In the Matter of the Russell Trust

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 4, 2015
Docket32,730 32,629
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Russell Trust (In the Matter of the Russell Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In the Matter of the Russell Trust, (N.M. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Appellate Reports. Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the filing date.

1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 IN THE MATTER OF THE RUSSELL 3 FAMILY TRUST,

4 and

5 SHARON RUSSELL,

6 Plaintiff-Appellant,

7 v. NOS. 32,629 and 32,730 8 (consolidated)

9 ESTATE OF DIANA RUSSELL and 10 TRACY BELCHER, as trustee of the RUSSELL 11 FAMILY TRUST,

12 Defendants-Appellees.

13 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF ROOSEVELT COUNTY 14 Teddy Lowe Hartley, District Judge

15 Eric Dixon Attorney & Counselor at Law, P.A. 16 Eric D. Dixon 17 Portales, NM

18 for Appellant

19 Doerr & Knudson, P.A. 20 Stephen E. Doerr 21 Portales, NM 1 for Appellee Estate of Diana Russell

2 Greig & Richards, P.A. 3 William H. Greig 4 Clovis, NM

5 for Appellee Tracy Belcher

6 MEMORANDUM OPINION

7 GARCIA, Judge.

8 {1} Plaintiff Sharon Russell appeals the district court’s judgment involving two

9 separate causes of action involving the Russell Family Trust (the Trust) that have been

10 consolidated on appeal. We affirm.

11 BACKGROUND

12 A. The Trust and its Successor Trustees

13 {2} The Trust was created by Dorothy Russell and Wiley Russell in 1992. Pursuant

14 to the terms of the Trust, when Wiley Russell died in 2000, the Trust was split into an

15 “A” trust (Trust A) and a “B” trust (Trust B).1 Trust A was a revocable trust of which

1 17 We use the terms “Trust A” and “Trust B” only as necessary to distinguish 18 between the original Russell Family Trust, Trust A, and/or Trust B. Otherwise, we use 19 the term “the Trust” throughout the opinion for convenience and because the 20 substantive issues in this case do not involve legal distinctions between these trusts.

2 1 Dorothy was the settlor, trustee, and life beneficiary. Trust B was an irrevocable trust

2 of which Dorothy was the trustee and life beneficiary, but not the settlor. Dorothy’s

3 two daughters, Sharon Russell (the Plaintiff in this case) and Diana Russell, were

4 initially designated successor co-trustees of Trust A and Trust B.

5 {3} However, due to “serious and irreconcilable disharmony” between Sharon and

6 Diana, Dorothy amended Trust A in 2005 to remove Sharon and Diana as successor

7 co-trustees and replace them with two independent successor trustees. Because Trust

8 B was irrevocable, Dorothy filed an action in the district court in 2005 to replace

9 Sharon and Diana as successor co-trustees for Trust B with the same two independent

10 successor trustees. We refer to this action as “the 2005 case.” In January 2006, the

11 district court entered an order in the 2005 case removing Sharon and Diana as

12 successor co-trustees for Trust B and replacing them with the two independent

13 successor trustees.

14 {4} About nine months later, one of these independent successor trustees resigned.

15 Dorothy continued to function as the trustee of the Trust until she died in November

16 2010. About a month after Dorothy died, the second independent successor trustee,

17 who became the acting trustee upon Dorothy’s death, informed the beneficiaries that

18 he wished to resign. Before resigning, he designated Tracy Belcher, a local certified

19 public accountant, to serve as the successor trustee.

3 1 B. The District Court Filings Involving Sharon, Diana, and Ms. Belcher

2 {5} In January 2012, Sharon and her children2 filed a petition in the 2005 case for

3 an accounting of the Trust and to remove Ms. Belcher as trustee, asserting breaches

4 of fiduciary duties and trust mismanagement. In March 2012, Diana learned of

5 Sharon’s petition and filed a “Motion to Dismiss” it for lack of subject matter

6 jurisdiction. A few days later, Diana opened a new cause of action, asking the district

7 court to order that her share of the trust assets be distributed to her (the 2012 case).

8 Ms. Belcher, Sharon, and Diana then filed several documents in both cases that are not

9 relevant to this appeal.

10 C. July 2012 Hearing and August 2012 Order

11 {6} Although the district court had not formally consolidated the 2005 and 2012

12 cases, it held a joint hearing on matters pending in both cases on July 23, 2012, and

13 entered an order on August 7, 2012 (the August 2012 order). As to matters between

14 Sharon and Ms. Belcher, the district court ordered the parties to “attempt, in good

15 faith, to meet and negotiate a resolution of all issues pending in this proceeding” or

16 else it would order a formal mediation. As to Diana’s petition for distribution of the

17 trust assets, the district court entered an order stating that the parties agreed that Diana

2 18 Sharon’s children are not involved in this appeal.

4 1 was entitled to a distribution of 40% of the assets in Trust A and 50% of the assets in

2 Trust B, that Diana had no claims against Ms. Belcher, and that Sharon requested a

3 portion of Diana’s share of Trust A be held pending resolution of Sharon’s claims

4 against Ms. Belcher.

5 {7} The district court also ordered that Randall Burnett, another certified public

6 accountant, serve as trustee of the Trust; that Mr. Burnett distribute to Diana her share

7 of the Trust assets, except for a sum agreed to by the parties to be held until Sharon’s

8 claims against Ms. Belcher were resolved; that the parties would have two weeks to

9 negotiate a distribution of the real property assets in the Trust that would allow Mr.

10 Burnett to distribute Diana’s share; and, that if the parties could not agree to these

11 matters, the district court would hold a hearing as soon as possible to resolve them.

12 D. Sharon’s Motions After Diana’s Death

13 {8} About a month later, on August 28, 2012, Diana died. Her estate was

14 substituted as a party in the proceedings. Three days after Diana’s death, Sharon filed

15 an emergency motion in the 2005 and 2012 cases. In this motion, Sharon asked the

16 district court to “immediately stay trust distribution” due to Diana’s death and the

17 suspicious circumstances and police investigation surrounding her death. The motion

18 also asked that Diana’s home “be placed under control” of the court-appointed trustee

19 Mr. Burnett and that “no one be allowed in the home until such time as an

5 1 investigation can be completed.” (Emphasis added.) Finally, the motion asked that any

2 of the Trust assets that had previously been distributed to Diana “be placed with the

3 [c]ourt or back into the [T]rust until further order of the court.” About ten days after

4 Diana’s death, Sharon filed another motion, asking the district court to modify the

5 distribution of the Trust. In this motion, Sharon asserted that Diana’s share had lapsed

6 due to her death without surviving issue and that the trust settlors “intended their hard-

7 earned life-long accumulated family assets to STAY within their family.”3 Sharon

8 asked the district court to order the trustee to distribute all of the Trust assets to the

9 “remaining beneficiaries”—Sharon and her children.

10 {9} Ms. Belcher and Diana’s estate opposed Sharon’s motions. Diana’s estate

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