In THE MATTER OF TRUST a AND TRUST C. ESTABLISHED UNDER THE BERNARD L. AND JEANNETTE FENENBOCK LIVING TRUST AGREEMENT, DATED MARCH 12, 2008 v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 2024
Docket22-0674
StatusPublished

This text of In THE MATTER OF TRUST a AND TRUST C. ESTABLISHED UNDER THE BERNARD L. AND JEANNETTE FENENBOCK LIVING TRUST AGREEMENT, DATED MARCH 12, 2008 v. the State of Texas (In THE MATTER OF TRUST a AND TRUST C. ESTABLISHED UNDER THE BERNARD L. AND JEANNETTE FENENBOCK LIVING TRUST AGREEMENT, DATED MARCH 12, 2008 v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court 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 TRUST a AND TRUST C. ESTABLISHED UNDER THE BERNARD L. AND JEANNETTE FENENBOCK LIVING TRUST AGREEMENT, DATED MARCH 12, 2008 v. the State of Texas, (Tex. 2024).

Opinion

Supreme Court of Texas ══════════ No. 22-0674 ══════════

In the Matter of Trust A and Trust C. Established Under the Bernard L. and Jeannette Fenenbock Living Trust Agreement, Dated March 12, 2008

═══════════════════════════════════════ On Petition for Review from the Court of Appeals for the Eighth District of Texas ═══════════════════════════════════════

Argued February 1, 2024

JUSTICE BOYD delivered the opinion of the Court.

A probate court found that a trustee breached her duties by transferring property from the trust to herself. Based on that finding, the court ordered that the property “be restored” to the trust. But the trustee had previously sold the property to persons who were not parties to the suit. The court of appeals vacated the probate court’s order, concluding that the buyers were “jurisdictionally indispensable parties” whose absence deprived the probate court of jurisdiction. We hold that the probate court had jurisdiction but erred by ordering the trustee to restore property she no longer owns or controls. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment vacating the probate court’s order, reverse the probate court’s order, and remand to the probate court for further proceedings. I. Background

Bill Silver started W. Silver Recycling, Inc. as an El Paso scrap yard in the early twentieth century, and it has remained family-owned and -operated ever since. The family members relevant to this case begin with Bill’s daughter, Jeannette, who married Bernard Fenenbock. Jeannette and Bernard had two children, Glenna Fenenbock Gaddy and Mark Fenenbock, who are the parties in this case. Glenna and Mark each also had two children, all of whom are now adults: Glenna’s sons Weston and Lane and Mark’s daughters Elysa and Lauren. For clarity, we will refer to everyone by their first names. After marrying Jeannette, Bernard succeeded Bill as W. Silver Recycling’s manager. Bernard and Jeannette accumulated substantial wealth during their lifetimes. In 2008, they placed their assets in a Living Trust to benefit themselves and their descendants. The trust agreement created three Sub-Trusts (Trust A, Trust B, and Trust C), which would become effective and receive the Living Trust’s assets upon Bernard’s death. It also established a trust to benefit Glenna and another trust to benefit Mark. After describing certain specific gifts, the trust agreement provided that the remainder of the assets must be distributed equally from the Sub-Trusts to Glenna’s Trust and Mark’s Trust. The agreement named trustees to manage the various trusts. It appointed Bernard and Jeannette as the initial co-trustees of the Living

2 Trust and provided that if Bernard died or otherwise ceased to act as a trustee before Jeannette, then Glenna would replace him and act as a co-trustee of the Sub-Trusts with her mother, Jeannette.1 And when both Bernard and Jeannette ceased to serve, the agreement appointed Mark to serve as a co-trustee with his sister, Glenna. In addition, the agreement appointed Glenna and Mark to each serve as the sole trustee of their own trusts. Bernard died in 2012, and—consistent with the agreement’s instructions—Glenna began serving as co-trustee with her mother Jeannette. At the same time, Glenna’s son, Lane, succeeded Bernard as W. Silver Recycling’s manager and has continued to manage the company since then. Over the last several years, clashes between Glenna and Mark and their children have resulted in multiple legal disputes.2 Jeannette was particularly “distressed and saddened” when Mark’s daughters, Elysa and Lauren, sued W. Silver Recycling in 2014.

