Court Opinion

ID: 9897696
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-11-14 19:23:51.112046+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:15.062028
License: Public Domain

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
UNPUBLISHED

              Present: Judges AtLee, Causey and Callins
              Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

              ELEANOR A. HUNTER, ET AL.

              v.     Record No. 1087-22-1

              CHARLES M. HUNTER, JR.                                        MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY
                                                                           JUDGE RICHARD Y. ATLEE, JR.
              CHARLES M. HUNTER, JR.                                            OCTOBER 31, 2023

              v.     Record No. 1237-22-1

              ELEANOR A. HUNTER, ET AL.

                         FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF WILLIAMSBURG AND
                                          COUNTY OF JAMES CITY
                                       Charles J. Maxfield, Judge Designate

                              Daniel R. Quarles (George H. Bowles, Sr.; Otey Smith & Quarles;
                              Williams Mullen, P.C., on briefs), for Eleanor A. Hunter, et al.

                              William W. Sleeth, III (Brett C. Herbert; Gordon Rees Scully
                              Mansukhani, LLP, on briefs), for Charles M. Hunter, Jr.

                     These cross-appeals concern the effect of “no-contest” provisions in two trust agreements

              and related litigation. The parties are the children of the individuals who created the trusts.

              Eleanor Hunter1 argues that the circuit court erred when it found that Charles M. Hunter, Jr.

              (“Chip”) did not violate the terms of these no-contest provisions. Chip argues that the circuit

              court erred in permitting Eleanor to present certain evidence and testimony and in granting her

                     *
                         This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A).
                     1
                         To avoid confusion, we refer to the members of the Hunter family by their first names.
request for attorney fees (and denying his own request for the same). For the following reasons,

we affirm.

                                         I. BACKGROUND

       Charles M. Hunter, Sr. and Theresa Hunter married in 1953 and had two children,

Eleanor and Chip, as well as one granddaughter. Charles executed a trust agreement in 2010,

naming his daughter, Eleanor, and wife, Theresa, as substitute trustees if he became unable to

serve. Charles died in 2013, at which point all his assets passed outright to Theresa, free of any

trust. Theresa executed a trust agreement in 2011, naming Eleanor as the initial trustee. Her

trust agreement provided that upon the death of both Charles and Theresa, Chip would receive

one-third of the trust assets, minus the value of certain loans previously extended to him, and that

Eleanor and the granddaughter’s trust would each also receive one-third of the trust assets.

       Both trust agreements contain no-contest provisions that would revoke a beneficiary’s

interest if they took certain actions.2 Each trust agreement also waived the trustee’s “formal

requirements to inform and report set forth in” former Code § 55-548.13 (current Code

§ 64.2-775).

       2
          The no-contest provision of Theresa’s trust agreement, which is the relevant, active trust
at this point, states

               if any beneficiary under this Trust Agreement takes any one or
               more of the actions described in this paragraph, then the interest of
               such beneficiary under this Trust Agreement shall be revoked, and
               such beneficiary shall be deemed to have predeceased me without
               surviving descendants for all purposes under this Trust Agreement,
               effective as of the date such action is taken.

One of the “actions” triggering forfeiture was “[c]ontest[ing] any provision of this Trust
Agreement,” which includes taking “any action seeking to invalidate, nullify, set aside, render
unenforceable, or otherwise avoid the effect of such instrument, action or transaction.” The trust
provides a caveat, however, that “a petition made in good faith and not objected to by my
Trustee hereunder, seeking an interpretation of this or any other instrument, shall not be
considered a contest of such instrument.”
                                               -2-
       Theresa died in 2015, at which point Eleanor began serving as trustee. Sometime

thereafter, Chip allegedly learned of a significant decline in the value of the trust’s assets that he

did not believe was attributable to market forces. In 2017, Chip filed a two-count complaint for

declaratory judgment against Eleanor as trustee and individually. In the first count, Chip sought

a judicial declaration that the second count would not violate the no-contest provisions of the

trust agreements. The second count sought a judicial declaration of the obligations owed by

Eleanor, as trustee, to provide Chip with information and documents relating to the trusts. The

second count provided, however, that the circuit court was to address the second count “[i]f, and

only if,” the circuit court first found that Chip’s second count would not trigger the no-contest

provisions.

