Simon v. Myers

570 S.W.3d 103
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 18, 2018
DocketWD 81518
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 570 S.W.3d 103 (Simon v. Myers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simon v. Myers, 570 S.W.3d 103 (Mo. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Lisa White Hardwick, Judge

Bryn Myers appeals from a judgment holding that her deceased brother's widow, as the personal representative of his estate and his sole heir, has standing as a beneficiary under a family trust. She contends the circuit court misapplied the law because *105her brother died before his beneficiary interest in the trust vested. For reasons explained herein, we affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Byron and Rosilea Myers were husband and wife. They had three children: Nancy Myers, James Myers, and Bryn Myers.1 Byron and Rosilea each executed a Revocable Living Trust Agreement.2 The trust provided that, if no spouse survived, trust assets were to be held in a single trust known as the "family trust." If one spouse survived, a QTIP trust was to be established to take advantage of the unified credit against the federal estate and gift tax with the remainder then going to a family (or marital deduction) trust. Upon the death of the surviving spouse, the QTIP trust would be distributed in accordance with the terms of the family trust.

Article 4, Section 2 of the trust gave Bryn the option to purchase the operating assets of Byron J. Myers, Inc. ("the business") upon the death of the last to die of Byron and Rosilea. The family-owned business was a Missouri corporation, doing business as Economy Lumber and Hardware, that Byron had started and that Bryn had taken an active role in managing and operating. The trust provided that the "operating assets" of the business included all of the assets of the business, including goodwill, but excluding real property. The trust further provided that Bryn's option was to purchase the business's operating assets at their fair market value upon such terms, including cash or credit, as the trustee deemed appropriate. The trust allowed Bryn a one-year period after the death of the last to die of Byron and Rosilea to exercise this option.

Article 4, Section 3 of the trust provided when and how the family trust was to be distributed. This section stated:

Section 3. Distribution of Family Trust. Upon the death of the last to die of my spouse and me, my Trustee shall divide the Family Trust, after the exercise, if any, of the option set forth in Section 2 of the ARTICLE, into a sufficient number of equal shares so as to create one share for:
(a) My Living Children. Each of my children who is then living; and
(b) My Deceased Children. Each of my children who is then deceased but has one or more descendants then living.

Article 4, Section 5 detailed the distribution of a living child's share:

Section 5. Distribution of Living Child's Share. Each share created for a living child of mine under Section 3(a) of this ARTICLE shall immediately be distributed, free and clear of trust, to such child.

Byron died in June 2005, and Rosilea died in September 2012. On Rosilea's death, Bryn and James became joint successor trustees of the trust. James later resigned his position as co-trustee, leaving Bryn as the trust's sole trustee. After Rosilea's death, Bryn made distributions from the trust to Nancy, James, and herself in somewhat equal amounts.

Just over nine months after Rosilea died, James died intestate in June 2013, leaving his widow, Teena Simon, but no *106children. Teena is the personal representative of James's estate. Bryn did not exercise her option to purchase the business's operating assets within one year after Rosilea's death in September 2012.

The total value of the assets from the trust when James died was between $3.1 and $3.4 million. After James's death, Bryn continued to make distributions from the trust to Nancy, James's estate or Teena, and herself, again in somewhat equal amounts, at various times in 2014 and 2015. Included in the distributions to Teena were regular monthly housing allowances ranging from $700 to $950.

In the summer of 2015, Teena was living in a house on the business's property that had been built for her and James. Bryn became angry with Teena because Teena had been living in the house without paying rent since James's death, and Bryn felt it was only fair that Teena pay either rent or the mortgage on the property. Bryn was also angry that her counsel had instructed her to pay to Teena James's entire one-third share of the trust, which included a distribution from a large investment holding in July 2015. Bryn asked Teena to move out of the house by August 2015, and Teena complied.

In March 2016, Bryn's counsel sent Teena's counsel a letter stating that James's estate was entitled to one-third of the common stock that the trust owned. Both Bryn and Teena said the letter was an offer to purchase James's one-third share of the stock. Teena rejected the offer.

After Teena rejected Bryn's offer to purchase James's share of the stock, Bryn decided to take a closer look at the language of the trust agreement. According to Bryn, issues had arisen between her and Teena that caused her to grow distant from and acquire a general dislike for Teena. When Bryn decided to reread the trust agreement in May 2016, she was specifically looking for a way not to have to pay Teena any more money.

After rereading the trust agreement, Bryn decided that the trust's language meant to exclude Teena from receiving any distributions from the trust because James died before Bryn's one-year option period within which to purchase the business's operating assets had ended and, therefore, before any distributions from the trust were supposed to have begun. On her counsel's direction, Bryn stopped making distributions from the trust altogether.

In September 2016, Teena filed a petition in the probate court seeking an order removing Bryn as trustee, imposing a constructive trust on the trust assets, requiring an accounting of the trust assets, requiring Bryn to reimburse the trust for money she allegedly had taken and retained for personal use, and declaring that James's estate was a proper beneficiary under the trust to receive a one-third interest in all of the trust's assets.

In response, Bryn filed an answer denying all of Teena's allegations. Bryn asserted, as an affirmative defense, that Teena lacked standing because the trust was to be divided among the children of Byron and Rosilea then living one year after the last to die of Byron and Rosilea and, because James died before that time, Teena did not have standing, either individually or as the personal representative of James's estate, to bring any action relating to the trust. Bryn also asserted, as an affirmative defense, that the trust contained a no-contest clause, so even if James's estate were a beneficiary, Teena forfeited the estate's interest by filing a lawsuit attacking the trust. Additionally, Bryn alleged counterclaims seeking orders declaring that only she and Nancy were trust beneficiaries and requiring Teena to pay back the over $730,000 that she receiv *107ed from the trust under theories of money had and received or unjust enrichment. Nancy entered the case, admitted all of Bryn's counterclaim allegations, and consented to the court's granting the relief that Bryn requested.

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Bluebook (online)
570 S.W.3d 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simon-v-myers-moctapp-2018.