Miller v. Rosewick Road Development, LLC

76 A.3d 422, 214 Md. App. 275, 2013 WL 5354210, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 132
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 25, 2013
DocketNo. 1093
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 76 A.3d 422 (Miller v. Rosewick Road Development, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Rosewick Road Development, LLC, 76 A.3d 422, 214 Md. App. 275, 2013 WL 5354210, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 132 (Md. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

KRAUSER, C.J.

On December 14, 1998, appellants—Stephen J. Miller, Mary Ebner, and Francis Lee Moreland—were appointed, by the Circuit Court for Charles County, as trustees of the Frank E. Connell Trust, under the terms of a consent order entered by that court. The trust’s principal asset was an undeveloped parcel of real property in Charles County. Among other things, the consent order directed the trustees (appellants) to sell the property and liquidate the trust, by distributing the [278]*278proceeds from that sale to the trust’s beneficiaries, “as soon as said sale and liquidation may be prudently completed.”

Appellants encountered lengthy delays in completing that sale and liquidation, and, in 2010, Rosewick Road Development, LLC, one of the appellees, having acquired the interests of a number of trust beneficiaries, filed a motion in the Charles County circuit court, seeking removal of appellants as trustees and appointment of a successor trustee, who would “fulfill the express purpose” of the consent order by selling the property and liquidating the trust. This motion was supported by a number of beneficiaries, representing, collectively, nearly an eleven percent interest in the trust and who are parties to this appeal as appellees.

Although appellants opposed the motion, the circuit court, after several hearings, granted Rosewick Road’s request and issued an order removing appellants as trustees and thereafter appointed a new trustee. Upon their removal as trustees, appellants noted this appeal, raising four issues, which are reducible to three. They are:

1. Whether Rosewick Road Development had standing to seek removal of the trustees, appointed under terms of a consent order to which its assignors had previously agreed;
2. Whether the circuit court exceeded its legal authority, either in unilaterally changing the terms of the consent order or in applying an incorrect legal standard, under Estates and Trusts Article § 15-112, in removing the trustees; and
3. Whether the circuit court committed clear error in removing the trustees in the absence of evidence that they had been derelict in the performance of their duties.

We hold that, notwithstanding appellants’ claim to the contrary, Rosewick Road had standing to seek the removal of the trustees and that the circuit court had legal authority to remove appellants as trustees. We further hold that, although the court below neither unilaterally changed the terms of the [279]*279consent order nor applied an incorrect legal standard, as appellants claim, it nonetheless erred in removing appellants as trustees. Consequently, we shall vacate the order of the circuit court and remand with instructions to reinstate appellants as trustees.

Background

In 1937, Frank E. Connell purchased, in his sole name, a farm just outside of La Plata, Maryland. According to the deed, it was, at that time, believed to be, “by estimation, four hundred and sixty-five (465) acres more or less.” Thirty years later, he died. At the time of his death, he was married to Rose L. Connell. She received, under the terms of his handwritten will, the use of all of his property and assets, including the property at issue, for the remainder of her life, and, upon her death, his “remaining property and assets” were to be “divided equally among her relatives and [his].”

In May 1977, Rose Connell died. Thereafter, the executors of the estates of Mr. and Mrs. Connell sought to sell the property. They soon learned, however, that there were no buyers, as the property had been “extensively” mined for gravel, and, pursuant to a lease then in effect, mining operations were still ongoing. Those operations eventually ended in 1994, upon the expiration of the gravel mining lease.

But, then, a dispute arose among the beneficiaries of the respective estates of Mr. and Mrs. Connell, because it was unclear which of the two estates owned the tract of land at issue and because the beneficiaries could not agree on an appropriate disposition of that property. Some of the beneficiaries wanted to operate it as a farm; others wanted to lease it for gravel and pulpwood extraction; and still others wished to sell it. Ultimately, the beneficiaries resolved their dispute, and the resultant settlement agreement was memorialized in a consent order, which was issued by the Charles County circuit court on December 14,1998.

That order provided that the will of Frank E. Connell be “hereby interpreted as establishing a trust,” containing the [280]*280property at issue. The stated purpose of the trust was to “hold the Real Property and assets previously or subsequently derived therefrom as a liquidating trust for sale with assets to be distributed to the beneficiaries in accordance with their interests as soon as said sale and liquidation may be prudently completed.” The consent order vested legal title in that property “solely and absolutely” in the trustees, whose appointment was provided for elsewhere in that document. It further declared that the trust “shall have three trustees ..., who shall act together by consensus” but that, should it become impossible to reach a consensus, any two trustees “together shall have the authority to act” on behalf of the trust.

The consent order named, as trustees, appellants: Francis Lee Moreland, Jr.; Stephen Miller; and Mary Ebner. Their appointment reflected, as Miller would later testify, a compromise among the various factions: Moreland was a relative of Rose Connell as well as a licensed real estate agent in Maryland; Miller was a relative of Frank Connell as well as an attorney; and Ebner was purportedly a “neutral party.” Under the terms of the consent order, replacement trustees “may only be appointed by” court order “upon recommendation of the Trustees” themselves, “after notice to the beneficiaries and an opportunity to be heard.”

Pending final sale of the real property and distribution of the proceeds, the trustees were granted authority to “create, increase, maintain, invest and reinvest reasonable reserves” from the liquid assets of the trust. They were further authorized to mortgage or encumber the real property “to facilitate a sale of one or more parcels” but could not, without prior court approval, mortgage or encumber it for development. Once the real property was sold, the trustees were required to distribute the proceeds to the beneficiaries in proportion to their interests and to dissolve the trust.

The consent order also authorized the trustees to “do all things necessary or helpful to effect the sale of’ the property “in a single transaction or in a number of transactions.” “For [281]*281purposes of sale,” the trustees could, “in their discretion, among other things, accept such arrangements for purchaser inspection, independent testing, governmental commitments, approvals and consents as may be customary or appropriate in marketing properties of similar size and condition in the greater Washington-Baltimore Metropolitan area.”

As for the timing of the sale of the property and its sale price, the consent order provided:

The Trustees may enter into a sales contract for the entire parcel of Real Property, subject to court approval, at 85% or more of the appraised value of the entire parcel, at any time within 36 months of the date of this consent decree.

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Related

In the Matter of Williams Revocable Trust
172 A.3d 988 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2017)

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.3d 422, 214 Md. App. 275, 2013 WL 5354210, 2013 Md. App. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-rosewick-road-development-llc-mdctspecapp-2013.