Lisa Martinez Paul and Steven Edward Martinez v. Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas, Acting in the Capacity of Independent of the Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez, and Toni Wasson Salvaggio Martinez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2005
Docket10-04-00185-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Lisa Martinez Paul and Steven Edward Martinez v. Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas, Acting in the Capacity of Independent of the Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez, and Toni Wasson Salvaggio Martinez (Lisa Martinez Paul and Steven Edward Martinez v. Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas, Acting in the Capacity of Independent of the Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez, and Toni Wasson Salvaggio Martinez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Lisa Martinez Paul and Steven Edward Martinez v. Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas, Acting in the Capacity of Independent of the Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez, and Toni Wasson Salvaggio Martinez, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-04-00185-CV

Lisa Martinez Paul

and SteVen Edward Martinez,

                                                                      Appellants

 v.

Merrill Lynch Trust Company of

Texas, Acting in the Capacity of

Independent Executor of the

Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez,

Deceased, and Toni Wasson

Salvaggio Martinez,

                                                                      Appellees


From the County Court at Law No. 1

Brazos County, Texas

Trial Court No. 11,414-PC

MEMORANDUM  Opinion

Appellants Lisa Martinez Paul (Lisa) and Steven Edward Martinez (Steve) (collectively Appellants) raise four issues complaining of a probate court’s rulings on the characterization of a gun collection and on attorney’s fees.  We will affirm.

Factual Background

          At the time of his death on August 25, 2002, Jose Eduardo Martinez (Ed) was married to Appellee Toni Wasson Martinez (Toni).  As an accident reconstruction expert, Ed had amassed a multi-million dollar estate that included a large home in College Station, 594 acres of land, at least twelve motor vehicles, multiple businesses, stocks and bonds, jewelry, a watch collection, and a large gun collection.

          Two documents govern the disposition of Ed’s property.  Ed and Toni had entered into a premarital agreement in 1996 (reaffirmed as a marital agreement soon after their marriage) providing that the undefined “contents of the home” became the property of the survivor of the parties (Toni, in this case) in the event of death.  On November 29, 2000, Ed executed a will that was later amended by a codicil executed on August 21, 2001.  The residuary of Ed’s property—the property other than the “contents of the home”—passes under the will and, after several specific bequests to his children are deducted, “pours over” in a family trust.  The will does not otherwise refer to Ed’s tangible personal property.

Toni is the primary beneficiary of the trust, having only an income interest.  Appellants—Ed’s adult children from a previous marriage—receive the remainder of the trust when it terminates because Toni dies or remarries or cohabits with a man.  In his will, Ed appointed Appellee Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas (now known as Merrill Lynch Trust Company FSB) to be the sole independent executor of his estate—without court intervention and without bond—and the sole trustee of the trust.

          The will contains a “no-derivative action” clause that explicitly prohibits Appellants from bringing any derivative cause of action, particularly “any derivative cause of action to collect damages on behalf” of Ed’s estate or the trust.  The will also contains an “in terrorem clause”[1] forfeiting all gifts, even if a beneficiary’s challenge to the dispositions under the will “was taken in good faith and with probable cause.”  However, the will gave Lisa the power to seek removal of Merrill Lynch as “the current fiduciary” and appointment of a replacement fiduciary.

          In early to mid-September 2002, after Merrill Lynch accepted the estate as a client but before it qualified as executor, Scott Luhnau, Merrill Lynch’s representative, began inspecting and identifying the estate’s property.  Luhnau drove to College Station, inspected the home and cars, and had the guns and jewelry appraised.  He met with Toni, who told him that Ed had told her that she was to receive “all the cars” and “everything in the house.”  Toni testified that Luhnau told her that she would not be making decisions on the property.  Toni had previously gone to Ed’s office and removed all of his personal property and mementos, storing them in boxes as requested by Merrill Lynch.

          Faced with the marital agreement’s disposition language and the will, Merrill Lynch, as independent executor, had to determine Ed’s intent and decide what personal property (the “contents of the home”) went to Toni under the marital agreement and what property passed under the will to the estate and into the trust (property other than the “contents of the home”).  After discussions with Toni and with some of Ed’s business associates, including his bookkeeper, Merrill Lynch distributed to Toni some of the property that Appellants later contested.  In its disposition of Ed’s property, Merrill Lynch defined “contents of the home” as tangible personal property contained in or associated with the residence structure and lot, and tangible non-business personal property wherever located or usually located.  Merrill Lynch concluded that Toni was entitled to the following property:  eight vehicles;[2] a watch collection and jewelry; and a gun collection that was being kept at Ed’s office in a gun safe.[3]  With respect to vehicles that Toni sold, Merrill Lynch had Toni place the proceeds in a separate Merrill Lynch account pending the resolution of the brewing dispute over the property.

Procedural Background

          Appellants sued Merrill Lynch in November 2003.  Their live pleading at the time of trial (Plaintiffs’ Fifth Amended Original Petition) essentially claimed that Ed’s will revoked his marital agreement with Toni and that Toni was not entitled to any of Ed’s property as the “contents of the home.”  Appellants alleged that Merrill Lynch committed gross misconduct and gross mismanagement by transferring property to Toni, and they sought removal of Merrill Lynch as independent executor and disgorgement of its executor fee ($175,000).  They sought actual damages (approximately $625,000) on behalf of the estate caused by Merrill Lynch’s (1) alleged failure to collect and gather all of the estate’s property and place it in the trust, and (2) alleged breach of fiduciary duties under sections 230 and 233 of the Texas Probate Code.  Appellants asked for exemplary damages of $500,000 and attorney’s fees.  Appellants did not request a declaratory judgment or construction of any will provisions.

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Lisa Martinez Paul and Steven Edward Martinez v. Merrill Lynch Trust Company of Texas, Acting in the Capacity of Independent of the Estate of Jose Eduardo Martinez, and Toni Wasson Salvaggio Martinez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisa-martinez-paul-and-steven-edward-martinez-v-merrill-lynch-trust-texapp-2005.