In re Trust of Marsha Milot (Jennifer Milot, Appellant)
No. 25-AP-061
Supreme Court
October Term, 2025
2026 VT 7
Gregory Glennon, J.
2026 VT 7
No. 25-AP-061
In re Trust of Marsha Milot (Jennifer Milot, Appellant)
Supreme Court
On Appeal from Superior Court, Chittenden Unit, Probate Division
October Term, 2025
Gregory Glennon, J.
Andre D. Bouffard of Downs Rachlin Martin PLLC, Burlington, for Petitioner-Appellant.
Matthew A. Zidovsky of Langrock Sperry & Wool, LLP, Burlington, for Respondent-Appellee Trust of Marsha Milot, Valerie Wiederhorn and Curtis Hennigar, as Co-Trustees.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Eaton, Cohen and Waples, JJ., and Corbett, Supr. J., Specially Assigned
¶ 1. REIBER, C.J. Petitioner Jennifer Milot appeals the denial of her petition to open a trust action to obtain information about the administration and assets of a revocable trust whose settlor, Marsha Milot, is still alive. Petitioner claims the probate division erred by: failing to apply the correct legal standard when deciding to dismiss petitioner’s action; failing to consider whether petitioner’s information requests were “unreasonable under the circumstances” as required by statute; and concluding that under
I. Background
¶ 2. The record reflects the following. In 2009, settlor Marsha Milot created a revocable trust naming herself as trustee and lifelong beneficiary. The trust named settlor’s daughter, Valerie Wiederhorn, and settlor’s three stepdaughters from a former marriage, including petitioner, as equal beneficiaries of the trust after settlor’s death.2 In 2018, Wiederhorn became a co-trustee with settlor. In July 2021, settlor stepped down from her role as co-trustee and settlor’s husband, Curtis Hennigar, became co-trustee with Wiederhorn.
¶ 3. In April 2024, petitioner filed a petition in the probate division seeking a copy of the trust instrument. Petitioner asserted that as a beneficiary of the trust, she was entitled to receive a copy of the trust along with any amendments under
¶ 4. In July 2024, the court ordered co-trustees to file a copy of the trust, along with any amendments, in camera so the filings would not be public.3 After reviewing the trust documents, the court determined petitioner was entitled to a copy of the trust under
¶ 5. Petitioner claimed that opening a trust action was still necessary because after receiving a copy of the trust, she had requested additional information to which she was entitled by law that co-trustees had not yet provided to her. Petitioner alleged that settlor had become incapacitated, making the trust irrevocable, and that petitioner had become a “qualified beneficiary” within the meaning of the Vermont Trust Code,
¶ 6. Petitioner replied that the report she received did not account for trust property between 2009, when the trust was formed, and 2021; falsely stated that the sole trust asset was an investment account, when petitioner was aware of at least one other checking account; and did not explain what happened to the proceeds of the sale of a commercial building that appeared to have been a trust asset. Petitioner asked the court to compel co-trustees to provide the information she requested and indicated that if the court required, she would amend her petition to request a determination that she had become a qualified beneficiary and to request further discovery from
¶ 7. In September 2024, the court issued another order noting that the substantive relief petitioner requested was “satisfied, more or less.” However, it determined that dismissal with prejudice was not appropriate based on the allegations in petitioner’s pleadings. The court suggested that
¶ 8. Petitioner filed a lengthy response alleging that co-trustee Wiederhorn had invaded the trust principal, given herself a loan of over $ 1 million from the trust assets, and in retaliation for petitioner’s requests for information about the trust pursued a collection action against petitioner for promissory notes that the trust specified were to be forgiven upon settlor’s death. Petitioner asserted that co-trustee Wiederhorn had acted without consulting co-trustee Hennigar. Petitioner asked the probate division to retain jurisdiction pursuant to its powers of equity and regulation and to allow petitioner to conduct discovery to determine whether co-trustee Wiederhorn should be removed. In response, co-trustees stated that the distributions from trust assets were for settlor, who remained in control of the trust, and whose medical expenses had tripled. They acknowledged that co-trustee Wiederhorn had borrowed from the trust but asserted that she had repaid the loan.
¶ 10. In response, co-trustees asserted that settlor had dementia and that her medical expenses had increased significantly due to the need for caregivers. They asserted that settlor and co-trustee Hennigar continued to travel, go out to restaurants, and make gifts to family and pay education expenses for family members. They listed settlor’s yearly expenses on an annualized basis without detail. Petitioner responded that co-trustees had failed to provide proof of these expenses or the trust’s income in the form of supporting documentation and data.
