IN RE ROBERT L. McDOWELL REVOCABLE TRUST
No. S-16-071
Supreme Court of Nebraska
May 5, 2017
296 Neb. 565
Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library
www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/
07/28/2017 09:10 AM CDT
Trusts. The interpretation of the words of a trust is a question of law. - Trusts: Equity: Appeal and Error. Absent an equity question, an appellate court reviews trust administration matters for error appearing on the record; but where an equity question is presented, appellate review of that issue is de novo on the record.
- Decedents’ Estates. In Nebraska, powers of appointment are construed according to the principles of the common law.
- Decedents’ Estates: Intent. In the construction of powers of appointment, the cardinal principle is that the intention of the donor is controlling.
- ____: ____. The donee of a power of appointment must keep within its terms, and where the donor prescribes the method of its execution, that method must be strictly followed, so far at least as may be necessary to give effect to the donor‘s intent and design.
- Decedents’ Estates. Where there is a prohibition, limitation, or restriction in a power of appointment, such provision will control and the donee will not be permitted to disregard the same.
- ____. A power of appointment is considered special or limited when the donee‘s appointment is limited to a group which is not unreasonably large and which does not include the donee.
Trusts: Intent. Rules of construction for interpreting a trust are applied when the language of the trust is not clear; but if the language clearly expresses the settlor‘s intent, the rules do not apply. - Appeal and Error. Plain error is error plainly evident from the record and of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial process.
- Trusts: Words and Phrases. A breach of trust includes every omission or commission which violates in any manner the obligation of carrying out a trust according to its terms.
- Trusts. Every violation by a trustee of a duty required of it by law, whether willful and fraudulent, or done through negligence, or arising through mere oversight or forgetfulness, is a breach of trust.
- ____. According to
Neb. Rev. Stat. § 30-3890 (Reissue 2016), a violation by a trustee of a duty the trustee owes to a beneficiary is a breach of trust.
Appeal from the County Court for Custer County: TAMI K. SCHENDT, Judge. Affirmed as modified.
John M. Lingelbach, James Tews, and Minja Herian, of Koley Jessen, P.C., L.L.O., for appellant.
Brian S. Koerwitz and Kent E. Endacott, of Endacott, Peetz & Timmer, P.C., L.L.O., and Heidi Hornung-Scherr, of Scudder Law Firm, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee Jane O. Hornung.
Richard A. DeWitt and David J. Skalka, of Croker, Huck, Kasher, DeWitt, Anderson & Gonderinger, L.L.C., for appellee Roger R. Stockall.
HEAVICAN, C.J., WRIGHT, CASSEL, STACY, KELCH, and FUNKE, JJ.
STACY, J.
This is a dispute between the adult children of Robert L. McDowell and Betty Jane McDowell, both deceased. The issue presented is whether Betty validly exercised a limited power of appointment given to her by Robert‘s trust when she appointed the assets in Robert‘s trust to her own revocable trust. The
I. FACTS
Robert and Betty were the owners of McDowell Cattle Company, which consists of farmland and pasture near Arnold, Nebraska. Robert and Betty each owned 270 shares of the company.
In 2001, Robert and Betty drafted wills and revocable trusts with nearly identical language. Robert‘s trust provided in relevant part:
From and after my death all principal of the trust not allocated to the said Trust shall be administered and distributed as Trust “A” as follows:
. . . .
(d) Upon the death of my wife in the event my wife shall survive me, the then principal of Trust “A” shall be distributed to or held in trust for the benefit of such one or more of my issue, the spouses of any such issue, and tax-exempt charitable organizations, in such shares and proportions and subject to such powers, terms and conditions, as my wife shall appoint by will and any principal of Trust “A” not appointed effectively by my wife shall continue to be administered as Trust “A” pursuant to the following provisions of this instrument.
Robert died before Betty. After his death, Betty executed a new will. In this will, she provided:
I hereby exercise any power of appointment given to me under the . . . Robert L. McDowell Revocable Trust . . . (including Trust “A” . . .), and direct that all such property over which I have a power of appointment, together with all of my property, whether real or personal, is hereby devised to the Trustee or Trustees of the [Betty Jane McDowell Revocable Trust], to be administered by the Trustee as part of the property of said . . . Trust,
and to be held or distributed according to the terms thereof . . . .
