DocketNumber: No. 409600
Citation Numbers: 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 7150
Judges: LEVIN, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 6/16/1999
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The cottage consists of a living room, measuring fifteen feet by twenty feet, a kitchen, measuring twelve feet by fifteen feet, and two small bedrooms on a second floor. It also has two porches and a large deck. The cottage is not serviced by city water or city sewers. Drinking water is obtained from a 700 gallon holding tank that collects rain water. There is an outdoor shower by the deck and, according to the defendant, a shower underneath the cottage. A toilet is provided by a fascinating device known as a "Clivus Multrum."
The trust agreement provides that the cottage shall be maintained by the trustees and "used as a summer residence for the members of the Hackbarth family." The trust further provides that "the "Hackbarth Family' shall be defined as the Settlor, his spouse, the settlor's issue and their legal issue."
In May of 1995, the plaintiff Dennis Hackbarth sought to open a discussion with the other trustees about how best to schedule use of the cottage, ostensibly so that its resources would not be overwhelmed. In a letter to the other trustees, he proposed that they implement an exclusive use agreement whereby each of the four branches of the family entitled to use the cottage would have exclusive use for assigned periods during the months of July and August. In a later letter dated April 14, 1997 and sent to the defendant Robert Hackbarth, the plaintiffs Arlene and Dennis Hackbarth indicated that as a majority of the trustees, they were in fact implementing an exclusive use arrangement with regard to the cottage. They divided the months of July and August into four use periods running from July 1st to July 15th; from July 16th to July 31st; from August 1st to August 15th; and from August 16th to August 31st. In that same letter, they solicited Robert's input in deciding who should use the cottage each period. Despite letters sent back and forth between the plaintiffs' and the CT Page 7152 defendant's respective attorneys, the defendant refused to accede to the exclusive use agreement.
By complaint and application for injunction dated January 29, 1998, the plaintiffs sought damages and an injunction against the defendant's continued use the cottage in violation of the exclusive use agreement. The court (Pittman, J.) granted the plaintiffs' application for a temporary injunction. The defendant then moved for summary judgment on the complaint, based on his special defenses. The court (Zoarski, J.) denied that motion.
The case was then tried to the court.
The summons in this action simply names the defendant and does not suggest that he is sued as trustee. " [T]he character in which one is made a party to a suit must be determined from the allegations of the pleadings, and not from the title alone. Where the allegations of the complaint indicate with reasonable certainty that [a defendant is sued]., in a representative capacity, although not specifically stated, this is sufficient to fix the character of the suit. Where it is doubtful in what capacity a party sues [or is sued] . . . the entire complaint may be examined to determine the question; and reference may also be had to the pleadings as a whole or the entire record.' 67A C.J.S., Parties, § 117; see Boyd v. Nelson's Restaurant,
The complaint identifies each of the three trustees, including the defendant, but focuses on the defendant's behavior in refusing to comply with the exclusive use arrangement. Moreover, while the complaint seeks injunctive relief and damages, at trial the plaintiffs did not present any claim or evidence of damages. The specific injunctive relief they sought was "lain injunction requiring the Defendant to comply with the Plaintiff's [sic] decision to adopt and implement the exclusive use arrangement.
The thrust of the complaint and the evidence at trial therefore, is that it is as a beneficiary that the defendant refuses to accede to the plaintiffs' decision. The defendant testified that he believed the exclusive use arrangement was unfair to him. For these reasons, and because injunctive relief is available to the plaintiffs against the defendant individually but not as trustee, the court determines that the defendant is sued in his capacity as a beneficiary only.
The defendant also renews a claim which was raised in his earlier motion for summary judgment, that this court lacks jurisdiction to entertain this action because the plaintiffs have not joined all beneficiaries. Again, I concur in the earlier decision in this case, which held to the contrary. A trustee may maintain suit without joining the beneficiaries of the trust. General Statutes §
The trustees hold legal title to the res of the trust for the benefit of the beneficiaries. Second Exeter Corporation v.Epstein,
With regard to whether the plaintiffs have adequate remedies at law, I am mindful that the use to which the trust puts the cottage is peaceful enjoyment during the summer by members of the Hackbarth family. The plaintiffs' action for this permanent injunction seeks to protect that use. "Any wrongful interference with these interests of the . . . trustee[s] is . . . a wrong to the trustee[s] and gives [them] a cause of action for redress or to prevent a continuance of the improper conduct.'" Second ExeterCorporation v. Epstein, supra,
The exclusive use arrangement allocates two weeks in July and August for each branch of the Hackbarth family — Robert's family, Dennis' family, Clifford's family, and Arlene's family — except that the settler may use the cottage at any time. It may be, as the defendant argues in his brief, that unlike his brother and sister, he "is a retired school teacher and his time is his own. He can visit the cottage, at any time. He enjoys going to the cottage with his children and grandchildren. His daughter has three children and visited the cottage frequently during the summer months. The defendant's son . . . although he now resides in New Hampshire, enjoys going to the cottage and the exclusive use arrangement restricts his opportunity to go there." These personal circumstances of the defendant, however, do not render the arrangement unreasonable nor do they prove self-dealing. While the defendant may feel worse off, the plaintiffs are no better off under this arrangement than is the defendant. Indeed, from the evidence, the court infers that the defendant will remain the principal user of the cottage for the ten month balance of the year. including the summer months of June and September. The plaintiffs have proven by clear and convincing evidence that they have not dealt with the defendant unfairly or engaged in selfdealing.
