Sarah Morris v. Martha L. Morris as Trustee of the Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 20, 2014
DocketA14A0017
StatusPublished

This text of Sarah Morris v. Martha L. Morris as Trustee of the Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust (Sarah Morris v. Martha L. Morris as Trustee of the Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarah Morris v. Martha L. Morris as Trustee of the Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

THIRD DIVISION ANDREWS, P. J., DILLARD and MCMILLIAN, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 20, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A1885. MORRIS v. MORRIS et al. A14A0017. MORRIS et al. v. MORRIS.

ANDREWS, Presiding Judge.

Martha L. Morris, a resident of Georgia, is the sole surviving trustee of the

Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust (the “Trust”). The Trust was created in Georgia by

Martha’s son Derek Morris as settlor in 19981 and has been located and managed in

Georgia since that time. Derek funded the Trust with the proceeds of the settlement

he received as a result of the litigation that ensued following a 1995 automobile

collision in which he and other family members were seriously injured. Derek’s 11-

year-old sister lost her life.

1 Co-trustee, Stephen B. Morris, is deceased. Derek married his wife, appellee Sarah Morris, in 2004. The couple had one

daughter, Iza Lily Morris, who was born while they were living in Atlanta. The

couple moved to North Carolina in 2005. At the time of Derek’s death, he and Sarah

were estranged, and Sarah was living with her family in Georgia, but traveling back

and forth to North Carolina. Unable to reach Iza Lily or her husband by telephone,

Sarah returned to North Carolina. That afternoon she found Derek and Iza Lily in Iza

Lily’s bedroom in the couple’s home. Both were dead from gunshot wounds fired by

Derek first shooting Iza Lily then himself. Sarah was appointed the administrator of

her decedent daughter’s estate. In that capacity, she filed a wrongful death action

against the Estate of Derek Morris which resulted in a default judgment in favor of

the daughter’s estate in an amount not of record.

In Case No. A13A1885, Martha as Trustee of the Trust, appeals from the trial

court’s order upon her verified petition for a declaratory judgment (the “Petition”).

Therein Martha sought the trial court’s guidance as to whether she should distribute

the property of the Trust to Sarah as the administrator of Iza Lily’s estate or to

Martha’s children (Derek’s siblings), as beneficiaries pursuant to the terms of the

Trust. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court granted judgment to

Sarah, declaring that North Carolina law required that the trust property be distributed

2 to her as Administrator of Iza Lily’s Estate and not to Derek’s siblings. This was

contrary to the terms of the Trust which, among other things, provided that the “Trust

shall be governed by the laws of the State of Georgia[.]”

In Case No. A14A0017, Sarah appeals contending that the trial court erred by

(i) allowing the Trustee to secure its judgment by a trustee’s bond rather than a

supersedeas bond, and (ii) taxing Iza Lily’s estate as the beneficiary of the Trust with

the expenses of a supersedeas bond.

The Trust as created inter vivos and its property as outside the Estate of Derek

Morris and not subject to Sarah as a creditor in her capacity as administrator of Iza

Lily’s estate, we reverse in Case No. A13A1885. Given the foregoing, Sarah’s motion

3 to dismiss in Case No. A13A1885 is denied,2 and Case No. A14A0017 is dismissed

as moot.

In addition to selecting Georgia law as governing its interpretation, the Trust

provides that upon Derek’s death, the Trust property shall be distributed to any

beneficiary Derek shall have appointed by his will. In the event of Derek’s death

intestate, the Trust provides that its property shall be distributed to Derek’s living

lineal descendants, if any. Absent any living lineal descendant, the Trust requires that

2 Sarah’s reliance upon First Nat. Bank v. Yancey, 207 Ga. 437 (62 SE2d 179 (1950), and its progeny for the proposition that the instant appeal should be dismissed for lack of standing to complain is inapposite and inconsistent with the Trustee’s duty to prudently administer the Trust in accordance with its terms and purposes. See OCGA § 53-12-241. Specifically and citing Yancey, the motion to dismiss asserts that the Petition sought a declaratory judgment to determine the rights of the interested parties “under the terms of the Trust” and “a declaration of rights under a will (or trust).” However, the Trustee never sought a construction of the terms of the Trust, as in Yancey. See Yancey, 207 Ga. at 438 (noting that the executors “got what they prayed for, a construction of the will.” To the contrary, the Trustee asked only for enforcement of the plain terms of the Trust and a declaration regarding Sarah’s third- party claim to the proceeds thereof as administrator of Derek’s estate. Also, unlike Yancey and as evidenced by Sarah’s post-judgment complaint against the Trustee for damages and an accounting, compliance with the trial court’s order would obviously have been insufficient to protect the Trustee from potential liability for breach of fiduciary duty. See id. at 437 (“[A] party is aggrieved by a judgment or decree when it operates on his rights of property, or bears directly upon his interest.”) (citations and punctuation omitted.).

4 its property be distributed equally to Derek’s living siblings as named in the Trust,3

“with an equal share, per stirpes, for the living lineal descendants of any of them not

then in life.”

After Derek’s death, the Trustee determined that the Trust assets should be

distributed to Derek’s living siblings because Derek died intestate, and his only lineal

descendant, Iza Lily, predeceased him. Subsequently, however, the Trustee received

a demand letter from counsel for Sarah opposing any distribution of the assets of the

Trust until it could be confirmed that Derek had, in fact, died intestate not having

exercised his power to appoint Sarah, his descendants or others as a beneficiary. The

letter also informed Martha that “a cause of action for wrongful death would arise on

behalf of [Sarah] . . . , the Trust as “an asset of [Derek’s] estate . . . .” Following its

hearing on cross-motions for summary judgment, the trial court entered judgment for

Sarah, declaring that

Derek Morris shot and killed his only lineal descendant, Iza Lily Morris, then six years of age before shooting and killing himself. The killing took place in the [S]tate of North Carolina where Derek Morris, Sarah Morris and Iza Lily Morris had resided for over five years. Per the

3 As set out in the Trust, Derek’s living sibling are appellees Conan Morris, Ingrid Morris, Gabriel Morris, Michelle L. Morris, and Ethan Morris.

5 law in North Carolina (N.C.G.S.A. §28A-24-5),4 where . . . Derek Morris and Iza Lily Morris died, Iza Lily Morris did in fact survive her killer, Derek Morris[,] and as such was a surviving lineal descendant at the time of Derek Morris’ death. As such, Iza Lily Morris is the beneficiary of the Trust. Since the child is deceased, her estate is entitled to the proceeds of the Trust . . ., not[ing] that while Georgia law certainly governs the interpretation and administration of the Trust, North Carolina probate law governs who predeceased who within its jurisdiction.

The Trustee contends that the trial court erred in denying her motion for

summary judgment on the Petition and in granting Sarah’s motion for summary

judgment on Count 2 of her counterclaim insofar as it asserted that Iza Lily was

4 NCGSA § 28A-24-5 provides

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Sarah Morris v. Martha L. Morris as Trustee of the Derek Morris Irrevocable Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarah-morris-v-martha-l-morris-as-trustee-of-the-derek-morris-irrevocable-gactapp-2014.