Robert and Betty had two children who survived them: Jane O. Hornung and Sandra K. Stockall. Pursuant to the terms of Betty‘s will, both Robert‘s 270 shares of McDowell Cattle Company—from his “Trust ‘A‘” (Trust A)—and Betty‘s 270 shares passed through Betty‘s trust to Stockall. Hornung received nothing under the terms of Betty‘s trust, but was a potential beneficiary under Robert‘s trust.
After at least some of Robert‘s assets from Trust A were distributed through Betty‘s trust, Hornung filed suit in the county court for Custer County requesting instructions and a declaration of rights of the beneficiaries of Robert‘s trust, pursuant to
Stockall, in her capacity as the trustee of Betty‘s trust and in her individual capacity, counterclaimed in the county court action. Her counterclaim also sought instructions and a declaration of rights of the beneficiaries under Robert‘s trust. Stockall denied that the power of appointment exercised by Betty was invalid. Stockall‘s counterclaim requested that the court enter an order (1) finding that Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was valid and enforceable, (2) approving the actions taken by the trustee of Robert‘s trust in “distributing the remaining principal of [Trust A] to the Trustee of
A bench trial was held. Hornung, Stockall, and the trustee of Robert‘s trust participated. The court determined Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was ineffective because it exceeded the scope of the limited power granted in Robert‘s trust, in that it commingled the Trust A assets with Betty‘s trust assets and thus benefited Betty, her estate, and creditors of her estate so that it was not limited to one of the three classes of beneficiaries Robert designated. The court ordered the trustee of Robert‘s trust to recover all assets of Trust A and to distribute them in accordance with the terms of Robert‘s trust.
Stockall appealed, and the trustee of Robert‘s trust (who is also Stockall‘s husband) filed a cross-appeal. We granted Stockall‘s petition to bypass the Nebraska Court of Appeals and moved this appeal to our docket.
II. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
Stockall assigns, restated, that the county court erred in (1) finding Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment granted to her by Robert‘s trust was ineffective; (2) finding Betty exceeded the power granted to her by Robert‘s trust; (3) finding merged assets (assets appointed from Robert‘s trust and assets that originally constituted Betty‘s trust) were used to pay taxes and creditors of Betty‘s estate; (4) finding Betty benefited herself, her estate, her creditors, and the creditors of her estate by merging the Trust A assets with her trust; (5) finding
The trustee of Robert‘s trust assigns on cross-appeal, restated, that the county court (1) erred in ordering him as trustee to recover all Trust A assets and then distribute them under Robert‘s trust and (2) lacked subject matter jurisdiction to determine that Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was invalid or to hold that transfers from Robert‘s and Betty‘s trusts were void.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
[1,2] The interpretation of the words of a trust is a question of law.1 Absent an equity question, an appellate court reviews trust administration matters for error appearing on the record; but where an equity question is presented, appellate review of that issue is de novo on the record.2
IV. ANALYSIS
1. Appointment Was Ineffective
Stockall argues the county court erred in finding Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was ineffective. We find no error on this issue.
[3-6] In Nebraska, powers of appointment are construed according to the principles of the common law.3 In the construction of powers of appointment, the cardinal principle is that the intention of the donor is controlling.4 The donee of a
[7] Here, Robert‘s trust gave Betty the power to “appoint by will” the Trust A property to “be distributed to or held in trust for the benefit of such one or more of my issue, the spouses of any such issue, and tax-exempt charitable organizations.” The parties agree this power of appointment was a special or limited power of appointment. A power of appointment is considered special or limited when the donee‘s appointment is limited to a group which is not unreasonably large and which does not include the donee.7 Here, Robert made it clear the permissible group included only tax-exempt charitable institutions, Robert‘s issue, and spouses of his issue.
