In re The Omega Trust ( 2022 )


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    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    10th Circuit Court-Brentwood Probate Division
    No. 2021-0138
    IN RE THE OMEGA TRUST
    Argued: November 18, 2021
    Opinion Issued: May 12, 2022
    Casassa Law Office, of Hampton (Lisa J. Bellanti on the brief and orally),
    for the petitioner.
    Barradale, O’Connell, Newkirk & Dwyer, P.A., of Bedford (Pamela J.
    Newkirk on the brief and orally), for the respondent-trustee.
    Shaheen & Gordon, P.A., of Concord (Benjamin T. Siracusa Hillman and
    Stephanie K. Annunziata on the brief, and Benjamin T. Siracusa Hillman
    orally), for the respondent-special trustee.
    HANTZ MARCONI, J. The petitioner, David J. Apostoloff, appeals an
    order of the Circuit Court (Weaver, J.) dismissing his petition to validate a
    purported amendment to the Omega Trust. He contends that the court erred
    when it dismissed his petition by finding that the grantor did not substantially
    comply with the terms of the trust regarding amendments, and that there was
    not clear and convincing evidence that the grantor intended to amend his trust.
    For the reasons set forth below, we reverse and remand.
    The petitioner alleges the following facts, which we accept as true for
    purposes of this appeal. See Elter-Nodvin v. Nodvin, 
    163 N.H. 678
    , 679 (2012).
    The Omega Trust was established by executed trust agreement on December
    30, 2005, by the grantor, Mark Frank Douglas. The Omega Trust was twice
    amended, once in June 2015 and once in September 2015.
    The relevant portions of the Omega Trust, regarding amendments and
    their execution, provide:
    [Paragraph] 19. AMENDMENT AND REVOCATION. The
    Grantor reserves the right at any time or from time to time without
    the consent of any person and without notice to any person other
    than the Trustee to revoke or modify the trust hereby created, in
    whole or in part, to change the beneficiaries hereof, or to withdraw
    the whole or any part of the trust estate by filing notice of such
    revocation, modification, change, or withdrawal with the Trustee;
    provided, however, that the terms of this agreement may not be
    modified by the Grantor in such manner as to increase the
    obligations or alter the rates of the commissions of the Trustee
    without its written consent.
    ....
    [Paragraph] 22. EXECUTION. This trust agreement, and
    any amendments hereto, shall be effective when executed by the
    Grantor, notwithstanding that the signature of the Trustee is
    provided for, the Trustee’s signature being intended to denote the
    acceptance of the Trustee to serve in that capacity only.
    This trust agreement may be executed in any number of
    counterparts with the same effect as if all of the parties had signed
    the same document. All counterparts shall be construed together
    and shall constitute one agreement.
    In July 2016, the grantor informed his Trust Protector1 that he was in
    poor health and asked her for assistance “in preparing the Third Amendment”
    to the Omega Trust. He informed her “of the changes that he planned to make
    and she assisted him in drafting an email to his attorney . . . to make the
    1 “A trust protector . . . is any person, other than a trustee, who under the terms of the trust, an
    agreement of the qualified beneficiaries, or a court order has a power or duty with respect to a
    trust, including, without limitation, one or more” of the 13 enumerated powers in RSA 564-B:12-
    1201 (2019).
    2
    changes to the trust.” The grantor also informed the trustee “that he was
    making changes to [the Omega] Trust and he was contacting his attorney to
    amend” the same.
    In August, the grantor emailed his attorney about updating his estate
    plan documents, including “his desire to amend the [Omega] Trust, with
    specific instructions on what he wished to do,” and informed the attorney of his
    “significant health issues.” The grantor’s instructions provided for a number of
    changes, including that “he wished to add successor trustees and successor
    trust protectors,” and to include four additional beneficiaries. On August 12,
    his attorney responded “with some questions about the changes requested.”
    On August 16, the attorney sent an email to the grantor that “summarized and
    confirmed the current actions to be taken regarding [the grantor’s] estate plan,”
    and indicated that his law firm was “working on the revised documents now.”
    In this email, the attorney explained that the firm “will prepare an Amendment
    to the Omega Trust,” and noted the changes that the trust would reflect
    including, among other things, the distribution of tangible property and trust
    shares. The email summary also provided for changes to some of the grantor’s
    other trusts. The grantor replied: “Very nice job, there are just a few suggested
    changes as noted below.” That night, the attorney responded that the firm “will
    prepare the revised documents accordingly.” On August 18, the grantor died
    without having signed the Third Amendment.
