Robert L. Connary v. Richard A. Shea

2024 ME 57
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedAugust 6, 2024
DocketCum-23-74
StatusPublished

This text of 2024 ME 57 (Robert L. Connary v. Richard A. Shea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robert L. Connary v. Richard A. Shea, 2024 ME 57 (Me. 2024).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2024 ME 57 Docket: Cum-23-74 Argued: September 13, 2023 Decided: August 6, 2024

Panel: STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, HORTON, CONNORS, LAWRENCE, and DOUGLAS, JJ.*

ROBERT L. CONNARY et al.

v.

RICHARD A. SHEA et al.

STANFILL, C.J.

[¶1] For the second time, the Connary heirs1 appeal from a summary

judgment entered by the Superior Court (Cumberland County, O’Neil, J.) in favor

of the Shea brothers on Connary’s claim for reformation of the Shea Family

Living Trust. In the proceedings leading to the first appeal, the court

(Stewart, J.) concluded that the Trust’s legacy to Connary of stock in a bank was

a specific devise that had adeemed when the bank recalled and redeemed the

stock, meaning that the stock was no longer part of the Trust and Connary was

not entitled to a distribution of money to account for the stock’s value.

* Although Justice Jabar participated in this appeal, he retired before this opinion was certified.

1 We use the term “Connary” or “Connary heirs” to refer collectively to appellants Robert

L. Connary, Susan E. Napolitano, Patricia A. Narducci, James C. Clark, Margaret A. Gillett, and Eric R. Clark, the plaintiffs in the trial court. We use the term “Shea” or “Shea brothers” to refer collectively to appellees Richard A. Shea, Dennis G. Shea, and William P. Shea, defendants in the trial court. 2

Connary v. Shea, 2021 ME 44, ¶¶ 8-9, 259 A.3d 118. We affirmed the court’s

interpretation of the Trust, but we remanded the matter for the parties to

litigate Connary’s reformation claim. Id. ¶¶ 25, 29-30; see 18-B M.R.S. § 415

(2024). On remand, the court (O’Neil, J.) granted Shea’s motion for summary

judgment on the ground that Connary had not marshaled any admissible

evidence generating a genuine dispute of fact as to the elements of the

reformation claim. Connary argues that the court erred in determining that the

evidence Connary proferred in support of the reformation claim was

inadmissible and urges us to conclude that, considering that evidence, a

genuine dispute of material fact exists for trial. We conclude that Connary’s

reformation claim cannot survive summary judgment even if he is correct that

the disputed evidence may be considered, and we therefore affirm the

judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

[¶2] In our opinion deciding Connary’s first appeal, we described the

following relevant facts as revealed by the summary judgment record viewed

in the light most favorable to the nonprevailing party, Connary. Connary, 2021

ME 44, ¶¶ 1-6, 259 A.3d 118; see, e.g., Kurtz & Perry, P.A. v. Emerson, 2010 ME

107, ¶ 15, 8 A.3d 677. In July 2003, William and Patricia Shea established the 3

Shea Family Living Trust; they funded it, in part, with stock in a private,

New-Hampshire-based bank and stock in General Electric. Connary, 2021 ME

44, ¶¶ 1, 4, 259 A.3d 118. The Trust’s distribution plan included a provision

that, upon the death of the survivor of William and Patricia, a successor trustee

was to “take charge of the assets then remaining in” the Trust, pay the debts of

the survivor and of the Trust, distribute the bank and General Electric stock to

the Connary heirs (Patricia’s nieces and nephews), and distribute all of the

remaining “net proceeds of the trust” to the Shea brothers (William’s children).

Id. ¶¶ 4, 18 n.10.

[¶3] William died in 2006. Id. ¶ 5. That same year, the bank recalled and

redeemed its stock, and the Trust received approximately $460,000. Id. During

the twelve years that followed, these funds were commingled with other funds

in the Trust’s investment accounts. Id. After Patricia died in 2018, the

successor trustee determined that the bank stock was no longer part of the

Trust and informed Connary that he could not distribute any money to Connary

in lieu of the bank stock.2 Id. ¶ 6.

2 The successor trustee liquidated the General Electric stock and distributed the proceeds to the Connary heirs; there is no dispute about this distribution. Connary v. Shea, 2021 ME 44, ¶ 6, 259 A.3d 118. 4

[¶4] In October 2019, Connary filed the operative nine-count second

amended complaint against Shea and the Trust.3 In what were styled as parts

“(A)” and “(B)” of Count 2, Connary requested a declaratory judgment stating

that the Trust unambiguously provided to him “the ‘[p]roceeds’ from the

involuntary redemption and sale of” the bank stock or, if the Trust was

ambiguous, that Patricia “intended to gift any proceeds” from the redemption

of the bank stock to him. In part “(C)” of Count 2, Connary asked the court to

reform the Trust to “conform to [Patricia’s] intentions” that “[t]he proceeds

[were] to be distributed” to him.

[¶5] The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment on Count 2.

Id. ¶ 8. Connary argued that the Trust’s provision relating to the bank stock

was a general devise that entitled him to proceeds from the 2006 redemption,

and Shea argued that the provision was a specific devise that had adeemed

when the redemption occurred. Id. ¶¶ 8, 26. The court (Stewart, J.) agreed with

Shea and granted his motion for summary judgment. Id. ¶¶ 9, 28. Although the

3 The complaint also named one of the Shea brothers, Richard Shea, in his capacity as the

successor trustee. The nine counts alleged were: breach of fiduciary duty by the successor trustee and replacement of the successor trustee (Count 1); declaratory judgment on the interpretation of the Trust or reformation of the Trust (Count 2); breach of fiduciary duty by the successor trustee (money damages) (Count 3); injunctive relief enjoining the successor trustee from making any further distributions (Count 4); return of any improper distributions (Count 5); breach of fiduciary duty by the successor trustee via conversion of trust assets (Count 6); and breach by the successor trustee of the duties of impartiality and loyalty, and the duty to protect beneficiaries’ interests (Counts 7 through 9). 5

parties had not addressed Count 2(C), Connary’s claim for reformation, the

court “denied and dismissed” that claim, later stating that it had entered a

summary judgment on Count 2 as a whole based on its conclusion that the

Trust’s distribution plan plainly provided for a specific devise of the bank stock.

Id. ¶¶ 8-9, 26-28 (quotation marks omitted).

[¶6] Connary appealed,4 and we affirmed the judgment as to Counts 2(A)

and 2(B), agreeing with the trial court that the Trust language “reflect[ed] a

plain and clear intent by William and Patricia to create a specific gift” of the

bank stock to Connary and that the stock had adeemed because no shares

remained in the Trust at the time of Patricia’s death. Id. ¶¶ 13-21, 25 (quotation

marks omitted). Turning to Connary’s reformation claim as reflected in

Count 2(C) of the complaint, however, we observed that this interpretation of

the Trust document did not necessarily preclude a viable claim for reformation.

Id. ¶ 29; see 18-B M.R.S. § 415 (“The court may reform the terms of a trust, even

if unambiguous, to conform the terms to the settlor’s intention if it is proved by

clear and convincing evidence that both the settlor’s intent and the terms of the

trust were affected by a mistake of fact or law, whether in expression or

inducement.” (emphasis added)). Because “facts extrinsic to the Trust” might

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