To determine whether Betty effectively exercised this limited power of appointment, we look to the provisions of Betty‘s will, which provided:
[A]ll such property over which I have a power of appointment, together with all of my property, whether real or personal, is hereby devised to the Trustee [of Betty‘s revocable trust], to be administered by the Trustee as part of the property of said . . . Trust, and to be held or distributed according to the terms thereof.
Notably, the beneficiaries of Betty‘s trust were Stockall and several of Robert‘s grandchildren. Betty‘s trust thus ultimately distributed all her property and all the property from Robert‘s Trust A to Robert‘s issue.
This court has not previously considered the effectiveness of exercising a limited appointment under such circumstances. We find guidance in cases from other jurisdictions which have addressed similar circumstances.
In BMO Harris Bank N.A. v. Towers,8 parents created two trusts granting their son a limited power to appoint assets of the parents’ trusts to certain beneficiaries. The son‘s will devised all of his estate to his trust, thus commingling the assets he received from the parents’ trusts with his own trust assets. The court determined this was an ineffective exercise of the power of appointment, because the son exercised the power of appointment in favor of himself and he was not a permissible beneficiary under the parents’ limited power of appointment. The court reasoned that no language in the son‘s trust segregated the assets of his parents’ trusts from the assets of his trust and consequently, the son‘s creditors could have used the commingled assets to satisfy the son‘s debts.
The case of In re Estate of Reisman9 is also instructive. There, a wife‘s trust granted her husband a limited power of appointment and designated her children and any descendants of her children as the permissible beneficiaries of the
Betty‘s will attempted to exercise her power of appointment by devising all of the Trust A assets to her own trust. But her trust was not in the permissible group, and her trust contained no language separating the Trust A assets from the remainder of her trust assets. To the contrary, Betty‘s will provided that the Trust A assets were devised to her trust “to be administered by the Trustee as part of the property of [the trust].” By devising the Trust A assets to her trust without expressly providing that the Trust A assets were not to be commingled with her other assets, Betty improperly exercised the power of appointment for her benefit. Merger of the Trust A assets with Betty‘s assets resulted in nondesignated objects (Betty, her estate, her creditors, and creditors of her estate) potentially benefiting from the power of appointment, and rendered her appointment ineffective.10 After reviewing the record, we find no error in the county court‘s determination that Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was ineffective.
2. Doctrines of Selective Allocation and Substantial Compliance Do Not Save Invalid Appointment
Stockall argues that even though Betty‘s will devised Trust A assets to her own trust, the county court should have applied the doctrines of selective allocation and/or substantial compliance to find Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was
(a) Selective Allocation
The doctrine of selective allocation is generally recognized by both the Restatement (Second) of Property and the Restatement (Third) of Property.11 According to the Restatement (Third), “If the donee of a power of appointment exercises the power in a document that also disposes of owned property, the owned and appointive property are deemed to be allocated in the manner that best carries out the donee‘s intent.”12 Stockall urges us to apply this doctrine, through which she asserts we can assume that only those assets in Betty‘s trust that she owned during her lifetime were used to pay the expenses of administering her final affairs and the claims of any of her creditors. Stockall contends that such a construction of Betty‘s trust would render Betty‘s power of appointment effective.
Stockall argues that applying selective allocation is particularly apt in this case, because distribution via Betty‘s trust ultimately resulted in the property‘s being distributed to Robert‘s issue and Robert‘s issue was one of the groups designated to receive his Trust A assets. Stockall also argues that even though Betty‘s will appointed Trust A assets to Betty‘s own trust, neither Betty, her estate, her creditors, nor any creditors of Betty‘s estate actually benefited from the invalid appointment, because the assets of Betty‘s trust, independent of the Trust A assets, were more than sufficient to cover Betty‘s debts and expenses.
Although the doctrine of selective allocation is recognized in the Restatements, the doctrine has not been recognized or
Our research suggests that legislatures in several states have recognized the doctrine by adopting all or provisions of the Uniform Powers of Appointment Act.14 That act addresses selective allocation by stating, “If a powerholder exercises a power of appointment in a disposition that also disposes of property the powerholder owns, the owned property and the appointive property must be allocated in the permissible manner that best carries out the powerholder‘s intent.”15 To date, the Nebraska Legislature has not adopted the Uniform Powers of Appointment Act.
