Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel Triche, and James S. Ruel, Individually and in His Capacity as Trustee of the Sally H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Versus Sally Pulver Dalesandro

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 9, 2019
Docket18-CA-224
StatusUnknown

This text of Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel Triche, and James S. Ruel, Individually and in His Capacity as Trustee of the Sally H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Versus Sally Pulver Dalesandro (Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel Triche, and James S. Ruel, Individually and in His Capacity as Trustee of the Sally H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Versus Sally Pulver Dalesandro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel Triche, and James S. Ruel, Individually and in His Capacity as Trustee of the Sally H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Versus Sally Pulver Dalesandro, (La. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

ROBERT E. RUEL, III, JANINE RUEL NO. 18-CA-224 JUNEAU, KRISTEN RUEL TRICHE, AND JAMES S. RUEL, INDIVIDUALLY AND FIFTH CIRCUIT IN HIS CAPACITY AS TRUSTEE OF THE SALLY H.P. RUEL INTER VIVOS COURT OF APPEAL REVOCABLE TRUST STATE OF LOUISIANA VERSUS

SALLY PULVER DALESANDRO

ON APPEAL FROM THE TWENTY-FOURTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF JEFFERSON, STATE OF LOUISIANA NO. 727-836, DIVISION "K" HONORABLE ELLEN SHIRER KOVACH, JUDGE PRESIDING

July 09, 2019

HANS J. LILJEBERG JUDGE

Panel composed of Judges Jude G. Gravois, Stephen J. Windhorst, and Hans J. Liljeberg

REVERSED AND REMANDED HJL JGG SJW COUNSEL FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT, ROBERT E. RUEL, III, JANINE RUEL JUNEAU, KRISTEN RUEL TRICHE, AND JAMES SCOTT RUEL, INDIVIDUALLY AND IN HIS CAPACITY AS TRUSTEE OF THE SALLY H.P. RUEL INTER VIVOS REVOCABLE TRUST David P. Salley Stephannie McKinney Sharon I. Corona Davidson S. Ehle, III

COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE, SALLY RUEL DALESANDRO Richard D. Mere LILJEBERG, J.

Plaintiffs/Appellants, Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel

Triche and James Scott Ruel, individually and in his capacity as trustee of the Sally

H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust (hereinafter collectively referred to as

“plaintiffs”), seek review of the trial court’s December 11, 2017 judgment, which

granted a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict raised by appellee,

Sally Pulver Dalesandro. The trial court vacated the verdicts returned by a jury in

favor of plaintiffs and entered rulings in favor of Ms. Dalesandro. For reasons

stated more fully below, we reverse the trial court’s judgment granting Ms.

Dalesandro’s motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, reinstate the

verdicts rendered by the jury in favor of plaintiffs and remand this matter to the

trial court for further proceedings.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This matter involves a dispute arising from a revocable trust – the Sally H.P.

Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust – established on February 25, 1994 (the

“Trust”). At the time of the creation of the Trust, Ms. Dalesandro was married to

Dr. Robert E. Ruel, Jr.1 Plaintiffs are Dr. Ruel’s children from a prior marriage.

Ms. Dalesandro was the settlor who created the Trust.2 The Trust named plaintiffs

as the principal beneficiaries and their father, Dr. Ruel, as the income beneficiary.3

The Trust states that it was created for the benefit of Dr. Ruel’s children. Robert E.

1 Dr. Ruel’s marriage to Ms. Dalesandro was his third marriage. 2 La. R.S. 9:1761 defines a settlor as “a person who creates a trust.” 3 La. R.S. 9:1725 defines principal and income beneficiaries as follows:

(2) ‘Income beneficiary’ means a beneficiary to whom income is payable, presently, conditionally, or in the future, or for whom it is accumulated, or who is entitled to the beneficial use of principal presently, conditionally, or in the future, for a time before its distribution. * * *

(4) ‘Principal beneficiary’ means a beneficiary presently, conditionally, or ultimately entitled to principal.

18-CA-224 1 Ruel, III (“Robbie Ruel”), was initially designated as the trustee. In 2002, James

Scott Ruel (“Scott Ruel”) was substituted as trustee. Attorney Bruce Miller drafted

the Trust and was appointed as the attorney to represent the Trustee.