       Eleanor filed a counterclaim that asserted that Chip’s complaint violated the no-contest

provisions because he sought to avoid the trust agreements’ waiver of the trustee’s

inform-and-report obligations under Code § 64.2-775. She argued that Chip’s complaint violated

the no-contest provisions and that his interests in the trusts were therefore revoked.

       Eleanor moved for summary judgment on her counterclaim. In Chip’s brief in

opposition, he contended that the Virginia Uniform Trust Code imposed “non-waivable duties”

on a trustee. Therefore, he argued that “permitting a waiver” of statutory and common law

duties to inform and report and finding that “his efforts to determine his rights” triggered the

no-contest clauses would violate the Uniform Trust Code. After a hearing, the circuit court

found that Chip’s complaint “contested, or sought to invalidate, nullify, set aside, render

unenforceable or otherwise avoid the effect of,” the trust agreements’ waiver of statutory

inform-and-report obligations and thus triggered the no-contest provisions of the trusts.

Therefore, the circuit court granted Eleanor’s motion for summary judgment and held that Chip’s

interest in the Theresa trust was revoked.

                                                 -3-
       Chip appealed to the Supreme Court of Virginia, which found that the circuit court

improperly reached the complaint’s second count without first determining whether doing so

would violate the no-contest provisions. Hunter v. Hunter (Hunter I), 298 Va. 414, 430 (2020).

The Supreme Court reversed the circuit court’s ruling and found that Chip had properly

employed an alternative pleading model as set forth in Virginia Foundation of Independent

Colleges v. Goodrich, 246 Va. 435 (1993), and thus had not triggered the no-contest provision.

Therefore, in finding Chip in violation of the no-contest provisions, the circuit court had

erroneously reached the second count of Chip’s complaint without first addressing the first count

regarding whether his claims would violate the no-contest provisions. Id. at 437. The Supreme

Court briefly discussed, but did not address on the merits, Chip’s argument that “if the

inform-and-report waiver and no-contest provisions were incorrectly interpreted to erect an

impregnable barrier to judicial review of a fiduciary’s duty to inform and report, then neither

provision would be enforceable as a matter of law.” Id. at 436. The Supreme Court noted,

however, that it had “little doubt that this claim, if Chip had pleaded it in his complaint, could

have been challenged as a contest of either the no-contest or the waiver provisions.” Id. The

Supreme Court declined to address it, however, because in employing the alternative pleading

model, “Chip never pleaded that argument, and expressly disclaimed it in his declaratory

judgment complaint.” Id.

       On remand, the circuit court granted Eleanor’s motion for leave to file an amended

counterclaim. The amended counterclaim addressed Chip’s arguments concerning the

enforceability of the no-contest provisions, which he had raised in his opposition to her motion

for summary judgment and his brief to the Supreme Court, and argued that Chip had violated the

no-contest provisions in those proceedings. Chip then nonsuited the second count of his

complaint, effectively disclaiming his challenges to Eleanor’s administration of the trust and

                                                -4-
those trust provisions. The circuit court entered an agreed order bifurcating the trial on Eleanor’s

amended counterclaim from a later hearing on attorney fees and costs. After the trial on the

amended counterclaim, the circuit court found that Chip had not violated the no-contest

provisions as Eleanor alleged. The circuit court therefore entered judgment in favor of Chip on

Eleanor’s amended counterclaim. Eleanor appeals this ruling.

