Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust, and Intervenor, St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas v. Stormy Lattimore Cansler, Individually and as Trustee of the 2014 Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust John Victor Lattimore, Jr., Richard Cansler

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 12, 2022
Docket05-21-00191-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust, and Intervenor, St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas v. Stormy Lattimore Cansler, Individually and as Trustee of the 2014 Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust John Victor Lattimore, Jr., Richard Cansler (Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust, and Intervenor, St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas v. Stormy Lattimore Cansler, Individually and as Trustee of the 2014 Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust John Victor Lattimore, Jr., Richard Cansler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust, and Intervenor, St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas v. Stormy Lattimore Cansler, Individually and as Trustee of the 2014 Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust John Victor Lattimore, Jr., Richard Cansler, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed September 12, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-21-00191-CV

THOMAS REDWINE, AS TRUSTEE OF THE MARTHA T. LATTIMORE LIVING TRUST, AND INTERVENOR, ST. LUKE’S EPISCOPAL CHURCH OF DENISON, TEXAS, Appellants V. STORMY LATTIMORE CANSLER, INDIVIDUALLY AND AS TRUSTEE OF THE 2014 MARTHA T. LATTIMORE LIVING TRUST; JOHN VICTOR LATTIMORE, JR.; RICHARD CANSLER; NORTHWEST HOLDINGS CREEKMORE, LLC; AMERICAN BANK OF TEXAS; AND RAYMOND JAMES FINANCIAL SERVICES, INC., Appellees

On Appeal from the 397th Judicial District Court Grayson County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CV-15-1547

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Schenck, Molberg, and Pedersen, III Opinion by Justice Pedersen, III Appellants Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living

Trust (Redwine), and St. Luke’s Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas (St. Luke’s)

challenge two orders of the trial court signed January 11, 2021: the Order Denying

Intervenor St. Luke’s Episcopal Church’s Request for Declaratory Relief, and the

Order Granting Defendant Stormy Cansler’s Second Amended Motion to Enforce Mediated Compromise Settlement Agreement and Dismiss Case. In a single

appellate issue, Redwine and St. Luke’s argue that the trial court denied them due

process by deciding a breach of contract issue on submission without a summary

judgment proceeding or trial. We affirm the trial court’s orders.

Background

This dispute originated following the death of Martha Lattimore (Lattimore)

in August 2015, when it was learned that she had identified the same property as the

corpus of two trusts with different beneficiaries. In May 2014, Lattimore executed

one trust, naming Redwine trustee and naming St. Luke’s the sole residuary

beneficiary. In August 2014, however, Lattimore executed another trust, identifying

substantially the same corpus, but this time naming her daughter, appellee Stormy

Lattimore Cansler (Cansler), trustee and naming Cansler and her brother, appellee

Victor Lattimore, Jr., the residual beneficiaries.

The Mediated Settlement Agreement

The parties signed a Mediated Settlement Agreement (the MSA) in February

2016.1 Along with conflicting trusts, Lattimore had also executed more than one

will. In the MSA, the parties agreed on which will and which trust—as modified by

the MSA—would be operative. The parties agreed to dismiss their will contest, a

guardianship proceeding, and this case, which the MSA called the Trust Case. The

1 The MSA is confidential and is filed under seal in this Court. We identify only the terms necessary to resolve the issues before us. –2– MSA intended only “proceedings necessary to complete and enforce the terms and

provisions of [the MSA]” to continue. Appellees’ counsel notified this trial court

that the parties had settled, that the court would need to terminate the trust in the

future, that “as a result of settlement, no motions for summary judgment would be

filed by any parties,” and that the trustee would continue paying the bills of the trust

as the court had directed and the parties had agreed in the MSA.

The MSA directed that before any distributions were made from Lattimore’s

estate, the debts and obligations owed by the estate were to be paid, including “[a]ny

and all obligations due and owing to the Internal Revenue Service by Martha

Lattimore, her Estate or her Trust.” The parties’ filings establish that, at the time of

the settlement, all were aware of the existence of a significant federal tax lien. After

all debts were paid, the trust would terminate, and disbursements would be made

according to the terms of the MSA.

