Yellin v. Gilroy (In Re Gilroy)

235 B.R. 512, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 780, 1999 WL 455731
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJuly 1, 1999
Docket19-10054
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 235 B.R. 512 (Yellin v. Gilroy (In Re Gilroy)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yellin v. Gilroy (In Re Gilroy), 235 B.R. 512, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 780, 1999 WL 455731 (Mass. 1999).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

CAROL J. KENNER, Bankruptcy Judge.

By his complaint in this adversary proceeding, the Chapter 7 Trustee, Jonathan Yellin, seeks a declaration that the Debt- or’s beneficial interest in an Illinois spendthrift trust is an asset of her bankruptcy estate. He argues that the Trust is not a valid spendthrift because the Trust gives the Debtor, as its trustee, discretion over distribution of the trust corpus, and because it gives her, as beneficiary, a general power of appointment over her share of the trust asset. On the strength of several arguments, including that the trust is a true spendthrift, the Debtor responds that her interest in the trust is excluded from the estate. The adversary proceeding is before the Court on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons set forth below, the Court concludes that the Trustee is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.

FACTS

The parties have submitted their motions on an agreed statement of facts, and both rely entirely on the facts set forth therein. Neither contends that there is a genuine issue of material fact, and I find that there are none. The agreed facts are as follows.

The Debtor is Kathleen Gilroy. In 1988, her father, Michael S. Gilroy, won a $2 million jackpot in the Illinois lottery. The proceeds are distributed over twenty years in annual payments of approximately $100,000 before taxes. On April 22, 1996, Mr. Gilroy, a resident of Illinois, executed his will and a trust agreement establishing the Michael S. Gilroy Revocable Trust (the “Trust”). Four days later, on April 26, 1997, Kathleen Gilroy filed a voluntary petition under Chapter 7 of the Bankruptcy Code, thereby commencing this bankruptcy case. At the time of her filing, she held a beneficial interest in the Trust. Michael Gilroy died on April 29, 1996, four days after the Debtor filed her bankruptcy petition. The primary -asset of his probate estate was his interest in the proceeds of the winning lottery ticket; at the time of his death, eleven payments, totaling approximately $1.1 million, remained to be distributed. By operation of a pour-over clause in the will, Mr. Gilroy’s interest in the ticket proceeds passed to the Trust and, pursuant to the Trust, is to be distributed among four subtrusts (created by the same trust agreement), including one of *514 which the Debtor is the sole beneficiary. From the remaining payments on the winning ticket, the total payable to the Debt- or’s subtrust, before taxes and expenses, is approximately $230,000.

The Trust Agreement Establishing the Michael S. Gilroy Revocable Trust has been placed in evidence as part of the agreed statement of facts. The Trust Agreement includes both a spendthrift clause and a general power of appointment. First, at ¶ 5.2, the Trust Agreement gives the beneficiaries of the sub-trusts (known as “descendants’ trusts”) a general power of appointment:

5.2 General Power of Appointment. After the beneficiary of a descendant’s trust shall have attained the age of twenty-one (21) years, said beneficiary shall have the right, at any time and from time to time during her lifetime and upon her death, to appoint all or any part of the trust estate of such trust to or for the benefit of any one or more persons or entities (including herself). 1

Later, at ¶ 10.5, the Trust Agreement contains the following spendthrift provision:

10.5 Spendthrift Provision. In keeping with the nature of this Trust, no beneficiary or any other person except as specifically provided in the Agreement shall have any ascertainable, proportionate, actuarial or otherwise fixed or definable right to or interest in all or any portion of the trust estate. No income or principal distributable or to become distributable with respect to a separate trust shall be transferable, assignable, or subject to being in any manner whatsoever anticipated, charge or encumbered by any person beneficially interested in such separate trust, or subject to interference or control by any creditors of said person, to any claim by any Federal, state or local government or department or office thereof for reimbursement for medical, disability or other payments provided to said person by such governmental entity, or subject to any claim for alimony, or for the support of a spouse pursuant to a decree of divorce or separate maintenance of a separation agreement, or to being taken or reached by any legal or equitable process in satisfaction of any debt, liability or obligation of said person prior to its receipt by said person; provided, that the provisions of this Section shall not prevent the exercise of, or transfer pursuant to the exercise of, any power of appointment granted hereunder.

Trust Agreement, ¶ 10.5 (emphasis added). Finally, in ¶ 12.8, the Trust Agreement states that “[t]his agreement shall be construed and administered and the validity of each separate trust created hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the laws of the State of Illinois.”

ISSUES AND ARGUMENTS

These simple facts raise a small tangle of issues. The starting point is § 541(a)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code. The Trustee argues that, because the Debtor held a beneficial interest in the Trust on the date of the bankruptcy filing, her interest in the Trust became an asset of the bankruptcy estate by operation of § 541(a)(1). The Debtor responds that her interest in the Trust was excluded from the estate by operation of § 541(c)(2) because the Trust includes a restriction on the transfer of her beneficial interest — to wit, the spendthrift clause — that is valid and enforceable under Illinois law. The Trustee responds that *515 the subtrust is not a true spendthrift trust because the Debtor is both sole trustee and sole beneficiary, and because the Trust gives her, as beneficiary, a general power of appointment over the subtrust assets, which power is specifically excepted from the spendthrift provision. The Debt- or answers that this argument is unavailing because (1) the Trust imposes severe limitations on her discretion as trustee; (2) in any case, she did not become trustee of the Trust until after she commenced this ease; (3) under Illinois law, the Debtor can disclaim her power of appointment, and her disclaimer would relate back to the date of the Trust’s creation; and (4) under Illinois law, a creditor cannot compel the exercise of a power of appointment.

In the alternative, the Debtor argues that, if her beneficial interest in the sub-trust is not excluded from the bankruptcy estate, the estate nonetheless acquired only the value of the property in trust on the date of the bankruptcy filing; the estate does not include any enhancement in value that occurred postpetition, by virtue of the Trust’s postpetition inheritance of her father’s right to the lottery proceeds. In response, the Trustee contends that the debtor’s right to the lottery proceeds is included in the estate by operation of § 541(a)(5)(A), which brings into the estate those interests in property that the Debtor acquires, or becomes entitled to acquire, within 180 days after the bankruptcy filing by bequest, devise, or inheritance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
235 B.R. 512, 1999 Bankr. LEXIS 780, 1999 WL 455731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellin-v-gilroy-in-re-gilroy-mab-1999.