Powell-Ferri v. Ferri

165 A.3d 1124, 326 Conn. 457, 2017 WL 3382446, 2017 Conn. LEXIS 235
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedAugust 8, 2017
DocketSC19434
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 165 A.3d 1124 (Powell-Ferri v. Ferri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell-Ferri v. Ferri, 165 A.3d 1124, 326 Conn. 457, 2017 WL 3382446, 2017 Conn. LEXIS 235 (Colo. 2017).

Opinion

EVELEIGH, J.

This appeal arises from an action dissolving the marriage of the plaintiff, Nancy Powell-Ferri, and the defendant, Paul John Ferri, Jr. (Ferri).

On appeal, Powell-Ferri challenges numerous financial orders entered by the trial court. Specifically, Powell-Ferri asserts that the trial court incorrectly (1) determined that she did not contribute to a trust created by Ferri's father, Paul John Ferri, Sr., in 1983 (1983 trust), (2) denied her motion for contempt, (3) determined that a trust created in 2011 (2011 trust) was not a marital asset, and (4) structured the award of attorney's fees. We disagree with Powell-Ferri and, accordingly, affirm the judgment of the trial court.

In its memorandum of decision, the trial court set forth the following relevant facts and procedural history. The trial court dissolved the parties' marriage in August, 2014, and entered financial orders. At the time of dissolution, the parties had been married for nineteen years and had three daughters, all of whom were minors. Powell-Ferri was a homemaker throughout the marriage, taking care of all three children and the family household. For most of the marriage, the parties lived in a home they owned in Farmington. Ferri briefly worked for his father's venture capital firm, Matrix Partners, but for the majority of the marriage, his income was derived from numerous Valvoline franchises (franchises).

Ferri is the sole beneficiary of the 1983 trust. The 1983 trust is central to the underlying dissolution action, and the parties'

use of the trust during the marriage strongly informed the trial court's financial orders. The parties did not rely on the trust for their daily living expenses. Ferri primarily used the 1983 trust for investment purposes. There were a few instances during the marriage when the 1983 trust was not used for purely investment purposes; for example, the trust provided $300,000 toward home improvements and regularly paid the parties' taxes. The parties, in turn, regularly contributed their tax refund checks to the trust. Ferri also used funds from the trust during the marriage to purchase ownership interests in the franchises. In March, 2011, while the underlying dissolution action was pending, the trustees of the 1983 trust (trustees) created a second trust whose sole beneficiary was Ferri (2011 trust). The trustees then decanted a substantial portion of the assets in the 1983 trust to the 2011 trust.

Throughout the divorce, the parties disputed the valuation of the 1983 trust. The trustees valued the trust at approximately $69 million, Powell-Ferri valued it at approximately $98 million, and Ferri at approximately $80.5 million. The majority of the trust value derived from three assets: securities, hedge and investment funds, and various limited liability companies related to the franchises. The parties did not dispute the value of the securities, as these were publicly traded. The parties also did not contest the values of the limited liability companies, which obtained ownership of the franchises using, in part, funds from the 1983 trust. Specifically, the trial court found that the 1983 trust contributed between $5 million and $8 million toward the acquisition of the franchises. The parties agreed that the franchise related entities were worth approximately $14.5 million. The parties did, however, dispute the value of the hedge and investment fund assets. The court engaged in a detailed and thorough analysis to determine the value of these assets. In a related declaratory judgment action, the trial court found that the trustees were not authorized to decant, and ordered the trustees to return 75 percent of the assets to the 1983 trust, 1 which the trial court in the present case had determined was marital property.

Although the trial court determined 75 percent of the assets transferred from the 1983 trust to be marital property, it did not divide those assets equally as Powell-Ferri had requested. The trial court found that Powell-Ferri had requested too great a share of those assets because the 1983 trust represented a sum of money that the parties knew they had in reserve so that they would "always be free from want or need in the lifestyle they had established." The trial court recognized that the 1983 trust was "an asset that [Ferri] brought to the marriage, that it is the initial product of the labor of his father, not him, and that it should be left sufficiently intact so that it may be used for investment ... purposes as [Ferri] had envisioned it." The court also recognized that whatever assets remained in the 2011 trust following an appeal in the declaratory judgment action; see footnote 1 of this opinion; were not marital assets because Ferri had no present or future entitlement to those funds.

On the basis of that separate action and the uncertainty as to the validity of the decanting, the trial court fashioned two alternative financial orders. The first order contemplated a return of assets to the 1983 trust. The second order assumed that the trustees' decision to decant was upheld on appeal and that the assets of the 2011 trust were left undisturbed. Under the first order, Ferri was required to pay Powell-Ferri $12 million in lump sum alimony over the course of several years. The trial court found that, under this scenario, it was "equitable to order a sufficient lump sum alimony [so] that [Powell-Ferri] will have no need for dependency on [Ferri] in the future." Conversely, under the second order, Ferri was required to pay, inter alia, $25,000 per month in alimony.

As we explained more fully in the appeal pertaining to the declaratory judgment action; Ferri v. Powell-Ferri , 326 Conn. 438 , 165 A.3d 1137 (2017) ; the issue of whether the trustees had the authority to decant the assets of the 1983 trust into the 2011 trust, presented a novel issue of Massachusetts law. Therefore, we certified the following three questions to the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court: (1) "Under Massachusetts law, did the terms of [the 1983 trust] empower [the] trustees to distribute substantially all of its assets ... to [the 2011 trust]?" (2) "If the answer to [the first question] is 'no,' should either [75 percent] or [100 percent] of the assets of the 2011 [t]rust be returned to the 1983 [t]rust to restore the status quo prior to the decanting?" (3) "Under Massachusetts law, should a court, in interpreting whether [Ferri's father] intended to permit decanting to another trust, consider an affidavit [from him], offered to establish what he intended when he created the 1983 [t]rust?" The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court answered the first and third questions in the affirmative. Ferri v. Powell-Ferri , 476 Mass. 651 , 663-64, 72 N.E.3d 541 (2017). In Ferri v. Powell-Ferri

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Bluebook (online)
165 A.3d 1124, 326 Conn. 457, 2017 WL 3382446, 2017 Conn. LEXIS 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-ferri-v-ferri-conn-2017.