McKenzie v. Vanderpoel

61 Cal. Rptr. 3d 129, 151 Cal. App. 4th 1442, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 972
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 13, 2007
DocketB186768
StatusPublished

This text of 61 Cal. Rptr. 3d 129 (McKenzie v. Vanderpoel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McKenzie v. Vanderpoel, 61 Cal. Rptr. 3d 129, 151 Cal. App. 4th 1442, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 972 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

EPSTEIN, P. J.

The issue in this appeal is whether a trust beneficiary may avoid a no contest clause in a trust instrument by utilizing a statutory procedure under California probate law to reallocate trust principal and income. We conclude that the statutory procedure does not insulate the beneficiary from the impact of the no contest clause, which is broad enough to encompass the relief she ultimately seeks. We affirm the order of the trial court denying plaintiff’s application for an order determining that her proposed action would not violate the clause.

*1445 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL SUMMARY

In 1959, Maud L. Bull created an irrevocable inter vivos trust with 2,000 shares of International Business Machines Corporation stock. There are three tiers of beneficiaries, each with a distinct interest. The first tier beneficiaries (seven individuals) are to receive fixed monthly payments ranging from $200 to $500 for life. The rest of the net trust income is to be accumulated by the trustee and added to the principal.

Upon the death, of the last of the first tier beneficiaries, the remaining trust estate is to be divided into three equal shares (each share to be held, administered, and distributed by the trustee as a separate trust). The second tier beneficiaries are the children of Phyllis Astaire (Bull’s niece), who died before the trust was created. These second tier beneficiaries are E. N. Potter, Jr., Fred Astaire, Jr., and Phyllis Ava Astaire (now known as Ava Astaire McKenzie, plaintiff herein). The net income from these three trusts is to be distributed to the second tier beneficiaries for life. Upon the death of a second tier beneficiary, that beneficiary’s share is to be distributed to lawful living issue. According to the parties, E. N. Potter, Jr., and Fred Astaire, Jr., had children, but plaintiff did not. The trust expressly excludes legally adopted children from the term “issue” as used in the trust instrument.

If a second tier beneficiary dies without leaving living issue, “such share shall be divided into equal parts, one for each then living child and one for the then living lawful issue of each deceased child of Phyllis Astaire. Each part set aside for a living child shall augment the share then held for the benefit of or previously distributed to such child. Each part set aside for the issue of a deceased child shall be distributed to such issue on the principle of representation.” The impact of these provisions is that upon her death, plaintiff’s trust share will be distributed equally to her brothers, the other second tier beneficiaries, or will pass to their respective children.

The third tier beneficiaries are the three children of E. N. Potter—Vivien Vanderpoel, Paul L. Potter, and Phyllis M. Potter (collectively the Potter third tier beneficiaries), and the three children of Fred Astaire, Jr.—Fred Henry Astaire, Johanna Astaire, and John Astaire (collectively, with Fred Astaire, Jr., the Astaire, Jr., beneficiaries).

The trust instrument- includes a no contest clause. No principal or income may be paid to a trust beneficiary who “has, directly or indirectly, alone or in cooperation or conjunction with others, contested or sought to impair, object *1446 to or invalidate this Declaration of Trust or any instrument whatsoever by which MAUD L. BULL hereafter shall seek to add or cause to be added, assets to these trusts under her reserved right herein. Any person engaging in such conduct shall be deemed a Contestant for the purposes of this sub-paragraph. ... To the extent necessary to carry out the intent as expressed in this paragraph (6), any such contest or course of conduct shall be deemed a condition which shall disentitle such Contestant to further right to any income or principal under this Declaration of Trust; however, such forfeiture shall not prejudice any right which any issue of the Contestant might otherwise have hereunder, nor shall the forfeiture terminate or restrict the distribution of income or principal to any beneficiary who shall not be a Contestant, or who has not cooperated with a Contestant. The Trustee’s determination that any person is or is not a Contestant shall be binding for all purposes hereunder.” (Italics added.)

Union Bank of California has served as the trustee since creation of the trust and is given broad powers, including the discretion to determine what is principal or income of the trust estate. The trust is to be governed by California law and provides: “Except insofar as the Trustee shall exercise the discretion herein conferred, matters relating to principal and income shall be governed by the provisions of the Principal and Income Law from time to time existing.”

As of 1987, only one first tier beneficiary was alive: Helen Richardson, then 87 years old. At the time, the trust estate was worth over $20 million and generated an annual income over $920,000. The only distribution from the trust was the fixed $500 monthly payment to Richardson. All remaining income was added to principal. The second tier beneficiaries sought to modify the trust to begin receiving trust income in excess of Mrs. Richardson’s share. This effort failed because the beneficiaries could not obtain a favorable ruling from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) concerning generation-skipping transfer tax.

By 1992, the trust estate had grown to over $22 million and was generating more than $1.2 million income annually. The second tier beneficiaries obtained the favorable IRS ruling that year. Together with all,the third tier beneficiaries, they reached a settlement and brought a petition to modify the trust. In May 1992, the probate court issued an order approving the .settlement. The trustee was instructed to purchase an annuity to secure the monthly payments to first tier beneficiary Richardson. Under the terms of the order, the second tier beneficiaries are to receive equal shares of the net income *1447 from the trust. Third tier beneficiaries are to receive $10,000 annual payments for the remainder of Mrs. Richardson’s life, plus $72,000 to be set aside in a further trust for the benefit of the issue of the third tier beneficiaries. No one raised an issue that this petition violated the no contest clause.

Pursuant to the 1992 order, the trust estate was divided into three equal shares held for the benefit of the second tier beneficiaries. By the end of 2004, plaintiff had a separate trust interest worth over $11 million. Together with the equal shares of the other second tier beneficiaries, the total value of the original trust exceeded $33 million.

In early 2004, an attorney for plaintiff contacted the trustee and requested an adjustment between the principal and income of plaintiff’s share of the trust for that year. This was to be accomplished by transferring a portion of the principal of that share into income, thus increasing the annual distribution to plaintiff. The trustee wrote to plaintiff and all known beneficiaries advising them that he proposed to transfer $130,210.64 from principal cash to income cash in plaintiff’s trust. The letter explained the procedure for filing an objection to this proposal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 Cal. Rptr. 3d 129, 151 Cal. App. 4th 1442, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 972, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckenzie-v-vanderpoel-calctapp-2007.