       Before the second phase of the trial, the parties filed competing motions for attorney fees

under Code § 64.2-795.3 Chip objected to Eleanor offering witness testimony or exhibits as to

attorney fees because she had not filed a witness and exhibit list as required by the pretrial

scheduling order. The circuit court, noting that the nature of the bifurcated trial accounted for

the inadvertence and that Chip suffered no prejudice, overruled Chip’s objections and allowed

the witnesses’ testimony and admitted the exhibits. Chip also specifically objected to one of

Eleanor’s witnesses, attorney Michael Ware, testifying as an expert witness on the issue of the

reasonableness of Eleanor’s attorney fees, asserting that Eleanor, as a prevailing party, had not

made a timely disclosure. The circuit court overruled that objection and allowed the testimony.

       After the hearing on attorney fees, the circuit court found that “nobody won” the

litigation, which only “resolve[d] a point of law . . . that you have standing to do a declaratory

judgment in the face of” a no-contest provision without reaching Chip’s contention that Eleanor

breached her fiduciary duties as trustee. The circuit court denied Chip’s request for attorney fees

because he had not established wrongdoing by Eleanor because she did not act “in bad faith in

defending the trust.” It also denied Eleanor’s request for an award of attorney fees against Chip.

The circuit court, however, found that Eleanor’s attorney fees were reasonable and properly

       3
          “In a judicial proceeding involving the administration of a trust, the court, as justice and
equity may require, may award costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney fees, to any
party, to be paid by another party or from the trust that is the subject of the controversy.” Code
§ 64.2-795.
                                                -5-
payable as trust expenses. It therefore granted her request for attorney fees from the trust. Chip

now appeals.

                                 II. ANALYSIS: ELEANOR’S APPEAL

        Eleanor argues that the circuit court ought to have granted her motion for a declaratory

judgment that Chip violated the no-contest clauses in the trust agreements in the course of opposing

her counterclaim and in his arguments to the Supreme Court.

                                       A. Standards of Review

        Whether a beneficiary has triggered a trust’s no contest clause presents “a mixed question of

law and fact.” Rafalko v. Georgiadis, 290 Va. 384, 401 (2015) (quoting Keener v. Keener, 278 Va.

435, 441 (2009)). “What activity or participation constitutes a contest or attempt to defeat a [trust]

depends upon the wording of the ‘no contest’ provision and the facts and circumstances of each

particular case.” Keener, 278 Va. at 441 (quoting Womble v. Gunter, 198 Va. 522, 529 (1956)).

“Accordingly, we accord deference to the circuit court’s findings of historical fact, but review

questions of law de novo.” Id.

B. The circuit court did not err in concluding that Chip did not violate the no-contest provision.

        The thrust of Eleanor’s argument on appeal is that Chip, in making certain arguments in

response to her counterclaim and on appeal, violated the no-contest provision of the Theresa trust

agreement (that being the remaining trust and therefore the one at issue). That provision states

                if any beneficiary under this Trust Agreement takes any one or
                more of the actions described in this paragraph, then the interest of
                such beneficiary under this Trust Agreement shall be revoked, and
                such beneficiary shall be deemed to have predeceased me without
                surviving descendants for all purposes under this Trust Agreement,
                effective as of the date such action is taken.

                                                 -6-
One of the “actions” triggering forfeiture was “[c]ontest[ing] any provision of this Trust

Agreement,” which includes taking “any action seeking to invalidate, nullify, set aside, render

unenforceable, or otherwise avoid the effect of such instrument, action or transaction.”

       As a preliminary matter, we will not find that Chip’s arguments on appeal to the Supreme

Court violated the no-contest provision. The Supreme Court, having reviewed the record below

and briefing on appeal, ruled that Chip had properly employed the alternative pleading model

and thus had not triggered the no-contest provision. It expressly declined to address Chip’s

arguments regarding the invalidity of the no-contest or waiver provisions, finding they were not

ripe for review. It elected to “leave Chip’s alternative argument for the circuit court to consider

in the first instance on remand, assuming that Chip properly asserts it.” Hunter I, 298 Va. at 436.

