression regarding Mississippi’s Principal and

Income Act of 2013, codified in Mississippi Code Section 91-17-401 (Rev. 2021). The

Court has never interpreted the Act, and the parties request that we do so to give guidance

to trustees and to the chancery courts. The Crider Family Share Trust was formed on April

19, 2021, and Haidee Oppie Sheffield was appointed as the Trustee. The Trust named Juliette Crider as the income beneficiary and Nathan Ricklin and Megan Woolwine as

remainder beneficiaries. Ricklin and Woolwine ask the Court to find that the Trustee of the

Crider Family Share Trust, Sheffield, breached her fiduciary duty owed to them when she

transferred a substantial distribution from Muskegon Energy Co. to the income beneficiary,

Crider, instead of to them, the remainder beneficiaries. Specifically, Ricklin and Woolwine

assert that the Jackson County Chancery Court erred in its interpretation of the Principal and

Income Act.

¶2. In general, Section 91-17-401 directs trustees to allocate money received to the

income beneficiary; however, the statute provides that money received from an entity in

partial liquidation should be allocated to principal rather than income. Ricklin and Woolwine

initiated the present action, arguing that as Trustee, Sheffield had failed to properly allocate

Muskegon’s distribution, allegedly in partial liquidation, to them as remainder beneficiaries.

The Jackson County Chancery Court found in favor of Sheffield, however, after determining

that Muskegon’s distribution was not in partial liquidation as purported because Ricklin and

Woolwine had failed to initially subtract the income tax paid by the Trust on the distributions

as required under Section 91-17-401(e).

¶3. On appeal, Ricklin and Woolwine rely upon a California Court of Appeals case, which

implied that income taxes should be ignored in determining whether a distribution is made

in partial liquidation, and the Act’s unofficial comments. The Court affirms the chancellor’s

interpretation of the Act and rules that, as a threshold matter, when determining whether an

3 entity’s distribution is in partial or full liquidation, Section 91-7-401(e) mandates that such

determination be done on a post-tax basis. In so doing, it is clear that the distributions at

issue fall well below the 20 percent threshold after reducing income taxes paid by the Trust.

Therefore, we affirm the chancellor’s ruling that Muskegon’s distributions were not in partial

liquidation and thereby also uphold the trial court’s determination that Trustee Sheffield did

not breach any duty owed to Ricklin and Woolwine.

FACTS

¶4. The Crider Family Share Trust held Muskegon Energy Co. common stock and

received two distributions from Muskegon in 2021. In June, Muskegon distributed $79,660

to the Trust, and in November it distributed $796,600 to the Trust. The Trustee allocated the

total, $876,260.00, to Crider, the income beneficiary. Thereafter, on November 30, 2021,

remainder beneficiaries Ricklin and Woolwine filed a Motion to Stay and Object to a

Proposed Distribution from the Crider Family Share Trust and for Directions in the Jackson

County Chancery Court, seeking to have the distribution paid to them rather than to Crider.

Specifically, Ricklin and Woolwine asserted in their motion that Muskegon’s distribution

should have been allocated to them as remainder beneficiaries rather than to Crider, the

income beneficiary, by virtue of Mississippi Code Section 91-17-401(d)(2) (Rev. 2021).

¶5. On December 16, 2021, however, the chancellor denied Ricklin and Woolwine’s

motion, finding that the Trustee had adhered to the Principal and Income Act, Mississippi’s

trust laws, and the Trust itself. Ricklin and Woolwine filed a notice of appeal on March 2,

4 2022, but then requested the Court to stay the appeal in light of newly discovered evidence

pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 60 on May 26, 2022. The Court obliged.

A hearing was held in chancery court on October 4, 2022, and the parties produced their own

experts. The chancellor issued an order on November 30, 2022, in which he declined to alter

his previous ruling in favor of Sheffield. Ricklin and Woolwine filed their second notice of

appeal on December 6, 2022, and the Court consolidated both appeals on December 12,

2022.

¶6. Ricklin and Woolwine argue that pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 91-17-401, as

remainder beneficiaries, they are entitled to the Muskegon distributions because, by their

calculations, the dividend payout equaled 21.945 percent of Muskegon’s assets, thereby

constituting partial liquidation; and the Trustee breached her fiduciary duty owed them as

remainder beneficiaries by failing to determine whether the distributions were made in partial

liquidation before allocating the funds to Crider. Ricklin and Woolwine ask the Court to

reverse and remand the case to the Jackson County Chancery Court to compel Sheffield to

allocate Muskegon’s distribution to them as remainder beneficiaries and hold that she

breached her fiduciary duty.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶7. The Court reviews the chancellor’s interpretation and application of the law de novo.

Miss. Baptist Found. v. Fitch, 359 So. 3d 171, 174 (¶ 6) (Miss. 2023). Further, “[w]hether

the statute is ambiguous or not, the ultimate goal of [the Court] is to discern and give effect

5 to the legislative intent[,]” and the Court should “neither broaden nor restrict the legislative

act.” Wayne Cnty. Sch. Dist. v. Morgan, 224 So.

Related

Mississippi Dept. of Transp. v. Allred
928 So. 2d 152 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2006)
Montgomery v. Montgomery
759 So. 2d 1238 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2000)
Wayne County School District v. Mississippi Department of Revenue
224 So. 3d 539 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 2017)

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In The Matter of the Crider Family Share Trust and The Estate of Lawrence Edwin Crider, Deceased: Nathan D. Ricklin and Megan R. Woolwine, In Their Capacity as Remaindermen of The Crider Family Share Trust v. Haidee Oppie Sheffield, Trustee of The Crider Family Share Trust and Juliette Hu Crider, Income Beneficiary of The Crider Family Share Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-crider-family-share-trust-and-the-estate-of-lawrence-miss-2024.