Sargent Coastline Trust v. Sargent

CourtSuperior Court of Rhode Island
DecidedNovember 12, 2010
DocketC.A. No. PC 08-1429
StatusPublished

This text of Sargent Coastline Trust v. Sargent (Sargent Coastline Trust v. Sargent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sargent Coastline Trust v. Sargent, (R.I. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

DECISION
Before this Court are Plaintiffs' Motion to Reconsider ("Motion") the July 31, 2009 Decision of the above-referenced matter and Defendant's Motion to Lift Temporary Restraining Order ("TRO"). After issuing its July 31, 2009 opinion, but before entry of a final order, this Court determined that it would consider revisiting the Decision if so sought by the parties. After reconsideration, this Court holds that the applicable timeframe for attorneys' fees related to Defendant's delayed production of the 1999-2004 Trust accounting shall encompass September 28, 2004 through August 3, 2006. In addition, this Court finds that applying prejudgment interest to the disgorgement award is appropriate. All other substantive matters contained in the July 31, 2009 Decision shall remain the same. As to Defendant's Motion, this Court declines to lift the TRO until Defendant complies with the forthcoming final order.

I
Facts and Travel1
In April 1998, Diane Sargent ("Diane") established a revocable trust ("Trust"), named herself as Trustee, and named her daughter Pamela Sargent ("Pamela" or "Defendant") as *Page 2 successor trustee. After Diane died on November 26, 1999, Pamela received most of her quarter share of the Trust outright per the Trust's instructions2 and commenced trustee duties as to the remaining three quarter-shares, which were held in trust for Diane's three other children: Lisa, Jeffrey, and Kennett. The Trust directed Pamela to administer a hybrid support/discretionary trust3 for her siblings, Lisa and Jeffrey, and a "special needs trust"4 for her brother, Kennett.

Due to Pamela's allegedly improper actions and inactions as Trustee, Jeffrey and Kennett filed Kennett F. Sargent andJeffrey P. Sargent v. Pamela M. Sargent, C.A. No. PC04-3674, on July 7, 2004, seeking a court order that would require Pamela to provide an accounting of the Trust assets and remove her as trustee. Though declining to remove Pamela from her Trustee post, this Court entered a Consent Order on September 28, 2004 ("2004 Order"), requiring Pamela to provide an accounting of the 1999-2004 Trust transactions within thirty (30) days of this Court's decree. Pamela did not make haste to comply with the 2004 Order. It was not until August 3, 2006 and after two insufficient accountings, that Pamela submitted a sufficient *Page 3 "preliminary accounting" of the Trust transactions that occurred between 1999 and 2004.5 Thereafter, on May 8, 2007, brothers Jeffrey and Kennett renewed their request to remove their sister, Pamela, as the trustee. Before this Court could intervene, Pamela resigned on September 14, 2007, and Coastline Trust Company ("Coastline") and Francis Sargent ("Francis"), the father of the four siblings, were appointed as successor Co-Trustees of the Trust ("Co-Trustees" or "Coastline and Francis" or "Plaintiffs").

On or about January 31, 2008, the new Co-Trustees requested guidance from this Court as to the distribution of the remaining Trust assets. Coastline and Francis suggested that the Trust should immediately pay Jeffrey and Kennett the difference between the amounts Pamela had already distributed to them and the $335,960 that Pamela had distributed to herself outright. This Court ultimately adopted the Co-Trustees' recommendation, and the requested assets were disbursed to Jeffrey and Kennett free of the Trust. Accordingly, on or about January 31, 2008, Jeffrey, Kennett, and Pamela had each received $335,960 as their distributive Trust share.6 This Court also issued an accompanying Order ("2008 Order"), compelling Pamela to complete a final accounting of the Trust for the entire time period she was the trustee — November 1999 through September 2007.7 *Page 4

On March 10, 2008, the Co-Trustees brought their own suit against Pamela in the instant action, C.A. No. PC08-1429. In their nine-count, verified complaint, they alleged that Pamela had breached duties of care and loyalty during her tenure as Trustee and had acted with malice or, at least, gross negligence in her administration of the Trust. Soon after filing the Complaint, the Co-Trustee Plaintiffs sought and obtained a Temporary Restraining Order ("TRO") against all of Pamela's assets. The TRO was amended four times, and the final TRO issued on November 18, 2008. Ultimately, the TRO permitted Pamela to access her assets for normal household uses and business expenses reimbursable by her employer and also allowed Pamela to redeem $40,000 of her assets to pay her attorneys' fees and $5000 to use for discretionary spending. All of Pamela's other assets were frozen pending further action in this Court.

The Co-Trustee-initiated trial commenced on February 17, 2009 before this Court, sitting without a jury. This Court issued a written Decision on July 31, 2009. Briefly, this Court found that Pamela had breached various duties to the Trust and its beneficiaries, justifying disgorging Pamela of the $43,628 she had received as payment for her trustee services. This Court also held that Pamela had willfully disobeyed the 2004 Order by not providing the 1999-2004 accounting of the Trust within thirty days of September 28, 2004. The Co-Trustee Plaintiffs, on behalf of the Trust, were awarded damages in the amount of Pamela's disgorgement and reasonable attorneys' fees related to the efforts necessary to compel Pamela to comply with the 2004 Order. In addition, this Court awarded Jeffrey and Kennett the balance of the Trust, stating its intention to make Jeffrey and Kennett whole as to the amount of their inheritance intended by Diane. Although each brother had received a disbursement from the Trust on or about January 31, 2008, after Francis and Coastline became the successor Co-Trustees, these amounts were only intended to make the brothers' total receipt from Trust equivalent to Pamela's outright share of $335,960. *Page 5 Based on the Trust's original corpus, however, each Sargent sibling was entitled to receive a quarter share equal to $400,000.8 Accordingly, though Jeffery and Kennett already had redeemed $335,960 from the Trust, they were each still short $64,040. By awarding the Sargent brothers the proceeds remaining in the Trust account, supposedly containing $141,191, this Court anticipated that each brother would receive the half of its balance, or $70,595.50, which would provide the $64,040 necessary to round each brother's total receipt from the Trust to $400,000, and also give Jeffery and Kennett an additional $6555.50 each as equitable relief.

Thereafter, on September 1, 2009, this Court issued an Order ("2009 Order") that requested that Plaintiffs submit invoices reflecting the attorneys' fees spent from September 28, 2004 through October 14, 2005 as related to the "draft accounting." This Court's 2009 Order also stated that it would reconsider the July 31, 2009 Decision if a party submitted a Motion for Reconsideration by September 15, 2009. Plaintiffs accepted this Court's offer for reconsideration, and on September 15, 2009, they filed the instant Motion to Reconsider. As such, a final judgment was not entered.

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Bluebook (online)
Sargent Coastline Trust v. Sargent, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sargent-coastline-trust-v-sargent-risuperct-2010.