1 The agreement originally provided that if Jeannette ceased to act first,

Bernard would serve as sole trustee. They later amended the agreement to provide that Glenna would serve as a co-trustee with Bernard if Jeannette ceased to serve first. These provisions became irrelevant when Bernard predeceased Jeannette. 2 See generally Gaddy v. Fenenbock, 652 S.W.3d 860, 873–74 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2022, no pet.) (reversing order denying special appearance); In re Fenenbock, 621 S.W.3d 724, 738 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2020, orig. proceeding) (granting mandamus to disqualify party’s counsel); Fenenbock v. W. Silver Recycling, Inc., 601 S.W.3d 32, 46 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2020, no pet.) (affirming judgment on stock-valuation and fraud claims); Fenenbock v. W. Silver Recycling, Inc., No. 08-17-00180-CV, 2017 WL 4534332, at *1 (Tex. App.—El Paso Oct. 11, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (dismissing appeal); Fenenbock v. W. Silver Recycling, Inc., No. 08-16-00308-CV, 2017 WL 1496968, at *1 (Tex. App.—El Paso Apr. 26, 2017, no pet.) (mem. op.) (dismissing interlocutory appeal).

3 Whether for that reason or others, Jeannette amended the trust agreement in 2015 to change the distribution instructions. As amended, the trust agreement instructs that the shares the Sub-Trusts held in W. Silver Recycling must be distributed only to Glenna’s Trust, but “assets of an equivalent value” must be “allocated to” Mark’s Trust. At the same time, Jeannette executed a will that included the same instructions. In short, Jeannette instructed that Glenna’s Trust and Mark’s Trust must still receive equivalent values of the Sub-Trusts’ assets, but only Glenna’s Trust would receive the shares in W. Silver Recycling. Jeannette died in 2016, and her will designated Glenna as the sole executor of her estate. Acting in that capacity, Glenna hired an appraiser to value the assets. The appraiser valued the shares the Sub-Trusts held in W. Silver Recycling at $3,450,000. Glenna apparently believed she also became the sole trustee of the Sub-Trusts. Acting in that capacity, she transferred the shares from the Sub-Trusts to her own trust, consistent with the instructions in the amended trust agreement and her mother’s will. After the transfer, the Sub-Trusts retained assets exceeding $9 million. That same day, acting in her capacity as sole trustee of her own trust, Glenna sold the shares in equal amounts to her two sons, Weston and Lane. In exchange, each son provided a promissory note for $1,725,000, consistent with the shares’ appraised value. Three days later, W. Silver Recycling paid $6 million in dividend distributions to its shareholders—Glenna, Weston, and Lane.

4 When Mark learned of these events, he filed this suit against Glenna, seeking declaratory relief, damages, and injunctive relief. In short, he asserted that Glenna’s transfer of the shares from the Sub-Trusts to Glenna’s Trust was void because Mark had become a co-trustee of the Sub-Trusts upon their mother’s death and he had not approved the valuation or the transfer. Although Mark did not dispute that the trust agreement and Jeannette’s will required that the shares be transferred to Glenna’s Trust, he argued that, as a co-trustee, he was entitled to an equal say on the valuation of the shares and the timing of the transfer. Mark alleges that, by cutting him out of the process, Glenna prevented him from ensuring that the shares were properly valued and deprived him of the portion of the $6 million in dividends he would have received from the Sub-Trusts had the dividends been paid before Glenna transferred the shares to her trust. He requested that the probate court declare that he had become a co-trustee, that his approval of the valuation and transfer to Glenna’s Trust was required, and that the transfer was void, and order that the shares be returned to the Sub- Trusts. Although Weston and Lane had already purchased the shares from Glenna’s Trust, Mark did not name them as defendants. Mark and Glenna filed competing motions for partial summary judgment on the issue of whether Mark is a co-trustee of the Sub-Trusts. The probate court denied Glenna’s motion and granted Mark’s, declaring that Mark is a co-trustee and has been since their mother’s death.

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In THE MATTER OF TRUST a AND TRUST C. ESTABLISHED UNDER THE BERNARD L. AND JEANNETTE FENENBOCK LIVING TRUST AGREEMENT, DATED MARCH 12, 2008 v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-trust-a-and-trust-c-established-under-the-bernard-l-and-tex-2024.