Sanders v. Capitol Area Council, Boy Scouts of America

930 S.W.2d 905, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 4209, 1996 WL 526620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 18, 1996
Docket03-95-00389-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 930 S.W.2d 905 (Sanders v. Capitol Area Council, Boy Scouts of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Capitol Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, 930 S.W.2d 905, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 4209, 1996 WL 526620 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

JONES, Justice. .

The opinion filed herein on July 17, 1996 is withdrawn, and the following is issued in lieu thereof.

Appellee Capitol Area Council, Boy Scouts of America (“Council”) sought to probate the will of Mary Lavinia Griffith (“decedent”). Appellant Sylvia Sanders, the daughter and only heir at law of the decedent, contested the will and, in a separate proceeding, sought a declaration that an irrevocable inter vivos trust created by the decedent, which was executed before the will and placed all her property in trust, was valid and that the trust assets passed to Sanders pursuant to the trust. The Council brought its own declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration that the trust was invalid and that the decedent’s property passed pursuant to her will or, alternatively, if the trust was valid, that the Council was the secondary beneficiary under the trust. All three actions were consolidated into one proceeding in Travis County.

The Council moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted on the *907 basis of a unique blend of the Council’s two theories. On appeal, Sanders asserts (1) that the trial court granted the summary judgment on a ground not presented in the motion, and (2) that the summary-judgment evidence did not show that the Council was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. We agree with Sanders on the first point and will reverse the judgment and remand the cause.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Before her death, the decedent executed an inter vivos trust instrument, which provides that it is “irrevocable and shall not be altered, amended, revoked, or terminated by the trustor or any other person.” 1 The document did, however, reserve in the decedent “the right to add, delete, or replace any Secondary Beneficiary or alter disbursement directions to any Secondary Beneficiary.” The Council refers to this language in the trust document as a power of appointment. 2 The decedent was the primary beneficiary of the trust and was to receive all income from the trust for life. Upon her death, the income was to be distributed to the secondary beneficiary, and ultimately the corpus was to be distributed to the remaindermen. The decedent purported to place all of her property in the trust, including a 5000-acre ranch located in Bastrop County.

The trust instrument named William Campbell and G. Steven McElroy as trustees. Article I of the trust document, which was titled “Trust Participants,” lists “the legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith” as both the secondary beneficiary and the remainder-men. Article II, titled “Beneficiaries,” states:

A. The Primary Beneficiary of this Trust is Mary Lavinia Griffith, for life.
Upon her death, the Secondary Beneficiary shall be:
1. The legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith
2. The surviving issue of the legal heirs, should they die prior to termination of the Trust.

Sanders is the decedent’s only child and legal heir.

After the execution of the irrevocable trust instrument, the decedent executed a will that purported to leave the 5000-acre ranch to the Council, $1000 to Sanders, and the remaining property to other individuals.

The trust instrument was found among the decedent’s papers after she suffered a stroke, which left her incapacitated. When the document was discovered, a line had been drawn through the words in Article I denoting the “legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith” as the secondary beneficiary, with the initials “L.G.” written beside the strikeout. 3 The designation in Article I of the “legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith” as the remaindermen was left unaltered. In addition, the designation in Article II of the “legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith” as the secondary beneficiary also remained unaltered. The decedent died shortly after the discovery of the trust instrument.

In its motion for summary judgment, the Council asserted two theories for why it should recover the ranch. First, the Council argued that the ranch was never validly conveyed into the trust and therefore never became part of the trust assets; according to this theory, the Council would recover the ranch under the will. Second, the Council asserted that even if the ranch had been validly conveyed into the trust, the subsequent execution by decedent of her *908 ■will leaving the ranch to the Council effectively constituted an exercise of her power of appointment to change the secondary beneficiary of the trust; according to this theory, the Council would recover the ranch under the trust by virtue of its status as secondary beneficiary of the trust. Of principal importance for our purposes is the fact that the Council’s motion does not list as a ground for summary judgment that the decedent exercised her right to change the secondary beneficiary by striking out the “legal heirs of Mary Lavinia Griffith” in Article I of the trust document. In fact, that circumstance, even assuming for the sake of argument that it was proven conclusively by the summary-judgment evidence, is not mentioned anywhere in the Council’s motion. 4

Sanders’s response to the Council’s motion argued that summary judgment was improper because the Council had failed to present competent summary judgment evidence that the decedent died testate and that the will the Council sought to probate was the decedent’s last will. Sanders asserted that until the will was admitted to probate, it could have no legal effect regarding the disposition of the decedent’s property. In addition, Sanders argued that the language of the decedent’s will was not sufficient to prove conclusively a valid and enforceable exercise of the power of appointment under the trust.

The Council, in its reply to Sanders’s response, argued again that the decedent’s will was sufficient to constitute an effective exercise of the power of appointment reserved in the trust instrument:

*909 The trust instruments are silent as to the manner in which the Trustor (Ms. Griffith) may change the Secondary Beneficiary. The Boy Scouts of America contends that the naming of the Boy Scouts in her subsequent Will and Codicil constitutes an effective change in Secondary Beneficiary (i.e., an exercise of her power of appointment) when viewed in light of her failure or refusal to deliver the trust instruments to the trustee (or anyone else) and her marking through the designation of her “legal heirs” on the first page of the trust instruments.

The last clause in the above-quoted portion of the Council's reply was the first time that the Council, as movant, had referred to the strikeout at all, yet even there it was mentioned only in a subordinate, “supporting” role.

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Bluebook (online)
930 S.W.2d 905, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 4209, 1996 WL 526620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-capitol-area-council-boy-scouts-of-america-texapp-1996.