The Supreme Court opined that it had “little doubt that this claim, if Chip had pleaded it in his

complaint, could have been challenged as a contest of either the no-contest or the waiver

provisions.” Id. In refusing to address the argument, however, it noted that by employing the

alternative pleading model, “Chip never pleaded that argument, and expressly disclaimed it in his

declaratory judgment complaint.” Id.

       Upon remand from the Supreme Court, Chip nonsuited the portion of his complaint that

sought interpretation of the no-contest and inform-and-report waiver provisions. The circuit

court was left to address Eleanor’s counterclaim, alleging that Chip had violated the no-contest

provisions, but there was nothing left to address of Chip’s initial complaint. In other words,

practically speaking, Eleanor had assumed the role of plaintiff, and Chip’s pleadings were all

responsive (aside from attendant matters concerning attorney fees). Chip’s arguments concerned

why he had not violated the no-contest provisions and why they were not enforceable against

him or applicable to his actions. He did not make any request of or bring any action in the circuit

court that sought to “invalidate, nullify, set aside, render unenforceable, or otherwise avoid the

                                                -7-
effect of” the trust. Instead, any challenges to the provisions of the trust were defensive, seeking

an interpretation of those clauses to avoid their application specifically to him in this matter, not

seeking that they be held to be unenforceable entirely.

          In other words, just as the Supreme Court reserved judgment on Chip’s challenges to the

inform-and-report waiver and no-contest provisions because he did not assert those claims in his

complaint, finding they would only be ripe for review “assuming that Chip properly asserts

[them]” on remand, Hunter I, 298 Va. at 436, we conclude that he did not, in fact, assert them

here. Recognizing that these circumstances are highly specific to “the facts and circumstances of

each particular case,” Keener, 278 Va. at 441 (quoting Womble, 198 Va. at 529), we cannot say that

the circuit court erred in finding that Chip had not triggered the no-contest provision.

                                     III. ANALYSIS: CHIP’S APPEAL

          Chip assigns seven errors, all of which fall into two general categories: (1) the circuit court

erred by permitting Eleanor’s offering exhibits and witness testimony because she failed to file a

witness and exhibit list pursuant to the court scheduling order, and (2) the circuit court erred by

granting Eleanor’s request for attorney fees and denying Chip’s. Finding no abuse of discretion, we

affirm.

                                   A. Exhibits and Witness Testimony

                                          1. Standard of Review

          “[W]e review the circuit court’s ruling regarding the admission of evidence for an abuse of

discretion.” Toraish v. Lee, 293 Va. 262, 272 (2017). This is also the case when considering expert

testimony. Id. at 268. While this Court has emphasized the importance and pragmatism of

scheduling orders, and we have repeatedly upheld a trial court’s decision to exclude evidence that

                                                    -8-
did not comply with a scheduling order,4 it is equally clear that this deference to the trial court’s

discretion extends to a decision to admit evidence that was not timely disclosed under that court’s

own scheduling order. See, e.g., Stark v. Dinarany, 73 Va. App. 733, 749 (2021) (noting that the

party was on notice that the admitted evidence, a postnuptial agreement, would be at issue). In

other words, “[w]hen we say that a circuit court has discretion, we mean that ‘the [circuit] court

has a range of choice, and that its decision will not be disturbed as long as it stays within that

range and is not influenced by any mistake of law.’” Id. at 745-46 (second alteration in original)

(quoting Galiotos v. Galiotos, 300 Va. 1, 10 (2021)). “Thus, only when reasonable jurists could

not differ can we say an abuse of discretion has occurred.” Id. at 746 (quoting Galiotos, 300 Va.

at 11).

          2. The circuit court did not abuse its discretion in admitting testimony and exhibits that
             were not disclosed according to the timeline set out in the scheduling order.

