The Greater Milwaukee Foundation v. American Company of Irish Dance

CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedAugust 20, 2019
Docket2018AP001294
StatusUnpublished

This text of The Greater Milwaukee Foundation v. American Company of Irish Dance (The Greater Milwaukee Foundation v. American Company of Irish Dance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Greater Milwaukee Foundation v. American Company of Irish Dance, (Wis. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS DECISION NOTICE DATED AND FILED This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound volume of the Official Reports. August 20, 2019 A party may file with the Supreme Court a Sheila T. Reiff petition to review an adverse decision by the Clerk of Court of Appeals Court of Appeals. See WIS. STAT. § 808.10 and RULE 809.62.

Appeal No. 2018AP1294 Cir. Ct. No. 2016PR1600

STATE OF WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT I

IN THE MATTER OF THE BILL BORCHERT LARSON REVOCABLE TRUST:

THE GREATER MILWAUKEE FOUNDATION,

PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,

V.

AMERICAN COMPANY OF IRISH DANCE,

INTERESTED PARTY-APPELLANT,

TRINITY IRISH DANCE COMPANY,

CROSS-PETITIONER-RESPONDENT,

UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO,

INTERESTED PARTY. No. 2018AP1294

APPEAL from an order of the circuit court for Milwaukee County: MARSHALL B. MURRAY, Judge. Reversed and cause remanded with directions.

Before Brash, P.J., Dugan and Gundrum, JJ.

¶1 BRASH, P.J. American Company of Irish Dance (American) appeals an order in which the trial court declared a successor organization to the Trinity Irish Dance Company (Trinity I). Trinity I was the beneficiary of a fund established by the Bill Borchert Larson Revocable Living Trust (Trust) and administered by the Greater Milwaukee Foundation (Foundation). The Trust stated that the Foundation was to make distributions to Trinity I from the fund as long as Trinity I was in compliance with certain requirements set forth in the Trust. The Trust further provided that a successor organization to Trinity I would be eligible to receive distributions from the fund as well, as long as that successor organization also complied with the requirements of the Trust.

¶2 In 2014, after a legal dispute between the Board of Directors and one of the founders, Trinity I changed its name to American. American continued to make claims for distributions from the fund under its new name. However, another dance company—also named Trinity Irish Dance Company, and started by the founder of Trinity I involved in the legal dispute (Trinity II)—began making claims to the fund as well. The Foundation filed a petition with the trial court seeking construction of the Trust and a declaratory judgment as to whether American or Trinity II was the “successor organization” to Trinity I under the Trust.

¶3 The trial court held that Trinity II was the successor organization to Trinity I. The court considered extrinsic evidence—in particular, testimony

2 No. 2018AP1294

received at a court trial—to determine the intent of Bill Borchert Larson, the testator, with regard to the meaning of “successor organization” in the Trust. The court found that Trinity II met that intent.

¶4 We disagree with the trial court’s analysis. The law of corporate succession clearly states that American changing its name from Trinity I did not change its corporate identity. Therefore, it was not necessary to determine a successor organization, since American is the same entity as Trinity I, the beneficiary named in the Trust. Furthermore, the terms of the Trust were clear and unambiguous in stating that Trinity I—now American—is the intended beneficiary of the fund as long as it remains in compliance with the requirements of the Trust.

¶5 We therefore reverse the order of the trial court declaring Trinity II the successor organization to Trinity I, and remand this matter for the entry of an order declaring that American is the beneficiary of the fund, subject to the requirements of the Trust, with the Foundation to determine compliance with those requirements as directed in the Trust.

BACKGROUND

¶6 Trinity I was founded by Mark Howard in the 1990s. It was incorporated in Illinois in 1997 under the name Trinity Irish Dance Company; that corporation was registered in Wisconsin as well, under the same name.

¶7 Howard met Bill Borchert Larson, a philanthropist in Milwaukee, in the spring of 2001, and Larson began providing financial support to Trinity I. When Larson died in 2006, his Trust distributed one million dollars to the Foundation to establish a fund for the benefit of Trinity I or its successor organization. All distributions from the fund had to be authorized by the

3 No. 2018AP1294

Foundation to ensure that certain requirements of the Trust were being met. Specifically, those requirements compelled the discontinuation of distributions if Trinity I or its successor organization (1) ceased to operate as a non-profit organization; or (2) ceased to operate “as a dance company primarily for girls.” In either event, the Trust mandated that any remaining funds were to be used to provide scholarships to “worthy and deserving” undergraduate students at the University of Chicago who were financing their education primarily on their own.

¶8 In the years that followed, the Board of Directors for Trinity I developed concerns over Howard’s management of the finances, particularly with regard to maintaining its non-profit status. After numerous legal battles, Howard split from Trinity I in 2014; however, as the result of a trademark dispute, Howard was awarded the rights to the name Trinity Irish Dance Company. Trinity I then legally changed its name to American, keeping the same corporate officers and the same federal tax identification number it had operated under as Trinity I.

¶9 While those legal disputes between Howard and Trinity I were taking place, the Foundation alerted Trinity I that beginning in 2012 it was withholding distributions because the “inactive status” of Trinity I did not meet the requirements of the Trust. Subsequently, in January 2015, the Foundation notified American that the Foundation was changing the beneficiary to the secondary purpose stated in the Trust—establishing scholarships at the University of Chicago. However, in May 2015, after a meeting between the Foundation and American, the Foundation informed American that it would delay making that change to the secondary beneficiary if American could demonstrate, by the end of the year, that it was meeting the requirements of the Trust. In that case, the Foundation would reinstate the distributions to American.

4 No. 2018AP1294

¶10 Meanwhile, Howard formed Trinity II and began making claims to the Foundation that it was the proper recipient of the funds from the Trust as the successor organization to Trinity I. Howard based his claim on his belief that it was the “donor’s intent” to have the funds go to “the founder of the organization”—himself. Thus, he asserted that his new dance company, Trinity II, was the successor organization to Trinity I, not American.

¶11 Due to this conflict, the Foundation filed a petition for declaratory judgment with the trial court in November 2016 seeking construction of the Trust regarding the meaning of “successor organization.” The Foundation explained that it had operated under the presumption that American was still the intended recipient of the funds since it had simply changed the name of the company and was still using the same tax identification number as Trinity I. However, after Trinity II began making claims to the funds, the Foundation believed that the threshold question had become which entity—American or Trinity II—is the successor organization. The trial court agreed with that posture. The court further noted that after making its decision, it would be up to the Foundation to determine whether that successor organization met the requirements of the Trust necessary to obtain the funds.

¶12 A court trial was held in February 2018.

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Bluebook (online)
The Greater Milwaukee Foundation v. American Company of Irish Dance, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-greater-milwaukee-foundation-v-american-company-of-irish-dance-wisctapp-2019.