Susan L. Brown (A/K/A Susan Brown-Thill), Trustee of the Eugene D. Brown Trusts Created by Trust Agreement Dated February 27, 1989 v. Richard L. Brown

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 2022
DocketWD84347
StatusPublished

This text of Susan L. Brown (A/K/A Susan Brown-Thill), Trustee of the Eugene D. Brown Trusts Created by Trust Agreement Dated February 27, 1989 v. Richard L. Brown (Susan L. Brown (A/K/A Susan Brown-Thill), Trustee of the Eugene D. Brown Trusts Created by Trust Agreement Dated February 27, 1989 v. Richard L. Brown) 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
Susan L. Brown (A/K/A Susan Brown-Thill), Trustee of the Eugene D. Brown Trusts Created by Trust Agreement Dated February 27, 1989 v. Richard L. Brown, (Mo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

MISSOURI COURT OF APPEALS WESTERN DISTRICT

SUSAN L. BROWN (A/K/A SUSAN ) BROWN-THILL), TRUSTEE OF ) WD84347 THE EUGENE D. BROWN TRUSTS ) CREATED BY TRUST ) OPINION FILED: AGREEMENT DATED FEBRUARY ) 27, 1989, ET AL., ) June 28, 2022 ) Respondents, ) v. ) ) RICHARD L. BROWN, ET AL., ) ) Appellants. )

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri Honorable Mark Anthony Styles, Jr., Judge

Before Division Four: Cynthia L. Martin, C.J., Karen King Mitchell and Janet Sutton, JJ.

Mr. Richard L. Brown has filed a pro se appeal from a Jackson County Circuit

Court Probate Division (probate court) order denying eight post-judgment motions

associated with a 2016 judgment approving the final distribution of the Brown family

estate. In his return to this Court, Mr. Brown challenges any order the probate court

issued while he had a prior appeal pending before this Court, as well as the probate

court’s approval of the termination of certain limited family partnerships and its

approval of a former attorney’s hourly legal fees and attorney’s lien. He also

challenges the probate court’s and this Court’s prior rulings on redirecting his purported individual interests in one of the partnerships into the court’s registry as

part of the contested trust distribution.

Because Mr. Brown has failed to remedy significant briefing shortcomings

under Rule 84.04, 1 for which we struck his initial brief, we dismiss the appeal. 2 We

do not address the merits. We also grant the motion for sanctions filed by the Trustee

Respondents, who include Ms. Susan Brown-Thill and Mr. James Cooper, each a

trustee of one of the two trusts created by Mr. Brown and Ms. Brown-Thill’s parents. 3

We remand for the probate court to determine the amount of reasonable fees and costs

on appeal and to make an appropriate award against Mr. Brown.

The dispute between and among these parties has been described by this Court

as costing “a shocking amount of time, money, and personal anguish,” Brown v.

Brown-Thill, 543 S.W.3d 620, 639 (Mo. App. W.D. 2018) (affirming probate court ’s

1 Unless otherwise indicated, all rule references are to the Missouri Supreme Court Rules (2021). 2 We also struck Mr. Richard L. Brown’s initial legal file for failure to meet the requirements of Rule 81.12(b)(2)(F) by including a mix of certified and non-certified documents, not otherwise agreed to by the parties, and elaborated in a letter to him that he had also failed to comply with the requirements of Rule 81.12(b)(2)(C) & (D) by omitting some pleadings on which the case was tried and by including extraneous material. Not only has Mr. Brown included in the revised legal file extraneous material, such as an order granting him time to amend a pl eading and duplicative material, but he also failed to change the legal -file references in his amended brief, so the legal -file pages on which cited material is said to be located cannot be found on those pages of the revised legal file. For example, Mr. Brown cites a common provision in the partnership agreements with a page reference to LF0614-0704. The partnership agreements in the corrected legal file only partially overlap that page reference. Similarly, Mr. Brown indicates in the amended brief that the probate court’s December 30, 2019, order granting Mr. Michael T. George’s attorney’s lien in the amount of $720,505.70 can be found at LF2164, which is a reference to the legal file that was struck. This document too is actually elsewhere in the revi sed legal file, which comprises 3,707 pages. And this is so for every legal-file reference in Mr. Brown’s amended brief, making the search for the orders, motions, and other documents discussed an exercise not required of appellate courts. Ellison v. Fry, 437 S.W.3d 762, 776 (Mo. banc 2014) (“It is not this Court’s duty to search the record for . . . evidence . . . .”). 3 For ease of reference we refer to the Respondents as the Trustee Respondents to distinguish them from Mr. George who is also a respondent.