The MSA had enough moving parts that—while certain MSA-related

requirements proceeded—this case sat relatively quietly for some time. In 2018, St.

Luke’s intervened in the suit seeking an accounting from Cansler. (Suit on the May

2014 trust had initially been brought by its trustee, Redwine.) And in 2020, there are

signs of discovery issues in the record.

The Motions to Enforce the MSA

On April 27, 2020, St. Luke’s filed its Plea in Intervention, Motion to Compel

Accounting and Motion to Enforce Settlement Agreement, or, in the Alternative, to

–3– Remove Stormy Cansler as Fiduciary. Following its statement of the basis for

intervention and the request for accounting, the motion stated:

St. Luke’s seeks enforcement of the terms of the [MSA]. Under paragraph 3.13 of the [MSA], the parties contemplated that the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust dated August 21, 2014 would be terminated prior to [payment of a specific promissory note. The party at issue] has paid off the promissory note and the proceeds are currently under the complete control of [Cansler]. St. Luke’s requests the Court enter an order directing that [St. Luke’s agreed-upon percentage] of the trust funds be paid over to St. Luke’s for its control over the funds that it received pursuant to the [MSA]. This request is made especially in light of the conduct by [Cansler’s] refusal and failure to produce an accounting. In the alternative, St. Luke’s requests that the Court enter its order directing [Cansler] to turn over one-hundred percent (100%) of the trust funds to a fiduciary beyond the control of [Cansler].

The motion was heard on June 17, but discussion was limited to discovery matters

already resolved and to the question of whether Cansler had provided a sufficient

response to St. Luke’s requests for an accounting. The trial judge suggested the

attorneys file motions if they had specific requests for dismissal or for discovery and

then file specific responses to any motions filed.2

Cansler complied with the judge’s suggestion almost immediately, filing her

Amended Motion to Enforce Mediated Compromise Settlement Agreement, Dismiss

Case, and Request for Expedited Hearing. Cansler complained of appellants’ failure

to have this case (and the will contest) dismissed as the MSA required. Cansler asked

the court “to enforce the [MSA], and incorporate the terms of the [MSA] in the

2 We note that the hearing was held on the Zoom digital platform. In the summer of 2020, the Covid- 19 pandemic remained at emergency levels across the United States, including Dallas County. –4– court’s final judgment disposing of this case.” Cansler filed a Second Amended

Motion to Enforce that specifically cited and quoted the MSA provisions on which

she relied. This is the motion on which the trial court ruled.

St. Luke’s filed its Response to Cansler’s Amended Motion to Enforce

Mediated Compromise Settlement Agreement, Dismiss Case, and Request for

Expedited Hearing and St. Luke’s Request for Declaratory Relief.

 St. Luke’s argued against dismissal, relying on (1) the MSA provision calling

for continued court oversight necessary to complete and enforce terms of the

MSA, and (2) a letter from Cansler’s counsel outlining post-settlement steps

that directs the Trust Case be dismissed after tax liability is resolved and the

trust is terminated.

 St. Luke’s also requested that a constructive trust be imposed on the Estate

funds being held by Texas Citizens Bank as an acknowledgement that St.

Luke’s was the beneficial owner of a specific percentage of those funds

pursuant to the MSA.

 St. Luke’s requested “declaratory relief” based upon its expressed concern

that the MSA provided no date certain for distribution of its percentage of

Lattimore’s estate. The response posited that limitations would run on the

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Thomas Redwine, as Trustee of the Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust, and Intervenor, St. Luke's Episcopal Church of Denison, Texas v. Stormy Lattimore Cansler, Individually and as Trustee of the 2014 Martha T. Lattimore Living Trust John Victor Lattimore, Jr., Richard Cansler, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-redwine-as-trustee-of-the-martha-t-lattimore-living-trust-and-texapp-2022.