[8] More important, the doctrine of selective allocation is a rule of construction.16 Rules of construction for interpreting a trust are applied when the language of the trust is not clear; but if the language clearly expresses the settlor‘s intent, the rules do not apply.17 We see no reason to resort to a rule of construction when the terms of both Robert‘s trust and Betty‘s will and trust are clear and unambiguous. Indeed, the county
(b) Substantial Compliance
Both the Restatement (Second) and the Restatement (Third) recognize the rule of substantial compliance.18 According to the Restatement (Third):
Substantial compliance with formal requirements of an appointment imposed by the donor, including a requirement that the instrument of exercise make reference or specific reference to the power, is sufficient if (i) the donee knew of and intended to exercise the power, and (ii) the donee‘s manner of attempted exercise did not impair a material purpose of the donor in imposing the requirement.19
Stockall urges us to apply the rule of substantial compliance in order to find Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was effective. She argues that this rule should be applied, because “Robert‘s goal of allowing Betty to control disposition of [his Trust A assets] at her death in favor of Robert‘s issue was accomplished.”20
The doctrine of substantial compliance can apply when the person exercising the power of appointment fails to comply with all the formal requirements imposed by the donor on the appointment.21 Formal requirements relate to the manner of the appointment, not its substance.22 They include such
Moreover, this court has long recognized that “‘[w]here the creator of a power defines the method of its execution, that method must be strictly followed, so far, at least, as may be necessary to give effect to his intent and design. This rule is fundamental.‘”24 The rule of substantial compliance presents an “ends justify the means” approach that is at odds with this court‘s established jurisprudence. The county court correctly refused to apply the rule of substantial compliance in this case, and Stockall‘s argument to the contrary is without merit.
3. Duty of Robert‘s Trustee
In his cross-appeal, the trustee of Robert‘s trust argues the county court erred in ordering him to recover the Trust A assets and distribute them in accordance with Robert‘s trust. He argues that because the court made an express finding that he did not breach Robert‘s trust when he transferred Trust A property to Betty‘s trust, the court had no authority to utilize the remedies for breach of trust available under
[9] It is true that the county court order includes a finding that Robert‘s trustee “acted appropriately, reasonably, and in good faith under the circumstances, and he did not commit a breach of trust in executing his duties as Trustee of Robert‘s Trust.” No party challenges this factual finding. However, upon our review of the record, we find the court committed plain error in making this finding, because it cannot be reconciled with the finding that Betty‘s appointment of Trust A property to her own trust was ineffective. Plain error is error plainly evident from the record and of such a nature that to leave it uncorrected would result in damage to the integrity, reputation, or fairness of the judicial process.25 An appellate court may, at its option, notice plain error.26
[10,11] As we previously explained, Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was ineffective on its face, because it violated the limited power of appointment granted her by Robert‘s trust. A breach of trust includes every omission or commission which violates in any manner the obligation of carrying out a trust according to its terms.27 Every violation by a trustee of a duty required of it by law, whether willful and fraudulent, or done through negligence, or arising through mere oversight or forgetfulness, is a breach of trust.28 When the trustee of Robert‘s trust transferred Trust A assets to
[12] According to
Here, after determining that Betty‘s exercise of the power of appointment was ineffective and void, the county court ordered:
[The] successor trustee to the Robert McDowell Trust, is hereby instructed to recover all assets, income, and principal properly attributable to [Trust A] since Robert[‘s] death (including as it relates to [Trust A‘s] ownership interest in McDowell Cattle Company), preserve such assets, income, and principal, and distribute such assets, income, and principal in accordance with Article Fourth, Paragraph (e)(2) of Robert‘s Trust. The Court shall retain jurisdiction to ensure that the trustee of Robert‘s Trust carries out this Order.
Because the trustee of Robert‘s trust breached the trust when he distributed the Trust A assets pursuant to an invalid exercise of appointment, the county court had available all the
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we modify the decision of the county court to the extent it failed to find that the trustee of Robert‘s trust breached the trust, but we otherwise affirm the decision of the county court.
AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.
MILLER-LERMAN, J., not participating.
