This case concerns the attempted rescission of the Mary C. Dobyns Irrevocable Trust by petitioner, Mary C. Dobyns, who is both the trustor and a beneficiary of the trust. Petitioner sought rescission on the basis of an asserted mistake of law, namely, that the creation of the trust would result in tax savings to her estate. Beneficiaries objected. 1 The trial court entered a judgment rescinding the trust, and beneficiaries appeal. On de novo review, ORS 19.415(3), we affirm.
The pertinent facts are undisputed. Petitioner created the trust in 1995. By its
“The Trustee shall pay or apply from income of the trust estate as the Trustor shall from time to time direct. Should the Trustee at any time consider the Trustor, by reason of illness or accident, or for any other reason, to be unable to direct it with respect to the disposition of such income, the Trustee shall expend for the Trustor such sums from the income and may invade principal, as it shall deem necessary or advisable for her care, support, maintenance and reasonable comforts.”
The trust expressly stated that it is irrevocable: “Trustor specifically acknowledges that Trustor may not revoke this Trust in whole or in part once Trustor’s assets have been delivered to Trustee.” Petitioner delivered assets to the trust the day after the trust was created.
Petitioner did not testify before the trial court. Instead, the parties stipulated that, if she had testified, she would have stated that her sole purpose in creating the trust was to save estate taxes. Over beneficiaries’ objection, the trial court admitted into evidence a letter that petitioner’s then-attorney, Clark, wrote to petitioner a few months after the creation of the trust. In the letter, Clark reviewed petitioner’s estate plan and encouraged her to place more assets in trust, stating that doing so would result in significant savings in estate taxes.
The parties further stipulated, however, that the trust as written would not save any estate taxes. Petitioner made that discovery after the trust was created, and she then filed an action against Clark for malpractice. Petitioner also attempted to rescind the trust, first by trying to secure the approval of all trust beneficiaries. After failing to do so, petitioner filed in the probate division of the trial court a petition for modification and rescission of trust under ORS 128.115 to 128.175. In the petition, petitioner described herself as “Trustor and Petitioner” in the caption, and as “trustor” throughout, and she stated that she is a beneficiary as well as the trustor of the trust. Petitioner also alleged that “[s]he ha[d] no adequate remedy at law[,]” and she requested rescission of the trust and “[s]uch further orders as may be just and equitable.” In addition, petitioner requested that the court modify the trust by naming a new successor trustee and an alternate successor trustee. 2 After a hearing, the trial court entered a judgment rescinding the trust, but the judgment did not specify whether rescission was granted as a statutory or a common-law remedy. On appeal, beneficiaries assert a jurisdictional challenge, and they make two assignments of error on the merits.
We first consider beneficiaries’ jurisdictional challenge, which consists of the following two arguments: (1) the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction and (2) petitioner, in her role as trustor, lacked constitutional standing to rescind the trust. We address those arguments in turn.
Beneficiaries argue that the statutory provisions that authorize changes to trusts do not authorize petitions for relief by trustors and that, because petitioner filed her petition solely in her status as trustor, the trial court therefore
lacked subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree. Subject matter jurisdiction exists when a court has authority to adjudicate the general subject involved.
Greeninger v. Cromwell,
Beneficiaries also argue that petitioner lacked constitutional standing to seek rescission of the trust because, as the trustor of an irrevocable trust, she has no continuing interest in the trust. Again, we disagree. A person has standing if resolution of the issues presented will have a practical effect on his or her rights.
Utsey v. Coos County,
We turn to beneficiaries’ arguments on the merits. We begin with beneficiaries’ second assignment of error. Beneficiaries argue that the trial court erred in admitting into evidence the letter from Clark to petitioner reviewing the status of her estate plan. Beneficiaries argue that Clark’s assertion in the letter that the purpose of the trust was to save estate taxes constituted inadmissible hearsay. Petitioner replies that the letter was offered not for the truth of that assertion; indeed, the parties have agreed that the assertion of tax savings was not true. Rather, petitioner argues, the letter was offered as evidence of petitioner’s belief that the creation of the trust would save estate taxes. That asserted fact was relevant to establish a disputed element of petitioner’s claim, namely, that she was mistaken as to the legal effect of the trust. It follows, petitioner reasons, that the assertion of intended tax savings was not offered for its truth and, therefore, was not hearsay.
Petitioner is correct. “An important nonhearsay use of out-of-court statements is to prove their effect upon a person who heard the statement, where such effect is relevant.” Laird C. Kirkpatrick,
Oregon Evidence
§ 801.01[3][d][iii]4, Art VIII (4th ed 2002);
see State v. Thomas,
We turn to beneficiaries’ first assignment of error, in which they assert that the trial court erred by rescinding the trust. The central premise of their argument is that an irrevocable trust cannot be rescinded by its trustor on the basis of a mistake of law. Petitioner counters that the trial court had authority to rescind the trust under both a statute, former ORS 128.135(2)(d), 3 and general equitable principles. Although petitioner relied on both sources of authority before the trial court, that court granted rescission without specifying the legal basis for its decision.
We begin our analysis with petitioner’s statutory argument. Former ORS 128.135(2) provided, in part:
“Any beneficiary of a trust * * * may petition the circuit court * * * for the purpose of any of the following:
* * Hs *
“(d) Making any modification of the trust that the parties could make by agreement under the provisions of ORS 128.177.”
