Court Opinion

ID: 9401693
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-06-13 19:14:09.843955+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:19:54.524152
License: Public Domain

FILED
                                                                                June 13, 2023
No. 22-0074 – Gabbert v. Coyne
                                                                                   released at 3:00 p.m.
                                                                               EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK
                                                                               SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS
WOOTON, J., dissenting:                                                             OF WEST VIRGINIA

              I dissent to the majority’s endorsement of the circuit court’s improper use of

Rule 12(b)(6) to resolve the merits of petitioner’s case—a case which by the majority’s

own admission turns on issues of intent. The majority concedes that our caselaw holds that

“[t]he paramount principle in construing or giving effect to a trust is that the intention of

the settlor prevails, unless it is contrary to some positive rule of law or principle of public

policy.”   Syl. Pt. 1, Hemphill v. Aukamp, 164 W.Va. 368, 264 S.E.2d 163 (1980).

Nonetheless, it affirms the circuit court’s construction of the trust at the 12(b)(6) stage

based solely on the documentary evidence available, without even permitting petitioner to

conduct discovery to develop evidence of Mr. Coyne’s intent—a decidedly factual

undertaking. It further does so despite the Legislature’s declaration that even unambiguous

trust documents may be reformed to conform to the settlor’s intent if it is shown by a mere

preponderance that the trust instrument was affected by a “mistake of fact or law[.]” See

W. Va. Code § 44D-4-415 (2011). Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

              Under the auspices of Rule 12(b)(6), the majority wades deep into the merits

of this dispute by construing and interpreting three documents: the original 2006 trust

instrument, the 2006 handwritten document, and the 2016 trust instrument. Because the

circuit court below permitted no discovery before dismissing petitioner’s complaint, the

Court has only the allegations contained in petitioner’s complaint—all of which it is bound

to accept as true. The majority banters about whether the 2016 trust is an amendment to
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the predecessor documents or a replacement of those documents, largely by focusing on

the multiple references to “this trust” in the 2016 instrument and relying upon a case from

the Utah Supreme Court—In re Est. of Flake, 71 P.3d 589 (Utah 2003), abrogated by

Mounteer Enter., Inc. v. Homeowners Ass’n for the Colony at White Pine Canyon, 422 P.3d

809 (Utah 2018). Upon this questionable extra-jurisdictional precedent and its exclusive

preoccupation with the language of the 2016 instrument, the majority declares Mr. Coyne’s

intention to be “abundantly clear,” i.e. to revoke his grant of the Waverly Drive property

to petitioner.

                 In dispensing with the case in this manner, the majority effectively applies

the “plain meaning” rule—without recognizing or acknowledging it—despite that rule

having been abolished by statute in West Virginia. As commentators have described, “[t]he

plain meaning rule requires that . . . donative intent be found strictly from the language

used in [the instrument] . . . regardless of the certainty derived from extrinsic evidence that

such language misstates the . . . actual intent.” Fred Franke & Anna Katherine Moody, The

Terms of the Trust: Extrinsic Evidence of Settlor Intent, 40 ACTEC L.J. 1, 5 (2014).

However, these same commentators have recognized that West Virginia Code § 44D-4-

415 “abolishes the plain meaning rule[.]” Id., app. at 32.

                 West Virginia Code § 44D-4-415 provides:

                          The court may reform the terms of a trust, even if
                 unambiguous, to conform the terms to the grantor’s intention
                 if it is proved by preponderance of the evidence that both the
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                grantor’s intent and the terms of the trust instrument were
                affected by a mistake of fact or law, whether in expression or
                inducement.

The aim of this statute is plainly to authorize courts to grant relief where a settlor’s intent

is at odds with the written trust instruments, consistent with our long-standing directive to

ensure that evidence of the settlor’s intent is adduced. As noted above, the Court has long

held that intent is “paramount,” Syl. pt. 1, in part, Hemphill, 164 W.Va. at 368, 264 S.E.2d

at 164, and it is well-established that to ascertain that intent, “all relevant evidence, whether

direct or circumstantial, may be considered, including the text of the donative document

and relevant extrinsic evidence.” Restatement (Third) of Property (Wills & Don. Trans.)

§ 10.2 (2003); see also Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 4 (2003) (“If a trust is created by a

transaction inter vivos and is evidenced by a written instrument, the terms of the trust are

determined by the provisions of the governing instrument as interpreted in light of all the

relevant circumstances and such direct evidence of the intention of the settlor with respect

to the trust[.]”).

                As though the procedural posture of this case does not make it obvious

enough, it is clear that our caselaw and West Virginia Code § 44D-4-415 first require the

development of evidence of the settlor’s intent to determine whether the trust instrument is

at odds with that intention, and whether that inconsistency was caused by “a mistake of

fact or law[.]” Id. Yet neither the circuit court nor the majority permit petitioner the benefit

of discovery to develop the evidence necessary for either of them to rule on the issue at

hand. Nor does the Utah case, upon which the majority primarily relies, sanction ruling on
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this issue on the basis of the instruments alone. In contrast to petitioner’s request for

discovery in the instant case, the Flake court noted that the plaintiff “stated she had no

evidence to offer and would rely solely on the documents at issue.” 71 P.3d at 591

(emphasis added).

              The foregoing notwithstanding, the majority refuses to address the impact of

West Virginia Code § 44D-4-415, declaring summarily—in a footnote—that it “need not

[be] address[ed]” because the 2006 writing was an amendment, the trust was “clear and

unambiguous,” and petitioner waived this “issue” below. Obviously, whether the 2006

writing is characterized as an amendment is not germane to the statute’s application and

the majority’s declaration that the 2016 instrument is “clear and unambiguous” does not

affect the statute’s application at all, given that it expressly permits reformation of a trust

“even if unambiguous[.]” Id. (emphasis added).

              More importantly, however, this statute is not a mere assignment of error or

“issue” to be waived. It is a grant of authority to the circuit court to award relief which

gives effect to the settlor’s intent, notwithstanding a legal determination that a trust

instrument is unambiguous. It is procedural mechanism to be employed, after development

of the underlying evidence, to grant relief under its provisions. In practical terms, however,

petitioner’s invocation of this statute was patently unnecessary unless and until evidence

was adduced which permitted the circuit court to rule properly on the issue of formation,

the terms of the applicable trust, and Mr. Coyne’s intent.
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              Further, the notion that petitioner was required to invoke this statute at the

Rule 12(b)(6) stage is entirely contrary to our standards for dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6).

It is, of course, axiomatic that for purposes of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, “the West

Virginia Rules of Civil Procedure establish the principle that a plaintiff pleading a claim

for relief need only give general notice as to the nature of his or her claim.” Mountaineer

Fire & Rescue Equip., LLC v. City Nat’l Bank of W. Va., 244 W. Va. 508, 521, 854 S.E.2d

870, 883 (2020) (footnote omitted). West Virginia Code § 44D-4-415 is, in effect, a

statutory exception to respondent’s defense that the trust terms are unambiguous and must

be applied as written. The Court has made clear that at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage a plaintiff

“need not anticipate or attempt to plead around potential defenses that may be raised by

the defendant.” Syl. Pt. 5, in part, Gable v. Gable, 245 W. Va. 213, 858 S.E.2d 838 (2021).

Accordingly, a plaintiff cannot be required to provide “any information about defenses”

and the complaint “may not be dismissed, under the guise of Rule 12(b)(6), for that

omission.” Id.

              The majority fails to explain why petitioner is not entitled to develop

evidence of intent or how her complaint—for which it resorts to applying extra-

jurisdictional caselaw and construing documentary evidence to resolve—does not state a

claim sufficient to survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.

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