In re Estate of Dean E. Chrisp, deceased. Gail A. Chrisp, Appellant, v. Lynn E. Chrisp et al., Appellees.
No. S-07-1089.
Supreme Court of Nebraska.
Filed January 2, 2009.
276 Neb. 966
HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CONNOLLY, GERRARD, STEPHAN, MCCORMACK, and MILLER-LERMAN, JJ.
Royce E. Norman and Stephen P. Herman, of Norman, Paloucek & Herman Law Offices, for appellees Lynn E. Chrisp and Kent A. Chrisp.
CONNOLLY, J.
I. SUMMARY
This is a dispute between Gail A. Chrisp, the surviving spouse of Dean E. Chrisp (Chrisp), and two of Chrisp‘s sons from his earlier marriage. The sons became the trustees of Chrisp‘s revocable trust after his death. Before his marriage to Gail, Chrisp had transferred the bulk of his assets to the trust. In his will, Chrisp devised all his property to Gail. Gail, however, petitioned for an elective share of the augmented estate. She claimed that the premarital trust assets were included in the augmented estate.
This appeal presents the issue whether the assets from a premarital trust must be included in the augmented estate for calculating a surviving spouse‘s elective share. The district court concluded that the trust assets were not included. We agree. Under
II. BACKGROUND
In November 2000, Chrisp created the Dean E. Chrisp Revocable Trust. The beneficiaries are his four children. He named his sons, Lynn E. Chrisp and Kent A. Chrisp, as successor cotrustees. In December 2002, Gail and Chrisp married without a prenuptial agreement. In April 2004, Chrisp amended his trust. First, he removed as trust beneficiaries two stepchildren from a previous marriage; second, he named Gail as a successor cotrustee also. Gail is not a trust beneficiary. Also in 2004, he created a new will devising all of his property to Gail. The will named Gail, Kent, and Lynn as copersonal representatives. Chrisp died in September 2004.
In July 2005, in the probate proceeding, Gail, acting as personal representative, notified the trustees that the probate estate was inadequate to pay statutory allowances and that they would be liable for the obligation if they distributed assets from the trust.1
Later, in August 2005, the court ordered an assessment against the trust for the statutory allowances, but this issue is not part of this appeal. Also in August, the court discharged Gail as personal representative and appointed a third party, attorney Richard A. Birch.
In September 2005, Gail filed a demand against Birch to initiate a proceeding against the trust to determine its liability under
In October 2005, at the hearing on the augmented estate, the parties disputed the estate‘s assets. They also submitted a stipulation acknowledging that Birch would file an amended inventory, valuing the estate‘s assets and the trust‘s assets. The stipulation showed that Birch valued Chrisp‘s estate at $842,185. But he included in that total $666,503 of trust assets.
In December 2005, in the probate proceeding, the court rejected Gail‘s argument that the augmented estate included the premarital trust assets. The court had reviewed the committee statements in the legislative history of Nebraska‘s augmented estate statute. It concluded that the Legislature had specifically drafted
In June 2006, the court conducted a final hearing on the remaining motions and issues. The court recognized that there was a separate trust proceeding, but it concluded it could merge the two cases for that hearing. In July, the court issued a consolidated order “[f]or judicial economy.” It denied Gail‘s motion for continued support payments and took all other matters under advisement pending briefing.
1. County Court Issues Final orders in Both proceedings
In September 2006, the court issued separate but identical orders in the probate proceeding and the trust proceeding. In each order, the court specifically stated that it considered its order final. It adopted the trustees’ calculation of the augmented estate; it granted Birch attorney fees, to be later assessed against the trust; and it awarded Gail $6,930 for attorney fees while she was the personal representative. Gail appealed from the probate order. The Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal for lack of a final order in a special proceeding.
In April 2007, in the trust proceeding, the trustees moved for a final order. The same month, the court entered a second final order in the trust proceeding, which was effectively the same as its September 2006 order. But in this order, the court specifically stated that all issues raised by Birch‘s petition had been resolved and that the trust proceeding was closed. Gail did not appeal from this order. In the probate proceeding, there remained some claims against the estate which the court resolved in May.
In August 2007, Birch filed a petition for a final settlement of the probate proceeding, a petition to determine inheritance taxes, and his final accounting. In October, the court assessed taxes, approved Birch‘s final accounting, awarded him attorney fees from the trust assets, and entered a decree of final discharge. Gail appealed from the final probate order.