Former ORS 128.177(l)(d), in turn, authorized agreements to “[m]odify[] the trust instrument, including extending or reducing the period of the trust’s operation, if the modification is not inconsistent with any dominant purpose or objective of the trust [.]” Petitioner reasons that if she could seek a modification of the trust to reduce the period of its operation, then she also could seek to reduce that period to nil, essentially terminating the trust immediately. Beneficiaries counter that petitioner’s theory is at odds with the plain language of former ORS 128.135(2), which used the word “modiffy],” not “terminate.” As explained below, we agree with beneficiaries.
Following the template of
PGE v. Bureau of Labor and Industries,
We next consider beneficiaries’ argument that the trial court did not have authority to rescind the trust based on general equitable principles. In support of that argument, beneficiaries rely, in part, on this court’s decision in
Fleenor v. Williamson,
Beneficiaries nonetheless rely on
dictum
in
Fleenor
in which we said that “we can find no Oregon case * * * that has allowed equitable relief where the mistake of law was unilateral.”
Beneficiaries also rely on
Stipe
for the proposition that irrevocable trusts cannot be rescinded under general
equitable principles. In
Stipe,
a trustor declared that certain shares of stock were held in trust for his children’s benefit, and he then transferred the shares to the trustee.
“ ‘If a trust has been created, it results in the vesting of property rights in the cestuis with regard to the subject-matter. If these property rights were absolute and unconditional, they cannot be taken from their owners without action on the part of such owners, by way of surrender or conveyance. The creator of those property rights, whether for a consideration or voluntarily, cannot resume his former position as owner merely because of a change of mind or a feeling that he has unwisely given or conveyed for a consideration.’ ”
Id. (quoting George Bogert, 4 The Law of Trusts and Trustees § 993, 429-30 (1948)). According to beneficiaries, Stipe controls here and, because petitioner did not reserve a power to revoke the trust but, rather, expressly made it irrevocable, she cannot rescind it because of a mistake.
Beneficiaries also rely
on Harrell.
In that case, a life-income beneficiary petitioned for modification of a trust in order to protect the interests of her disabled son, a remainder beneficiary who, the petitioner feared, might lose his eligibility for public assistance when he received his share of the trust. With the approval of the other beneficiaries, the petitioner sought to modify the trust to provide funds in a way that would not disqualify her son from receiving public assistance.
Harrell,
Harrell,
like
Stipe,
is inapposite. Here, there was no evidence that petitioner sought rescission “merely because of a change of mind or a feeling that [she] has unwisely given,”
Stipe,
Having explained why the cases on which beneficiaries rely do not assist them here, we must determine whether, under applicable equitable principles,
8
an irrevocable trust can be rescinded for mistake at the instance of the
trustor. Although no Oregon case is directly on point, we conclude that such authority does exist. The Supreme Court has permitted the voiding of a trust whose execution was induced by fraud or undue influence. In
Egr v. Egr et
al.,
To obtain rescission of an instrument for mistake, a plaintiff must establish by clear and convincing evidence that
he or she made a mistake that was so fundamental that it frustrated the purpose of the instrument, and the mistake must have existed when the instrument was created.
Lesher v. Strid,
On de novo review, we find that petitioner established all necessary elements of her claim by clear and convincing evidence. First, it is undisputed that estate tax avoidance was petitioner’s sole purpose for creating the trust. Second, the trust did not result in tax savings and, thus, did not serve its intended purpose. Third, petitioner was justified in relying on her attorney’s advice that an irrevocable trust would serve that purpose. That is, she was not grossly negligent in making the mistake. Fourth, after petitioner learned of her mistake, she promptly sought legal counsel and attempted to have the trust rescinded by agreement of the beneficiaries. When that effort failed, she brought this action for rescission. It follows that the trial court did not err in entering a judgment rescinding the trust.
Affirmed.
Notes
Dorothy Generaux, Sharon Kalister, Sandra Kalister, and Scott Kalister are the beneficiaries of the trust who objected to petitioner’s petition for rescission before the trial court. They were collectively referred to as “beneficiaries” in the trial court proceeding, and, although they are not only the beneficiaries of the trust, we refer to them by the same designation on appeal.
Petitioner did not seek to modify the trust by deleting the provision that the trust is irrevocable.
The statutes in ORS chapter 128 that are referred to in this opinion, including former ORS 128.135, are the 2003 versions of those statutes. Each of them was repealed by Oregon Laws 2005, chapter 348, section 128. In the same session, the legislature enacted the Oregon Uniform Trust Code, ORS chapter 130. Or Laws 2005, ch 348. The quoted provisions of ORS chapter 128, rather then the provisions of the Uniform Trust Code, apply to this case. See ORS 130.910(l)(b) (“ORS chapter 130 does not apply to judicial, administrative and other proceedings concerning trusts commenced before January 1,2006.”).
The relevant language in former ORS 128.009 was enacted in 1981. Or Laws 1981, ch 915, § 1. Former ORS 128.177(l)(d), using the word “modifly],” was enacted in 1993. Or Laws 1993, ch 222, § 2.
ORS 112.650 has since been repealed. Or Laws 2001, ch 245, § 19.
In the context of a bilateral contract, a unilateral mistake will justify rescission only if the mistake was induced by the other party’s inequitable conduct.
Jensen v. Miller,
Oregon courts frequently look to the
Restatements of Torts
to provide guidance on questions of law not well developed in our jurisprudence.
See, e.g., Morrow v. II Morrow, Inc.,
Again, the statutory scheme for making changes to trusts did not supplant those principles. See former ORS 128.175.
Our conclusion also is consistent with decisions from other jurisdictions.
See duPont v. Southern Nat. Bank of Houston, Texas,
We note that this case presents no issue of detrimental reliance by the beneficiaries of the trust, and we do not address whether and how such rebanee might affect the analysis of other cases.