¶ 11. In January 2025, the court issued an order denying the petition to open a trust proceeding. The court stated that co-trustees’ response to its November 2024 order addressed the court’s concerns around spending of trust principal to support settlor’s lifestyle and medical needs. It therefore declined to invoke its equity jurisdiction to “override the statutory application” of
II. Analysis
¶ 12. We first address the question of jurisdiction. This Court has jurisdiction over appeals from probate proceedings that involve questions of law.
¶ 13. We therefore turn to petitioner’s arguments on appeal. Petitioner argues that the probate division improperly focused on whether co-trustees had satisfied the court’s concerns about spending trust principal, rather than considering whether petitioner had alleged facts and circumstances that could justify relief under the Vermont Trust Code. Petitioner argues that the court was required to accept petitioner’s allegations and reasonable inferences as true, and assume respondent’s contravening allegations to be false. Petitioner argues that, taken as true, the facts alleged in her various filings show that she is entitled to discovery under
¶ 14. Addressing petitioner’s arguments requires us to interpret various provisions of the Vermont Trust Code. In interpreting the Vermont Trust Code, we are guided by the familiar rules of statutory interpretation and aim to give effect to the Legislature’s intent. Flint v. Dep’t of Lab., 2017 VT 89, ¶ 5, 205 Vt. 558, 177 A.3d 1080 (“In interpreting a statute, our primary aim is always to determine the intent of the Legislature and implement that intent.”). We look to the statute’s plain meaning to ascertain the Legislature’s intent. Id. If the Legislature’s intent is evident from the statute’s clear and unambiguous plain language, we will “implement the statute according to that plain language.” Id. We employ other tools of statutory construction “only if the plain language of the statute is unclear or ambiguous.” Id.
¶ 15. Section 813 of the Vermont Trust Code delineates a trustee’s duty to keep beneficiaries informed about the administration of a trust.
¶ 16. However,
¶ 17. Petitioner argues that a settlor must have testamentary capacity to revoke or amend a revocable trust, and alleges that settlor has been incapacitated since 2021. See
¶ 18. However, the comments to the Vermont Trust Code make clear that a settlor’s incapacity does not make the trust irrevocable or trigger the beneficiary’s right to information. “The fact that the settlor becomes incapacitated does not convert a revocable trust into an irrevocable trust. The trust remains revocable until the settlor’s death or the power of revocation is released.” Official Comment,
The Uniform Trust Code optional language of “and the settlor has capacity to revoke the trust” after “While a trust is revocable” was not adopted into the Vermont Trust Code. This is consistent with the concept that the subsequent mental incapacity of the settlor will not affect the settlor’s rights and powers. The settlor’s retained rights and powers may be exercised by an agent.
The 2004 Official Comment to
¶ 19. The comments to the Vermont Trust Code are a strong indication of the Legislature’s intent. Cf. Bissonnette v. Wylie, 162 Vt. 598, 602, 654 A.2d 333, 336 (1994) (explaining that this Court regards comments to Uniform Commercial Code (UCC) “as a strong indication of the Legislature’s intent in adopting a particular UCC provision”); see Springfield Tchrs. Ass’n v. Springfield Sch. Dirs., 167 Vt. 180, 188 n.3, 705 A.2d 541, 546 n.3 (1997) (“Ordinarily, when the Legislature models a statute after a uniform act, but does not adopt particular language, we conclude that the omission was intentional such that the policy of the uniform act was rejected.”). They support the conclusion that a trustee’s duty to provide information under
¶ 20. That does not end our inquiry, however. In her responses to the probate division’s orders, petitioner added a new request for relief, which was to investigate whether co-trustee Wiederhorn should be removed under
¶ 21. Here, petitioner alleged that co-trustee Wiederhorn was acting without the consent of co-trustee Hennigar and had given herself a large loan from the trust.5 Petitioner further alleged that the report the trust provided contained inaccurate trust principal and expense amounts. Petitioner asked for permission to amend her complaint to seek removal of co-trustee Wiederhorn under
¶ 22. Vermont Rule of Probate Procedure 15(a) provides that leave to amend a petition “shall be freely given when justice so requires.” Both Rule 15 and Vermont’s common-law tradition “encourage liberality in allowing amendments to pleadings” when doing so will not
¶ 23. In sum, we hold that petitioner was not entitled to receive trust information under
Reversed and remanded for the probate division to address petitioner’s request to amend her petition to seek removal of co-trustee(s).
FOR THE COURT:
Chief Justice