On appeal, the trustees moved for summary dismissal, arguing that this court lacked jurisdiction because Gail had not appealed from the April 2007 final order in the trust proceeding. They argued that because the April 2007 order was final and Gail had failed to appeal from that order, res judicata precluded her appeal in the probate proceeding. In granting the trustees’ motion to bypass, this court simultaneously denied their motion for summary dismissal, without prejudice, subject to reconsideration after hearing the appeal.
III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Gail assigns, condensed and restated, that the county court erred in concluding that Chrisp‘s revocable trust was not part of the augmented estate. Gail also assigns that the court erred in awarding her only $6,930 for attorney fees.
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
A jurisdictional question which does not involve a factual dispute is determined by an appellate court as a matter of law.2 Statutory interpretation is a question of law.3 When reviewing questions of law in a probate matter, we reach a conclusion independent of the determination reached by the court below.4 When an attorney fee is authorized, the amount of the fee is addressed to the trial court‘s discretion, and its ruling will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.5
V. ANALYSIS
1. Appellate Jurisdiction
The trustees contend that this court does not have jurisdiction because Gail failed to timely appeal from the final order in the trust proceeding. Before reaching the legal issues presented for review, it is the duty of an appellate court to determine whether it has jurisdiction over the matter before it.6 An appellate court acquires no jurisdiction unless the appellant has satisfied the statutory requirements for appellate jurisdiction.7
During these proceedings, the county court, under the Nebraska Probate Code, did not have jurisdiction over trusts.8 This jurisdictional change was part of the Legislature‘s enactment of the Nebraska Uniform Trust Code in 2003.9 Thus, the court did not have jurisdiction in the probate proceeding to consider the petition of the personal representative, Birch, against the trust under
2. The Augmented Estate Does Not Include premarital Trusts
Under
(a) Section 30-2314(a) Excludes a Decedent‘s Premarital Transfers to a Revocable Trust
Section 30-2314(a), in relevant part, provides that
[t]he augmented estate is the estate, first, reduced by the aggregate amount of funeral and administration expenses, homestead allowance, family allowances and exemptions, and enforceable claims and, second, increased by the aggregate amount of the following items:
(1) The value of property transferred by the decedent at any time during marriage to the surviving spouse to or for the benefit of any person other than a bona fide purchaser or the surviving spouse, but only to the extent to which the decedent did not receive adequate and full consideration in money or money‘s worth for such transfer, if such transfer is a transfer of any of the following types:
. . . .
(ii) Any transfer to the extent to which the decedent retained at death a power alone or with any other person to revoke such transfer or to consume, invade, or dispose of the principal of the property for his or her own benefit.
Absent a statutory indication to the contrary, we give words in a statute their ordinary meaning.13 Section 30-2314(a)(1) lists all of a decedent‘s transfers of property the value of which may be used to increase the probate estate for calculating an elective share. We agree that the transfer described in
Although in 1980 and 1985, the Legislature amended
(b) “Estate” in § 30-2314 Means “Probate Estate”
Nebraska adopted the original 1969 Uniform Probate Code (UPC) in 1974,16 and Nebraska‘s
(c) Trust Code Protections Do Not Apply in Determining the Augmented Estate
We do not agree that excluding premarital transfers to trusts from the augmented estate is inconsistent with the protections afforded under
Again, absent a statutory indication to the contrary, we give words in a statute their ordinary meaning.22 We will not read into a statute a meaning that is not there.23 And reading
the property of a trust that was revocable at the settlor‘s death is subject to claims of the settlor‘s creditors, costs of administration of the settlor‘s estate, the expenses of the settlor‘s funeral and disposal of remains, and statutory allowances to a surviving spouse and children to the extent the settlor‘s probate estate is inadequate to satisfy those claims, costs, expenses, and allowances.
Nor is an elective share a statutory allowance. The statutes granting statutory allowances explicitly state that these rights are in addition to any shares passing to a surviving spouse or dependent child through a will, intestate succession, or elective share.24
Gail, however, relies on the definition of “claim” under the probate code to argue that an elective share is a claim against the estate. Section 30-2209(4) of the probate code provides:
Claim, in respect to estate of decedents . . ., includes liabilities of the decedent . . . whether arising in contract, in tort or otherwise, and liabilities of the estate which arise at or after the death of the decedent . . ., including funeral expenses and expenses of administration. The term does not include . . . demands or disputes regarding title of a decedent . . . to specific assets alleged to be included in the estate.