    In August 2019, the petitioner sought a declaration by the court that the
    series of emails between the grantor and his attorney constituted a valid third
    amendment to the Omega Trust. The special trustee of the Omega Trust2 filed
    a motion to dismiss the petition; the petitioner objected. The court found that
    the “exchange of the e-mails did not substantially comply with the terms of the
    [Omega] Trust.” The court based its finding, in part, on “the history of how the
    Trust was amended in the past and the language of the Trust.” The history
    and language of the trust, the court found, showed that the grantor
    “understood that documents amending the [Omega] Trust must be signed” and
    that “notice to the trustee included having the trustee acknowledge the receipt
    of the amendment.”
    The court also considered the “overall nature” of the emails, which it
    explained involved instructions to revise “an entire estate plan,” not simply the
    Omega Trust. Noting that the attorney’s response indicated that documents
    “will” be drafted, the court found it was “clear that [the grantor] expected that
    documents were to be prepared and forwarded to him for final review and
    signature.” The court, therefore, found that because the Omega Trust
    2 At the time of the petition, the trustee of the Omega Trust believed he had a conflict of interest
    given the changes to the beneficial interests of the Omega Trust, under the purported amendment.
    The court appointed a special trustee to represent the interests of the beneficiaries.
    3
    “required all amendments to be executed, the failure to execute any
    amendment require[d] a finding that the petition must be dismissed.”
    The court further found that the petitioner had not shown “by clear and
    convincing evidence that [the grantor] intended the e-mails to be the
    amendment to his trust.” “Indeed,” the court observed, the grantor “was still
    making corrections and waiting to see the final version from his attorney when
    he died.” Specifically, the court noted that the grantor’s “last e-mail does not
    indicate any intention that the amendment was completed at that point.” The
    court dismissed the petition; the petitioner appealed.
    In reviewing the trial court’s grant of a motion to dismiss, our standard
    of review is whether the allegations in the petitioner’s pleadings are reasonably
    susceptible of a construction that would permit recovery. Automated
    Transactions, LLC v. Am. Bankers Ass’n, 
    172 N.H. 528
    , 532 (2019). We
    assume that the facts set forth in the petitioner’s pleadings are true and
    construe all reasonable inferences in the light most favorable to the petitioner.
    See 
    id.
     We need not assume, however, the truth of statements in the pleadings
    that are merely conclusions of law. Elter-Nodvin, 163 N.H. at 680. We then
    engage in a threshold inquiry that tests the facts in the petition against the
    applicable law, and if the allegations do not constitute a basis for legal relief,
    we must uphold the granting of the motion. Id. In conducting this inquiry, we
    may also consider documents attached to the pleadings, documents the
    authenticity of which are not disputed by the parties, official public records, or
    documents sufficiently referred to in the petition. See Automated Transactions,
    LLC, 172 N.H. at 532.
    On appeal, the petitioner contends that the trial court erred when it
    dismissed his petition to validate the Third Amendment because the grantor
    “clearly and unequivocally sought to amend the [Omega] Trust.” He maintains
    that the email exchange between the grantor and his attorney, “instruct[ing]
    his attorney . . . to prepare a Third Amendment and Restatement reflect[s] [the
    grantor’s] intent.” Resolving this appeal requires that we interpret provisions of
    the New Hampshire version of the Uniform Trust Code (UTC), see RSA ch. 564-
    B (2019 & Supp. 2021). To do so, we rely upon our ordinary, well-established
    rules of statutory construction. Hodges v. Johnson, 
    173 N.H. 595
    , 604 (2020).
    Under those rules, we first look to the language of the statute itself, and, if
    possible, construe that language according to its plain and ordinary meaning.
    See 
    id.
     We construe all parts of a statute together to effectuate its overall
    purpose and avoid an absurd or unjust result. 
    Id.
     We also rely upon the
    official comments to the UTC. 
    Id.
    RSA 564-B:6-602 governs the revocation or amendment of a revocable
    trust. Paragraph (c) provides that a settlor may revoke or amend a revocable
    trust by two methods: first, under (c)(1), “substantial compliance with a method
    provided in the terms of the trust,” or, second, under (c)(2), by “any other
    4
    method manifesting clear and convincing evidence of the settlor’s intent if the
    terms of the trust do not provide a method or do not expressly prohibit
    methods other than methods provided in the terms of the trust.” RSA 564-B:6-
    602(c). We need not decide, here, whether the facts, as pled, constitute
    “substantial compliance” with the trust terms because we conclude that the
    petitioner adequately pled an alternative method of amendment under
    subparagraph (c)(2).
