Dоes commencement of a will contest trigger an in terrorem clause contained in a pour-over trust designated as the sole beneficiary under the will? The plaintiffs commenced an action in the Probate and Family Court seeking an answеr to that question, and now appeal from a decree answering the question in the negative. We affirm.
Background. The parties are the children of Georgenia M. Hatch, who died on March 14, 2006. Several years before her death, on January 29, 2002, Georgеnia
“If any person, including a beneficiary, other than me, shall in any manner, directly or indirectly, attempt tо contest or oppose the validity of this agreement, including any amendments thereto, or commences or prosecutes any legal proceedings to set this agreement aside, then in such event such person shall forfeit his or her shаre, cease to have any right or interest in the trust property, and shall be deemed to have predeceased me.”
The trust stated an initial funding of ten dollars, made concurrently with its execution. The trust was not otherwise funded during Georgenia’s life.
On May 3, 2006, Suzanne Savage and David Hatch, the execu
In February, 2008, the plaintiffs brought the present action, seeking instruction on whether the challenge by Cheryl, James, and Cathie to the will triggered the in terrorem clause contained in the trust, resulting in a forfeiture by them of any interest they otherwise would hold under the trust. The defendants moved to dismiss the complaint, and the plaintiffs responded with a motion for summary judgment. When the parties appeared for argument on the summary judgment motion, the judge, sua sponte, entered an order appointing a special master to review the motion for summary judgment and to determine whether, in his judgment, Cheryl, Jаmes, and Cathie had forfeited their interests in the trust. The special master thereafter prepared and filed a draft report, expressing his conclusion that no forfeiture had occurred, and the judge entered an order on the plaintiffs’ mоtion for summary judgment, adopting the master’s conclusions. This appeal followed.
Discussion. The determination that the defendants’ challenge to the will did not trigger the trust’s in terrorem clause “is a legal conclusion that we review de novo.” Ritter v. Massachusetts Cas. Ins. Co.,
“A provision forfеiting the interest of a beneficiary who contests a will is valid.” Old Colony Trust Co. v. Wolfman,
The plaintiffs contend nonetheless that the will and trust should be read together as inextricably intertwined elements of Georgenia’s estate plan, suggesting that, had the defendants’ challenge to the will been suсcessful, it would have defeated the trust as a practical matter, since the trust would have received no assets under the will. To be sure, we generally will review the separate components of a decedent’s estate plan аs parts of an interrelated whole. See Clymer v. Mayo,
As a threshold matter, the plaintiffs overstate the interrelationship between the will and the trust. Though it appears that the trust was in fact only nominally funded during Georgenia’s life, therе is nothing in the terms of either the will or the trust that prevented more significant funding during her life. The trust could have been funded by any number of sources wholly independently of the will. For example, the trust could have been designated as the beneficiary under a life insurance policy. Article Three of the trust explicitly expresses Georgenia’s “intent that, from time to time and when necessary, specific items of property will be individually transferred and titled either directly
We also note that the purpose of an in terrorem clause is to deter challenges to a will. See Rudd v. Searles,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
We refer to the decedent and the parties by their first names where necessary to avoid confusion.
Article Two of the will provides as follows:
“All of my property of whatever nature and kind, wherever situated, shall be distributed to [the trust], ... I specifically omit from this property any property in any trust settled by my late husband, Manuel Hatch. I also exempt from this property any proрerty over which I may have a power of appointment under any trust or will made by my late husband, Manuel Hatch.”
The defendants also filed a notice of appeal, based on their counterclaim asserting that the plaintiffs’ commencement of this action likewise constituted a violation of the in terrorem clause under the trust, to the end that the plaintiffs had also forfeited their respective interests under the trust. However, the defendants have abandoned their cross apрeal.
The plaintiffs acknowledge that no Massachusetts case has adopted the position they advocate. The single case they submit in support of their position is Matter of Ellis,
The record does not indicate whether the defendants were in fact awаre or unaware of the in terrorem clause contained in the trust in the present case. However, our conclusion does not rest on whether the parties to a particular action had knowledge in fact that a separate instrument contains such a provision. Instead, we note the difference between the public character of a will filed for probate and the nonpublic character of a related pour-over trust to illustrate their status as separate and independent instruments. We note as well that a testator who employs an in terrorem clause to deter a challenge to her will can rely on the fact that her will must be filed for probate before any contest might arise, but cаnnot know whether potential contestants will have knowledge of a putatively deterrent in terrorem provision contained in a separate nonpublic instrument. In any event, at least one case has declined to enforce a forfeiture clause in a will based on a challenge to a related trust, and we are aware of no case reaching a contrary conclusion. See Meyer v. Meyer,
Though we discern no cause to disturb the judgment, we question the propriety of the judge’s sua sponte appointment of a special master to review and express his judgment concerning the legal question presented by the case. A special master ordinarily may be appointed for the purpose of conducting hearings directed to findings of fact. See Mass.R.Civ.P. 53(a)(1), as amended,
