Maloney v. Maloney

2019 WI App 26, 928 N.W.2d 802, 387 Wis. 2d 685
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedApril 2, 2019
DocketAppeal No. 2018AP67
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 WI App 26 (Maloney v. Maloney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maloney v. Maloney, 2019 WI App 26, 928 N.W.2d 802, 387 Wis. 2d 685 (Wis. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

¶1 This appeal involves two claims made by Barbara Maloney, as personal representative of the Estate of Thomas R. Maloney (the Estate), against Francis and William Maloney. First, Barbara asserted a partition claim, asking the circuit court to order the sale of real property that the Estate, Francis, and William owned as tenants in common. Second, Barbara made a claim against Francis and William in their capacities as co-trustees of the Mary A. Maloney Family Trust (the Trust), asserting the Estate was entitled to Thomas Maloney's share of the Trust's assets. The circuit court granted Barbara summary judgment on both claims and subsequently denied Francis and William's motion for reconsideration.

¶2 We conclude a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the real property owned by the Estate, Francis, and William can be divided into parcels of approximately equal value. We therefore reverse that portion of the circuit court's decision ordering the sale of the property, and we remand for further proceedings on Barbara's partition claim. However, we conclude the court properly granted summary judgment to Barbara on her claim regarding the distribution of Thomas's share of the Trust's assets. We therefore affirm the court's decision granting Barbara summary judgment on that claim.

BACKGROUND

¶3 Barbara is Thomas Maloney's surviving spouse and is the personal representative of his estate. Francis and William were Thomas's brothers. The Trust is an irrevocable trust that was created on November 25, 1987, by Mary Maloney, who was Francis, William, and Thomas's mother. Thomas was the sole original trustee of the Trust. He was a licensed attorney and certified public accountant who worked for at least eight years in the area of estate planning law.

¶4 Mary transferred certain real estate to the Trust upon its creation. She was the sole beneficiary of the Trust during her lifetime. As grantor, Mary reserved a testamentary power of appointment (POA) over the Trust's assets. Upon Mary's death, the trustee was to "distribute the remaining assets of the Trust Estate to such person, persons, or entities ... as Grantor shall appoint and designate to receive the same by a Last Will and Testament in which specific reference is made to this power of appointment." If Mary did not exercise her testamentary POA, the trustee was to "retain the Trust Estate assets not so appointed to be held and distributed in accordance herewith."

¶5 Mary died on March 5, 1999. It is undisputed that she did not exercise her testamentary POA, as she did not specifically refer to it in her will. As such, the treatment of the Trust's assets following Mary's death was governed by § 3.1 of the Trust, which provided:

After the death of the Grantor a Trust share shall be created for each living child and a Trust share for each deceased child with then living issue, excluding Daniel P. Maloney and if deceased, his spouse and his then living issue. The Trust share of each living child shall then be distributed to that child. The Trustees shall also then distribute, for each Trust share of a deceased child, the remaining balance of his Trust share to such person or persons among said child's spouse and the Grantor's then and thereafter living issue, upon such conditions and estates, in trust or otherwise, in such manner and at such time or times as said child appoints or directs in his Will specifically referring to this power of appointment. In default of the exercise of such appointment or to the extent such power is not effectively exercised, the Trustees shall distribute the balance of such Trust share to said child's then living issue by right of representation.

¶6 Following Mary's death, Thomas, acting as trustee, created a trust share for each of Mary's children, except Daniel, by assigning each child a 25% equitable interest in the Trust's remaining assets. Thomas did not actually transfer any of the Trust's assets to the beneficiaries. In each subsequent year, he allocated 25% of the Trust's net income to each beneficiary. Actual cash payments of the allocated net income were made to the beneficiaries at Thomas's discretion.

¶7 Thomas died intestate on February 19, 2014. Upon his death, Francis and William became successor trustees of the Trust. Because Thomas died intestate and therefore did not exercise the testamentary POA granted to him by § 3.1 of the Trust, Francis and William took the position that Thomas's three children-Christopher, Elizabeth, and Patrick Maloney-were entitled to his 25% equitable interest in the Trust. However, in August 2016, Christopher, Elizabeth, and Patrick each signed a document stating that they consented to Thomas's interest in the Trust being distributed to the Estate and that they waived any right to argue they had an interest in the Trust.

¶8 Barbara then filed the instant lawsuit against Francis and William, seeking an order requiring them to distribute Thomas's share of the Trust assets to the Estate. Barbara also sought an order regarding approximately 314 acres of farmland that the Estate, Francis, and William owned as tenants in common. Barbara alleged she had attempted to negotiate with Francis and William to either divide or sell that real estate, but they refused to do so. She therefore asked the circuit court to order either partition or sale of the commonly owned property.

¶9 Both sides subsequently moved for summary judgment. With respect to her claim regarding distribution of the Trust's assets, Barbara argued the Trust's plain language required that its assets be distributed to the beneficiaries at the time of Mary's death. Barbara argued that distribution "should have been accomplished during [Thomas's] lifetime," and Francis and William were therefore required to distribute Thomas's share of the Trust's assets to the Estate. She contended § 3.1 of the Trust allowed Thomas's share to be distributed to his children only if he predeceased Mary.

¶10 In response, Francis and William asserted the Trust "did not require the Trustee to distribute the Trust Corpus to all beneficiaries at the time of [Mary's] death." They argued the trustee instead had "absolute discretion to determine when and whether to distribute Trust assets to any beneficiary under the Trust." Francis and William also argued that because Thomas did not exercise his testamentary POA, § 3.1 of the Trust required them to distribute his share of the Trust to his children.

¶11 Barbara also sought summary judgment on her partition claim. Relying on an appraiser's affidavit, she asserted: (1) the presence of irrigation systems made the physical division of the commonly owned property impossible; (2) each irrigated section of the property would need to be sold as a whole; and (3) the irrigated property was more valuable than the nonirrigated property. For these reasons, Barbara argued the only reasonable remedy was "the sale of the entire property." Relying on Francis's affidavit, Francis and William responded that the property could be divided into parcels of approximately equal value and therefore did not need to be sold.

¶12 The circuit court ultimately granted summary judgment in favor of Barbara. The court concluded § 3.1 of the Trust "clearly and unambiguously required that at the time of Mary's death, a Trust share was to be created for each living child and that Trust share distributed to that child ." The court also agreed with Barbara that § 3.1 allowed distribution of Thomas's share to his children only if he predeceased Mary.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 WI App 26, 928 N.W.2d 802, 387 Wis. 2d 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maloney-v-maloney-wisctapp-2019.