The evidence presented at trial revealed that the Trust was originally drafted

with Dr. Ruel as both the settlor and income beneficiary, and plaintiffs as principal

beneficiaries. Robbie Ruel testified, and Ms. Dalesandro and Mr. Miller did not

dispute, that due to financial difficulties resulting from a poor investment decision

which Dr. Ruel faced around the time the Trust was created, Mr. Miller

recommended that Dr. Ruel restructure the Trust to substitute Ms. Dalesandro as

the settlor in place of Dr. Ruel. According to Robbie Ruel, Mr. Miller advised this

change in order to provide an additional layer of protection against possible seizure

by creditors of Dr. Ruel’s assets which were placed into the Trust.

Dr. Ruel died on October 10, 2011. Shortly after his death, Bruce Miller

contacted trustee, Scott Ruel, about executing documents to revoke the Trust and

transfer title to the immovable property held by the Trust to Ms. Dalesandro.

Plaintiffs contend that on January 19, 2012, based on Mr. Miller’s representations

that Ms. Dalesandro still had the right to revoke the Trust, Ms. Dalesandro and

Scott Ruel executed documents that revoked the Trust and transferred title to four

pieces of immovable property to Ms. Dalesandro, including an eighty percent

(80%) interest in property located at 210 Highway 21 in Madisonville, Louisiana ,

a condominium in Redstick Lofts in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, property in

Gunnison, Colorado, and property located at 450 Hesper Avenue in Metairie,

Louisiana.

Ms. Dalesandro subsequently sold the condominium in Redstick Lofts to a

third party and in January 2013, Scott Ruel purchased the eighty percent (80%)

interest in the property located in Madisonville, Louisiana. In May 2013, Ms.

Dalesandro attempted to sell the property located on Hesper Avenue. However, an

18-CA-224 2 attorney researching the title for this property determined the sale could not

proceed due to title issues created by the terms of the Trust ‒ specifically that the

Trust terminated at Dr. Ruel’s death and that plaintiffs obtained ownership rights in

the property at that point. In response, Bruce Miller contacted Robbie Ruel and

requested that plaintiffs execute documents that would serve to quiet title to the

property in favor of Ms. Dalesandro. Scott Ruel testified that Robbie contacted

him and they reviewed the terms of the Trust in light of the issues raised by the

title attorney. Scott testified that at that point, he realized the Trust terminated

when his father died.

Plaintiffs relied on the language of Section 2.1 of the Trust to support their

position that the Trust terminated at the time of their father’s death:

Term. Except as provided in Section 1.3, this trust shall terminate as to each principal beneficiary upon the death of the Settlor’s husband or when the beneficiary attains age 35, whichever last occurs.4

As noted above, Dr. Ruel died on October 10, 2011, and on that date all of

the principal beneficiaries (plaintiffs) had attained the age of 35. As a result,

plaintiffs took the position that the Trust terminated as to all principal beneficiaries

on October 10, 2011. Plaintiffs refused to sign the documents requested by Mr.

Miller to quiet title in favor of Ms. Dalesandro, and instead demanded that she

return the unsold Trust property to them, as well as the funds she received from the

prior sales of two of the Trust properties. Plaintiffs argued that the documents

executed in January 2012 to revoke the Trust and to transfer the Trust property to

Ms. Dalesandro were invalid because the Trust previously terminated by its own

terms at the time of Dr. Ruel’s death in October 2011, and at that time, ownership

4 Section 1.3 of the Trust provides as follows:

Revocability. At any time the Settlor may, by signed instrument delivered to the Trustee, revoke this trust, amend it in any manner, or withdraw any property from the trust. No amendment changing the powers or duties of the Trustee shall be effective unless approved in writing by the Trustee.

18-CA-224 3 of the immovable property transferred to plaintiffs as they were all 35 or older at

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Robert E. Ruel, III, Janine Ruel Juneau, Kristen Ruel Triche, and James S. Ruel, Individually and in His Capacity as Trustee of the Sally H.P. Ruel Inter Vivos Revocable Trust Versus Sally Pulver Dalesandro, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robert-e-ruel-iii-janine-ruel-juneau-kristen-ruel-triche-and-james-s-lactapp-2019.