          Because Eleanor did not file a witness and exhibit list when she was required to do so, at

least fifteen days before trial, Chip argues that the circuit court abused its discretion in admitting

those exhibits and testimony related to the issue of attorney fees. A court abuses its discretion if

“a relevant factor that should have been given significant weight is not considered; when an

irrelevant or improper factor is considered and given significant weight; and when all proper factors,

and no improper ones, are considered, but the court, in weighing those factors, commits a clear error

of judgment.” Toraish, 293 Va. at 268 (quoting Manchester Oaks Homeowners Ass’n v. Batt, 284

Va. 409, 429 (2012)).

          4
          See, e.g., Reaves v. Tucker, 67 Va. App. 719, 736 (2017) (finding no abuse of discretion
in “uphold[ing] the scheduling order by denying wife permission to present any witnesses or
exhibits that had not been disclosed prior to trial”); Rahnema v. Rahnema, 47 Va. App. 645, 658
(2006) (finding no abuse of discretion in excluding evidence, noting that “[t]he impartial,
consistent enforcement of scheduling orders provides systemic benefits to litigants and trial
courts alike”).
                                                 -9-
        Here, the circuit court, in overruling Chip’s objection, found that there was no surprise or

prejudice to Chip in not being provided the exhibits or disclosures concerning attorney fees,5

noting that “the whole purpose of the hearing was attorney fees. No surprise there.” It also

noted that the failure to “comport with the pre-trial order” was understandably due to

inadvertence, as “this is a bit of an ambiguous situation when you’ve got a bifurcated case and

you set up a separate hearing on attorney fees.” Chip also objected to the purportedly late

disclosure of the expert witness on the reasonableness of her claimed fees, attorney Michael

Ware, which only was late if Eleanor had been a “prevailing party” in the underlying litigation;

however, the circuit court explicitly held that “nobody won” the litigation. The circuit court here

committed none of the errors that are considered an abuse of discretion, and we cannot say that

reasonable jurists could not differ on the court’s rulings; accordingly, it was not an abuse of

discretion to allow exhibits and testimony regarding the issue of attorney fees.

                                     B. Attorney Fees and Costs

                                       1. Standards of Review

        “An award of attorney’s fees is a matter submitted to the trial court’s sound discretion and is

reviewable on appeal only for an abuse of discretion.” Fadness v. Fadness, 52 Va. App. 833, 848

(2008) (quoting Graves v. Graves, 4 Va. App. 326, 333 (1987)). “The key to a proper award of

counsel fees [is] . . . reasonableness under all of the circumstances revealed by the record.” Id. at

849 (alterations in original) (quoting McGinnis v. McGinnis, 1 Va. App. 272, 277 (1985)). To the

extent that some of Chip’s arguments involve statutory construction or issues of law, we review

        5
          The pretrial scheduling order stated: “Any exhibit or witness not so identified and filed
will not be received in evidence . . . unless the admission of such exhibit or testimony of the
witness would cause no surprise or prejudice to the opposing party and the failure to list the
exhibit or witness was through inadvertence.” It also provided that “the time limits and
prohibitions contained in this order may be waived or modified by leave of [c]ourt for good
cause shown.”
                                                 - 10 -
those de novo. Dietz v. Commonwealth, 294 Va. 123, 132 (2017). Finally, “[o]n appeal, we will

not reverse findings of fact ‘unless plainly wrong.’” Milam v. Milam, 65 Va. App. 439, 462 (2015)

(alteration in original) (quoting Budnick v. Budnick, 42 Va. App. 823, 834 (2004)).

       2. The circuit court did not err in awarding Eleanor attorney fees from the trust or in
          denying Chip’s request for fees.

       Chip both advocates for why Eleanor should not have been awarded attorney fees, paid

from the trust, and for why the circuit court ought to have awarded them to him. The thrust of

Chip’s first argument is that the circumstances do not satisfy the factors presented in an

Oklahoma Court of Civil Appeals case, Atwood v. Atwood, 25 P.3d 936, 947 (Okla. Civ. App.