2 July 2016 judgment ordering final distribution of trust assets and approving trustees ’

final accountings “in all respects,” while expressing, in vain as it turned out, that “a

final conclusion will be a blessing to all concerned”), 4 and as “scorched earth

litigation regarding the assets of this estate” by Mr. Brown. Brown v. Brown, No.

WD84312, slip op. at 15 (Mo. App. W.D. Apr. 26, 2022) (rehearing and transfer

motions overruled and denied May 31, 2022). 5

The facts underlying the parties’ disputes and leading to the probate court’s

judgment are set forth in Brown-Thill, 543 S.W.3d at 625-26. We will discuss the

facts relevant to this appeal as needed. For purposes of context, the parents whose

trusts and estates are at the core of this dispute between siblings both passed away by

2009. Id. at 624. Thus, within the span of 13 years, Mr. Brown filed in this Court, by

our count, six previous appeals involving the Trustee Respondents. See Appendix A.

Each time the relief he requested was denied, Mr. Brown unsuccessfully sought

rehearing or transfer, although he twice voluntarily dismissed his appeals when we

questioned the finality of the order or judgment appealed from. See Appendix A. Mr.

Brown unsuccessfully filed two motions for appeal out of time and two motions for

leave to file late notice of appeal in 2020, when he was also occupi ed with filing

related motions that the probate court denied in the omnibus order at issue in this

appeal. See Appendix A. Not listed in Appendix A is an appeal Mr. Brown filed

challenging a court’s order confirming a partition sale of real property owne d by one

4 Nine of Mr. Brown’s appeals and motions for leave to file appeal out of time preceding th is appeal were filed after we decided the appeal in 2018. See Appendix A. 5 Any reference we may make to an unpublished memorandum is not intended to suggest precedential value, but simply supports our conclusion that Mr. Brown has previously been warned about briefing violations and that he has litigated and appealed virtually the same issues repeatedly over the course of these protracted proceedings to settle the Brown family estate.

3 of the limited partnerships involved in these proceedings as a tenant in common with

a Texas-based general partnership. Cohen v. Normand Prop. Assocs., L.P., 498

S.W.3d 473, 481 n.8 (Mo. App. W.D. 2016) (affirming circuit court’s approval of

sale, finding appeal frivolous, declining to award sanctions, and warning Mr. Brown

“that further frivolous filings in this court in this matter may not yield the same

response.”). In his reply brief, Mr. Brown asks us to correct the facts and law in

Cohen, referenced for the first time in his reply brief, as well as two others

(WD79914, WD82949), neglecting to mention that motions to rehear or transfer in all

three cases were overruled and denied.

Mr. Brown’s litigiousness prompted the probate court in December 2019 to

grant Ms. Brown-Thill’s motion to enjoin her brother from pursuing “further

vexatious litigation.” Finding “that [Mr.] Brown’s petition in this matter presents

legal questions which are identical to certain issues that [Mr.] Brown has repeatedly

raised and have been ruled upon by this Court and other courts,” the probate court

ordered Mr. Brown to pay Ms. Brown-Thill’s legal expenses associated with the

petition and also enjoined Mr. Brown:

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Susan L. Brown (A/K/A Susan Brown-Thill), Trustee of the Eugene D. Brown Trusts Created by Trust Agreement Dated February 27, 1989 v. Richard L. Brown, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-l-brown-aka-susan-brown-thill-trustee-of-the-eugene-d-brown-moctapp-2022.