    Here, the terms of the Omega Trust provide, in pertinent part, that the
    grantor may amend the trust “at any time or from time to time without the
    consent of any person and without notice to any person other than the Trustee
    . . . by filing notice of such revocation, modification, change, or withdrawal with
    the Trustee,” and that such an amendment “shall be effective when executed
    by the Grantor.” Because the terms of the Omega Trust provide a method for
    amendment, we first consider whether the trust “expressly prohibit[s] methods
    other than” that provided by the trust terms. RSA 564-B:6-602(c)(2).
    Both the trustee and the special trustee maintain that the method of
    amendment provided in the terms of the Omega Trust is exclusive. The trustee
    contends that the no-contest clause “precludes other methods of amendment,”
    and thereby “precludes any claim of an amendment pursuant to RSA 564-B:6-
    602(c)(2).” Similarly, the special trustee argues that the use of the word “shall”
    in paragraph 22, the execution paragraph, “identifies the execution of a
    document as the exclusive method of amendment.” According to the special
    trustee, because the word “shall” is used to “express a command,” the grantor’s
    use of the word “must be interpreted in the context of the Trust as a whole”
    and in “light of all the circumstances and other competent evidence of the
    settlor’s intent.” (Quotations omitted.) We are not persuaded by either
    argument.
    The commentary to the UTC explains that the code “tries to effectuate the
    settlor’s intent to the maximum extent possible . . . .” Unif. Trust Code § 602
    cmt. at 220 (2018). “[T]o honor the settlor’s intent,” paragraph (c) “generally
    honors a settlor’s clear expression of intent even if inconsistent with stated
    formalities in the terms of the trust.” Id. Even absent substantial compliance
    with the trust’s terms, a settlor may still revoke or amend a revocable trust by
    “any other method manifesting clear and convincing evidence of the settlor’s
    intent.” Id. (explaining that, although amendment or revocation of a trust “will
    ordinarily . . . be accomplished by signing and delivering a written document to
    the trustee, other methods, such as a physical act or an oral statement coupled
    with a withdrawal of the property, might also demonstrate the necessary
    intent”). “Only if the method specified in the terms of the trust is made
    exclusive is the use of other methods prohibited.” Id.
    Similarly, the Restatement (Third) of Trusts provides that if the terms of
    the trust provide a method for the exercise of a power of revocation or
    5
    amendment, but they do not make that method exclusive, “the settlor’s power
    can be exercised either in the specified manner,” or “in any way that provides
    clear and convincing evidence of the settlor’s intention to do so.” Restatement
    (Third) of Trusts § 63 cmts. h, i, at 447-48 (2003). As an example of an
    exclusive amendment provision, the Restatement (Third) of Trusts provides, “if
    a settlor reserves the power to revoke the trust ‘only by a notice in writing
    delivered to the trustee,’ revocation requires the delivery of such a notice to the
    trustee.” Id. cmt. i at 447 (emphasis added). From this guidance, we conclude
    that only if the method specified in the terms of the trust is made exclusive
    does the trust “expressly prohibit methods other than methods provided.” RSA
    564-B:6-602(c)(2).
    Here, nothing in the terms of the Omega Trust purports to make the
    method of amendment provided exclusive. The method provided in the trust
    terms, set forth in paragraphs 19 and 22, provides that the grantor may revoke
    or amend the trust “in whole or in part . . . by filing notice of such revocation,
    modification, change, or withdrawal with the Trustee,” which “shall be effective
    when executed by the Grantor.” Nothing in this language prohibits the use of
    other methods to amend the trust. Accordingly, the power to amend the
    Omega Trust could be exercised by any method, manifesting clear and
    convincing evidence “of the settlor’s intention to do so.” Restatement (Third) of
    Trusts, supra § 63 cmt. h at 447; see RSA 564-B:6-602(c)(2). We conclude that
    the method at issue here — an expression of intent to amend by email — is
    capable of manifesting, by clear and convincing evidence, the settlor’s intent.
    See RSA 564-B:6-602(c)(2). Because the settlor’s intent “is a question of fact to
    be determined by competent evidence and not by rules of law,” King v.
    Onthank, 
    152 N.H. 16
    , 18 (2005), we leave the question of the settlor’s intent
    to the trial court to determine in the first instance.
    In sum, taking all of the facts alleged in the petition as true, and
    applying them against the applicable law, we conclude that the allegations
    constitute a basis for legal relief. See Elter-Nodvin, 163 N.H. at 680. Thus, the
    petitioner has sufficiently pled his case to survive a motion to dismiss.
    Accordingly, we reverse the order of the circuit court granting the special
    trustee’s motion to dismiss. See id.
    Reversed and remanded.
    MACDONALD, C.J., and HICKS, BASSETT, and DONOVAN, JJ.,
    concurred.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2021-0138

Filed Date: 5/12/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/12/2022