Klecan v. Santillanes

643 F. App'x 743
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
Docket15-2171
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 643 F. App'x 743 (Klecan v. Santillanes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klecan v. Santillanes, 643 F. App'x 743 (10th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

*744 ORDER AND JUDGMENT *

Bobby R. Baldock, Circuit Judge.

George F. Klecan filed this action against his sister, Janet Santillanes, who is the Trustee of the Eugene E. Klecan and Jane F. Klecan Revocable Trust (“Trust”), a conventional gift trust created by their parents. Mr. Klecan asserted breach-of-trust claims and sought declarative and injunctive relief and damages. After the Trustee moved for partial summary judgment, the court held that Mr. Klecan had, by his conduct, absolutely forfeited his one-eighth share of the Trust property under the express terms of the Trust. The court further held that its ruling on the forfeiture issue necessarily dispensed with Mr. Klecan’s other claims, which the court dismissed. The court then entered judgment disposing of the case in its entirety. Mr. Klecan appeals the district court’s judgment. Exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we affirm.

I. Background

Mr. Klecan’s parents, Eugene and Jane Klecan (“Grantors”), created the Trust in 1999 under New Mexico law. Grantors designated Ms. Santillanes to serve as Trustee of the Trust after their deaths. The Trustee, Mr. Klecan, and their six siblings are the named beneficiaries of the Trust, and each is entitled to receive a one-eighth ’ share of the Trust property. The primary asset in the Trust was an apartment complex in Fort Worth, Texas, known as La Plaza Apartments, where Mr. Klecan lived and worked as the apartment manager for 30 years.

The Trust originally provided in § 8.1 for the formation, upon the death or incapacity of the Grantors, of a Trust Advisory Committee (“TAC”) made up of all eight beneficiaries. The Trust granted the TAC the power to direct the Trustee regarding the sale of real property held in the Trust, with one exception: if Mr. Klecan was residing in and managing La Plaza Apartments, he had the right to veto any sale of the apartment complex for five years after the death of both Grantors. In 2005, however, Grantors amended the Trust (the “Second Amendment”), limiting the TAC to three members: the Trustee and two of Mr. Klecan’s other siblings. The Second Amendment also deleted the original provision granting Mr. Klecan a five-year veto power over the sale of La Plaza Apartments.

The Trust includes what is commonly referred to as a no-contest provision. Section 14.5 (“Contestability Clause”) provides as follows, in relevant part:

14.5 Contestability

A. The beneficial provisions of this trust agreement ... are intended to be in lieu of any other rights, claims, or interests of any nature, whether statutory or otherwise, except bonafide pre-death debts, which any beneficiary of this trust may have against or in ... the properties in this trust. Accordingly, if any beneficiary of this trust ... asserts any claim whatsoever (except bonafide predeath debts), statutory election, or other right or interest against or in ... any properties of this trust, other than pursuant to the express terms hereof ..., directly or indirectly contests, disputes, or calls into question, before any *745 tribunal, the validity of this instrument ..., then such beneficiary shall thereby absolutely forfeit any beneficial interests which such beneficiary might otherwise have under this instrument .., and the interests of the other beneficiaries hereunder shall thereupon be appropriately and proportionately increased. In addition, all of the provisions of this instrument, to the extent that they confer any benefits, powers, or rights upon such claiming, electing or contesting beneficiary, shall thereupon become absolutely void and revoked....
B. Subparagraph A shall not apply to any beneficiary who (i) either contests this trust agreement ... or institutes other proceedings relating to a governing instrument ... if probable cause exists for instituting proceedings, (ii) participates solely as a witness in any proceeding involving a governing instrument ... or (iii) appears in any capacity in any proceeding solely for the construction of a governing instrument.

ApltApp., Vol. I at 48.

The Trust was revocable in its entirety until Eugene Klecan died in February 2007. After Jane Klecan died in 2013, the TAC began efforts to sell La Plaza Apartments. The TAC hired the Trustee’s husband, Abraham Santillanes, to oversee repairs and improvements at the apartment complex. The Grantors had previously hired Mr. Santillanes to do similar work at other apartment properties. Because the TAC believed that Mr. Klecan was interfering with the work needed to prepare La Plaza Apartments to be sold, the Trustee terminated his position as apartment manager and asked him to vacate the manager’s apartment and move to another apartment in the complex. Mr. Klecan refused to move and, according to the Trustee, interfered with the business of running the apartment complex. The Trustee caused La Plaza Apartment Partnership' (“Partnership”), an entity created to own La Plaza Apartments, see id. at 143, to file an eviction proceeding against Mr. Klecan in Texas state court (“Eviction Action”).

Mr. Klecan filed an answer in the Eviction Action challenging the Partnership’s standing to bring the action on the ground that the Second Amendment to the Trust “had no legal effect because it sought to amend an irrevocable Trust B controlling the La Plaza Apartments.” Id., Vol. Ill at 281. He maintained that, “[b]ecause the Second Amendment had no legal effect, the only way to authorize [his] eviction [was] a majority vote of the eight beneficiaries, including [Mr. Klecan], constituting the ‘Trust Advisory Committee’ in Section 8.1 of the Trust.” Id. Thus, Mr. Klecan contended in the Eviction Action that the Second Amendment was invalid and that the original § 8.1 of the Trust, which provided for his five-year veto power over the sale of La Plaza Apartments and his membership in the TAC, remained in effect.

The Partnership prevailed in the Eviction Action. After Mr. Klecan appealed that ruling, the parties settled the dispute when Mr. Klecan agreed to move into another apartment at La Plaza Apartments.

Following the sale of La Plaza Apartments for $2.9 million in 2014, the Trustee prepared a proposed schedule of distribution for each beneficiary, setting forth his or her one-eighth share of the Trust property minus any advances the beneficiary had received. All beneficiaries but Mr. Klecan approved the distribution schedules and signed releases of claims against the Trust. Upon signing a release, the Trustee distributed to each beneficiary a one-eighth share of the proceeds from the sale of La Plaza Apartments less an amount held in reserve for legal and other expenses related to the claims that Mr. Kle-can had asserted and threatened to assert.

*746 At the time of these distributions, the Trustee believed that, by his conduct, Mr. Klecan had forfeited any beneficial right or interest in the Trust under the Contesta-bility Clause. The Trustee informed Mr.

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643 F. App'x 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klecan-v-santillanes-ca10-2016.