Gail‘s argument lacks merit. Her interpretation of a claim to include a petition for an elective share would render the augmented estate statute nonsensical.25 As stated above, the augmented estate must be reduced by enforceable claims.26 Thus, if a “claim” included a petition for an elective share, the augmented estate would have to be reduced by whatever amount the surviving spouse properly claimed for an elective share. When viewed in context with other relevant statutes, it is clear that the trust code‘s
(d) Legislature Has Chosen Public Policy
Finally, Gail contends that excluding premarital trusts from the augmented estate would have a devastating effect on the elective share statutes. She argues that by transferring their property to a revocable trust before marrying, individuals can simply avoid the statutes meant to protect surviving spouses without the disclosure and consent that would be required for a prenuptial agreement. As we know, however, it is the Legislature‘s function through the enactment of statutes to declare what is the law and public policy of this state.27 And the Legislature has declared its public policy choice by rejecting the revised article II of the UPC.
In 1990, article II of the UPC was significantly revised, including the elective share provisions.28 Under the revised UPC article II, the augmented estate includes the value of the decedent‘s nonprobate transfer to others through a revocable trust, whether the trust was created before or during the marriage.29 The Legislature, by adopting the original UPC and declining to adopt the revised article II of the UPC,30 has made a clear policy choice in
3. Attorney Fees
Gail argues that the county court erred in failing to award her more than $6,930 for the attorney fees she incurred as personal representative.
In February 2006, Gail requested attorney fees, under
At the final hearing, Birch agreed that by the time he was appointed in August 2005, Gail and her attorneys had opened the estate, sent out notices, filed an inventory, and obtained funding from the trust for statutory allowances. Birch stated that he did not bill hourly for estate work, but he estimated that this work would normally require about 20 hours. Birch stated that he charged $120 an hour and opined that the hourly rate for attorneys locally ranged from $100 to $150, depending on the attorney‘s experience. Another attorney for Gail testified that he believed the fees her attorneys charged were reasonable. The court stated that its concern was not the hourly rate of Gail‘s attorneys but the cutoff period for awarding expenses under the probate code.
Gail contends that it was her duty as personal representative to seek funds from the trust for statutory allowances, costs, expenses, and claims, and to administer these sums once she obtained them. Relying on
We agree that under
We recognize that when the Legislature removed probate jurisdiction over trusts, it failed to amend the definition of “estate” to include trusts only in limited circumstances. But this provision must be read consistently with other provisions of the probate code and trust code. Under the trust code, a county court may authorize a settlor‘s guardian or conservator to exercise the settlor‘s powers over a trust with the approval of the court supervising the conservatorship or guardianship.32 If, under the trust code, the county court so authorizes a conservator or guardian, then, under the probate code, the court supervises the guardian or conservator‘s exercise of power.33
Otherwise, a court in a probate proceeding could have jurisdiction over nontestamentary trust assets only in the unusual circumstance that they become probate assets. For example, this could occur when a settlor directs a trustee to pay over the undistributed principal and income of an inter vivos trust to the settlor‘s personal representative.34 Also, when a testamentary trust is created by a valid will,35 the court has jurisdiction over the probate assets until they are distributed to the trustee.36
Because Chrisp‘s inter vivos trust could not be revoked after his death, those assets were not a part of his estate. So, Gail incorrectly argues that she had a duty as personal representative to take an inventory of the trust assets or recover those assets for probate administration. The persons responsible and potentially liable for the trust‘s administration were the trustees, Lynn and Kent—not the estate‘s personal representative. Under
Attorney fees and expenses may generally be recovered in a civil action only where provided for by statute or when a recognized and accepted uniform course of procedure has been to allow recovery of attorney fees.40 Under
Despite Gail‘s arguments, a surviving spouse‘s efforts to have the decedent‘s nonprobate trust assets included in the augmented estate are personal to the surviving spouse. Even if she had succeeded in having the court include Chrisp‘s nonprobate transfer in the augmented estate, that decision would not have benefited the estate because the trust was not a probate asset. We conclude that a surviving spouse is not entitled to attorney fees for legal actions that she took while she was not the personal representative42 and that were directed at obtaining assets that did not benefit the estate or come under its administration.43
Gail does not argue that the county court‘s award of attorney fees for her administrative duties while personal representative was unreasonable, and we find no abuse of discretion in the court‘s award.
VI. CONCLUSION
We conclude that Gail‘s failure to appeal from the final order in the trust proceeding commenced under
Affirmed.