The "overcrowding" here was largely subjective. If a beneficiary from one branch of the family found himself in the cottage with the defendant, that beneficiary was not comfortable, and complained of a lack of privacy. Clearly, the plaintiffs and Clifford's children are not friendly with the defendant. The court will not bemoan the inability of family members to all "get along," a phenomenon which, for better or worse, has for over two centuries enriched and enlarged Connecticut case law. For reasons that were not entirely disclosed in the evidence but are now painfully obvious, no member of the other branches of the Hackbarth clan wants to share his time in this cottage with the defendant. This is so without any suggestion that the defendant ever overtly misbehaved. However, members of the Hackbarth family did complain that when they were in the cottage with the defendant there was tension and that they had only a superficial relationship with the defendant.
The plaintiffs' entitlement to injunctive relief, however, is not dependent on their showing overcrowding by some objective standard. This is an action for an injunction, not an action for permission to adopt the exclusive use arrangement for a particular reason. The exclusive use arrangement has already been adopted, and the defendant threatens to use the cottage in derogation of that arrangement. An allegation or evidence of the particular reason why the plaintiffs enacted the arrangement is unnecessary and need not be proved. A "plaintiff is obliged to prove only those facts that are necessary elements of its claim; it need not prove facts it unnecessarily pleaded that are not elements of its cause of action." 29 Am.Jur.2d, Evidence § CT Page 7157 158; see Nikitiuk v. Pishtey,
Indeed, some beneficiaries would not use the cottage without the enforcement of that arrangement. Considerable discretion in the management of the trust is conferred by the trust instrument on the trustees. Article III of the trust instrument states: "The Trustees shall hold [and] manage . . . the trust property., Article VII provides: "The Trustees shall have all the powers granted pursuant to General Statutes § 45-100e [now §
"It is well settled that in the construction of a testamentary trust, the expressed intent of the testator must control. This intent is to be determined from reading the instrument as a whole in the light of the circumstances surrounding the testator when the instrument was executed, including the condition of his estate, his relations to his family and beneficiaries and their situation and condition."Gimbel V. Bernard F. Alva B. Gimbel Foundation, Inc.,
It is unnecessary to determine whether this rule is also applicable to the construction of an inter vivos, or living, trust. Except for the text of the trust instrument and testimony that it was executed when the settlor was elderly, there was little other evidence presented showing the circumstances surrounding the settlor when the instrument was executed.5
Thus, in the final analysis, the court is left with the intent of the settlor as expressed in the trust instrument itself. The trust mandated that the cottage be maintained as a summer residence for the members of the Hackbarth family and conferred broad powers on the trustees pursuant to General Statutes §
Judgment may enter in favor of the plaintiffs, permanently enjoining the defendant from using the cottage structure at Indian Cove, Guilford, Ct. during the months of July and August of each year except in accordance with the arrangements adopted by the majority of the trustees.
BY THE COURT
Bruce L. Levin, Judge of the Superior Court
Hoffman v. First Bond Mortgage Co., Inc. , 116 Conn. 320 ( 1933 )
Russell v. Russell , 109 Conn. 187 ( 1929 )
State Ex Rel. Johnson v. Atchison , 105 Conn. 315 ( 1926 )
McClure v. Middletown Trust Co. , 95 Conn. 148 ( 1920 )
Nikitiuk v. Pishtey , 153 Conn. 545 ( 1966 )
Breen v. Phelps , 186 Conn. 86 ( 1982 )
Gimbel v. Bernard F. & Alva B. Gimbel Foundation, Inc. , 166 Conn. 21 ( 1974 )
New Haven Trust Co., Rec. v. Doherty , 75 Conn. 555 ( 1903 )
Lyman v. Stevens , 123 Conn. 591 ( 1938 )