Sammye M. Brock v. Benjamin Garrison Brock

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 10, 2022
DocketE2021-00363-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sammye M. Brock v. Benjamin Garrison Brock (Sammye M. Brock v. Benjamin Garrison Brock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sammye M. Brock v. Benjamin Garrison Brock, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

08/10/2022 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE April 13, 2022 Session

SAMMYE M. BROCK ET AL. v. BENJAMIN GARRISON BROCK

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 20-0421 Jeffrey M. Atherton, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. E2021-00363-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

This appeal concerns the interpretation of a last will and testament, which provided for the creation of a trust. The decedent’s wife is the current income beneficiary of the trust, with the decedent’s son being a remainder beneficiary. The son requested an accounting of the trust financials, to which the trustees of the trust responded that the son was not entitled to receive them. The trustees filed a complaint for declaratory judgment asking the trial court to instruct the parties whether the son was entitled to the information he requested. The son subsequently filed a counterclaim asking that the trustees be required to provide him with the information he requested and alleging breach of trust by the trustees. The Trial Court granted the trustees’ motion for judgment on the pleadings after finding that the son was a remainder beneficiary and not a current income beneficiary of the trust and, therefore, was not entitled to financial information regarding the trust. The Trial Court found that the language in the decedent’s last will and testament was intended to override the reporting requirements of Tenn. Code Ann. § 35-15-813(a) and limit the trustees’ statutory obligation of reporting to qualified beneficiaries. In doing so, the Trial Court determined that the trustees were not required to provide the son with reports or other financial information concerning the trust. The Trial Court denied the son’s motion for judgment on the pleadings. Discerning no error, we affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed; Case Remanded

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, C.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which JOHN W. MCCLARTY and KRISTI M. DAVIS, JJ., joined.

Christopher E. Thorsen, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Benjamin Garrison Brock.

Alan L. Cates, Samantha A. Lunn, and Madeline E. Leonard Phifer, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellees, Sammye M. Brock and William B. Sansom. OPINION

Background

J. Don Brock (“Decedent”) died in March 2015, and his estate was distributed pursuant to his Last Will and Testament (the “Will”), which is the instrument creating the trust at issue. Decedent had executed the Will in October 2013. At the time of his death, Decedent was married to Sammye M. Brock, his surviving spouse (“Wife”). The Will established a marital trust (“the Trust”) in order to provide income to Wife during her lifetime. Wife is the current income beneficiary of the Trust. The Will provides that following Wife’s death, the remaining assets of the Trust would be distributed between four beneficiaries, one of which is the appellant, Benjamin Brock (“Son”).1 Son is a 50% remainder beneficiary of the Trust, with three other individuals sharing an equal interest of the residual 50% remainder of the Trust. Wife and William B. Sansom (collectively, the “Trustees”) were appointed as co-trustees of the Trust.2

The relevant provisions of the Will are as follows:

7 MARITAL TRUST

***

7.6 Income distribution. The entire net income of each trust administered hereunder shall be distributed currently to or applied for the benefit of my spouse during my spouse’s lifetime. The distribution of income shall be made at least annually, or more frequently if my spouse so requests. My spouse may at any time upon written request withdraw any undistributed income of any trust administered hereunder.

7.7 Encroachment on principal. The trustee may pay to or apply for the benefit of my spouse all or any portion of the principal of any trust administered hereunder as the trustee deems necessary or advisable for the health, maintenance, and support of my spouse. In making such payments, the trustee is requested to take into consideration my spouse’s separate estate

1 Prior to the remainder of the trust being distributed, Wife possessed a limited power of appointment in the Will and was permitted to designate $2,500,000 of the principal of the trust that upon Wife’s death would be distributed or placed in trust for the benefit of one or more of Decedent’s and Wife’s children or their descendants. 2 Another individual was initially appointed under the Will as co-trustee with Wife; however, upon his resignation as co-trustee, Mr. Sansom was appointed. -2- and other financial resources. I request that the trustee make such distributions from any non-exempt marital trust hereunder before invading the principal of any exempt marital trust hereunder.

7.11 Final distribution. At the death of my spouse should my spouse have survived me, the remainder of the principal of the Marital Trust (and such portion of its principal as is not otherwise disposed of under the limited power of appointment granted to my spouse in the paragraph above entitled “Limited power of appointment,”) shall be apportioned of as follows.

(a) 16 2/3% to Christie, per stirpes; (b) 16 2/3% to Devin, per stirpes; (c) 16 2/3% to Beth, per stirpes; and (d) 50% to Ben [Son], per stirpes.

If such child should predecease the survivor of me and my spouse without surviving descendants then living at the death of the last of me and my spouse to die, such child’s share shall lapse and be distributed among the surviving children named above, per stirpes, in the proportions set forth above.

13 OFFICE OF THE FIDUCIARY

13.4 Reports. The fiduciary shall not be required to make any inventory or appraisal of the assets of my estate or any trust or to file reports, inventories or settlements with any court. However, the fiduciary shall upon written request at reasonable intervals render to each then current income beneficiary of my estate or the trust estate, or to the natural or legal guardian of the beneficiary, full statements of all receipts and disbursements and a schedule of all assets and liabilities of the trust or my estate.

In October 2019, counsel for Son sent a letter to the Trustees, which reflects that Son had received copies of the semiannual statements showing “the asset allocation for accounts of the Estate and Marital Trusts.” In his letter, counsel for Son found these statements inadequate because they had not shown the distributions being made from the Trust or explained the changes in value of the assets. Son’s counsel, therefore, requested further information regarding administration of the estate, including “more complete account statements showing increases and decreases in the value of the assets, the amount

-3- of any distributions from the accounts, and breakdown of whether the distributions are from income or principal,” as well as identification of the source of income for the Trust and income tax returns for the estate and the Trust.

Counsel for the Trustees sent a responsive letter concerning Son’s request in November 2019, explaining the contents of Decedent’s Will and the Trust and informing him that he is not entitled to the information he had requested because he is a residuary beneficiary and not a current income beneficiary. Counsel stated that reports concerning the Trust’s asset allocation had been voluntarily provided to Son by the Trustees but was not required under the terms of Decedent’s Will establishing the Trust or the Tennessee Trust Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Sammye M. Brock v. Benjamin Garrison Brock, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sammye-m-brock-v-benjamin-garrison-brock-tennctapp-2022.