Montoya v. Ahern (In re W.N. Connell & Marjorie T. Connell Living Trust, Dated May 18, 1972)

426 P.3d 599
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
DocketNo. 71577
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 426 P.3d 599 (Montoya v. Ahern (In re W.N. Connell & Marjorie T. Connell Living Trust, Dated May 18, 1972)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montoya v. Ahern (In re W.N. Connell & Marjorie T. Connell Living Trust, Dated May 18, 1972), 426 P.3d 599 (Neb. 2018).

Opinion

By the Court, CHERRY, J.:

In this appeal, we consider a district court's order declining to enforce the no-contest clause of the W.N. Connell Living Trust, Dated May 18, 1972 (the 1972 Trust) against trustee-beneficiary respondent Eleanor Connell Hartman Ahem. The district court found that Eleanor violated her fiduciary duties as trustee of the 1972 Trust, but the court determined that her acts as trustee did not warrant imposition of the trust's no-contest clause to revoke her beneficiary status. The question before this court is whether a trust beneficiary forfeits interest in the trust's assets pursuant to a no-contest clause penalty by breaching her fiduciary duties while acting in her dual capacity as trustee. We conclude that no-contest clauses do not apply to foreclose beneficiary interests when the beneficiary, acting in a trustee capacity, breaches his or her fiduciary duty, as doing so would conflict with the trustee's powers to administer and distribute the trust, and the most fair and reasonable interpretation of a no-contest clause excludes actions taken in a trustee capacity. We therefore affirm the district court's judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Eleanor was the sole trustee of the 1972 Trust. Eleanor and her daughters, appellants Jacqueline Montoya and Kathryn Bouvier, were its subtrusts' beneficiaries. The 1972 Trust provides for disbursement of its asset income, with Eleanor ultimately receiving a 35-percent share of income, and Jacqueline and Kathryn receiving a 65-percent share. The 1972 Trust contains a no-contest clause, which reads in relevant part:

The Grantors specifically desire that these trusts created herein be administered and distributed without litigation or dispute of any kind. If any beneficiary of these trusts or any other person, whether stranger, relatives or heir ... seek or establish to assert any claim to the assets of these trusts ... or attack, oppose or seek to set aside the administration and distribution of the said trusts, ... such person ... shall receive One Dollar ($1.00) and no more in lieu of any interest in the assets of the trusts.

Acting as trustee, Eleanor ceased disbursement of Jacqueline and Kathryn's income share, and they petitioned the district court for a determination construing and interpreting the trust's language, and specifically, a declaration that they are entitled to 65 percent of the trust assets. The district court ordered Eleanor to safeguard and impound the 65-percent interest pending final resolution of the petition.

*601The parties filed several motions seeking various forms of relief, including cross-motions for summary judgment. The court granted summary judgment in favor of Jacqueline and Kathryn on their claims that they were entitled to the 65-percent income share and that Eleanor breached her fiduciary duty as trustee by unilaterally cutting off their share of the trust income.1 The district court also ordered Eleanor to produce an accounting of the 1972 Trust. Eleanor submitted the trust accounting, and, after a hearing, at which the district court addressed concerns with Eleanor's management of the trust funds, the district court appointed a new temporary trustee for the 1972 Trust and ordered Eleanor to provide the trustee with all relevant information regarding the trust's administration. Upon preliminary review of the accounting information, the new trustee filed an affidavit indicating his concerns with Eleanor's administration, including her failure to maintain the 65-percent interest and withdrawal of over $1 million of trust funds after being removed as trustee.

Jacqueline and Kathryn moved for enforcement of the trust's no-contest clause, as well as damages and a surcharge of Eleanor's interest, arguing that Eleanor inappropriately withheld payment of their 65-percent income share, misreported the total amount due to them, and failed to account for trust income and resolve tax issues, further breaching her fiduciary duty as trustee. Although Jacqueline and Kathryn acknowledged that the court's summary judgment orders afforded some relief by removing Eleanor as trustee and awarding them attorney fees, they maintained that Eleanor's continued refusal to cooperate with the new trustee to recover trust funds she improperly withdrew and to account for income she received while she was trustee continued to have adverse impacts on them. Following a hearing, the district court found that Eleanor violated the district court's orders by failing to protect the 65 percent interest, filing an intentionally inaccurate accounting and summary of the trust's administration, and removing from and returning funds to the trust before turning them over to the successor trustee.

The district court held that Eleanor's actions constituted breaches of Eleanor's fiduciary duties as trustee2 and granted a surcharge of Eleanor's interest. However, the district court declined to enforce the no-contest clause against Eleanor, reasoning that her "failure to properly apply her duties as a Trustee d[id] not warrant imposition of the harsh remedy of imposition of the no-contest clause, specifically her failure to seek Court approval before ceasing payments to [Jacqueline and Kathryn]."

DISCUSSION

Eleanor's breaches of her fiduciary duty as trustee did not violate the no-contest clause

Jacqueline and Kathryn argue that, under the undisputed findings of fact in this case, the no-contest clause should apply to reduce Eleanor's beneficiary share in the trust to $1 based on breaches of her fiduciary duty as a trustee.3 They assert that application of the no-contest clause penalty is proper against Eleanor as a beneficiary because Eleanor's inappropriate conduct as trustee "was undertaken solely to benefit herself as a *602beneficiary," and actions taken in a representative capacity can give rise to forfeiture under a no-contest clause.

Generally, we review a district court's factual determination of whether a beneficiary violated a trust's no-contest clause for clear error. Hannam v. Brown , 114 Nev. 350, 357, 956 P.2d 794, 799 (1998). Where there are no disputed facts, we review a district court's trust interpretation de novo. See Connell Living Tr., 133 Nev. at ----, 393 P.3d at 1092.

We construe trusts in a manner effecting the apparent intent of the settlor. Hannam, 114 Nev. at 356, 956 P.2d at 798 ; see also NRS 16.,00195(2). To determine the settlor's intent, we employ contract principles, including determining the intentions of the settlor "by considering [the trust] as a whole," Connell Living Tr., 133 Nev. at ----, 393 P.3d at 1092, and favoring the most "fair and reasonable" interpretation of the trust's language, Dickenson v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
426 P.3d 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montoya-v-ahern-in-re-wn-connell-marjorie-t-connell-living-trust-nev-2018.