2001). As a preliminary matter, Atwood is not Virginia law and has little persuasive value to,

and no binding effect on, Virginia courts. Here, under Code § 64.2-795,6 the consideration is

what “justice and equity may require.”

       Chip argues, using the Atwood factors, that “justice and equity” do not support an award

because (1) Eleanor did not prevail on any substantive legal issue, (2) she “unnecessarily

prolonged the litigation,” (3) she “has the ability to bear the financial burden,” and (4) she acted

in bad faith in the course of litigation. Even putting aside the critical issue that these factors are

not drawn from Virginia jurisprudence, each of these points plainly fail.

       First, Code § 64.2-795 does not require that a party prevail in order to receive an award

of attorney fees, paid either by the other party or from the trust. The remaining arguments are

pure issues of fact, which the circuit court was able to weigh and take into account when

       6
          Eleanor makes the curious argument that the award of attorney fees was made not
pursuant to Code § 64.2-795, but instead under Code § 64.2-762 (“A trustee is entitled to be
reimbursed out of the trust property, with interest as appropriate, for . . . [e]xpenses that were
properly incurred in the administration of the trust . . . .”). This is despite her own amended
complaint citing Code § 64.2-795 in her request for fees, and the final order awarding fees
expressly mentioning Code § 64.2-795 while making no mention of Code § 64.2-762. In fact,
the entire record appears to make no mention of Code § 64.2-762.
                                               - 11 -
considering the competing requests for fees. It even expressly found the last claim to be untrue,

and it ruled that Eleanor did not act in bad faith in defending the trust. Despite Chip’s strenuous

disagreement on these factual matters, there is nothing plainly wrong in the circuit court’s

conclusions. Moreover, the circuit court did not order that Chip pay Eleanor’s attorney fees; it

ordered that she be reimbursed from the trust.

       For similar reasons, it was not error to refuse to grant Chip’s request for attorney fees.

As the initial complainant, Chip was the originator of the legal action. Considering that, along

with the factual conclusion that Chip did not establish that Eleanor acted in bad faith, the circuit

court could reasonably conclude that “justice and equity” did not support an award of his

attorney fees, paid either from Eleanor or the trust. Accordingly, we find no error.

       Seemingly as a corollary argument that Eleanor litigated wastefully or in bad faith, Chip

finally argues that Eleanor should have filed, or been denied attorney fees for not filing, a

petition for aid and guidance, otherwise referred to as a “request for instructions and an action to

declare rights,” Code § 64.2-710, instead of litigating the no-contest clause issue.7 Such a

petition allows a fiduciary, without advocating for a position, to place a legal issue before a trial

court for consideration. Once again, having no Virginia law to cite, he suggests we follow the

New Hampshire case of Hodges v. Johnson, 244 A.3d 245 (N.H. 2020), which upheld a lower

court’s denial of reimbursement for legal fees when the party could have, but did not, file an

analogous “petition for instruction.” This outcome, and the New Hampshire court’s rationale for

it, was more attributable to the deferential standard of review regarding awards of attorney fees

on appeal, rather than there being any rule favoring such petitions when awarding attorney fees.

We decline Chip’s invitation for this Court to sit in the role of the legislature and create new law

       7
          On brief, Eleanor also claims that Chip never raised this argument below and thus it is
waived. This claim is directly contradicted by the hearing transcripts, in which his counsel
raised this issue, and they show that it was vigorously debated before the circuit court.
                                                - 12 -
requiring a court to favor those who file petitions for aid and guidance when reviewing requests

for attorney fees. “We refuse to do so as it is our role to interpret the statutes—not to make the

law.” Thormac, LLC v. Dep’t of Alcoholic Beverage Control, 68 Va. App. 216, 230-31 (2017).

Accordingly, we find no error.

                                           IV. CONCLUSION

          For the foregoing reasons, we find no error in the circuit court’s rulings and therefore

affirm.

                                                                                             Affirmed.

                                                 - 13 -