Court Opinion

ID: 9929259
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-02-02 05:06:26.605433+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T10:06:21.290221
License: Public Domain

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
                  revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

                           STATE OF MICHIGAN

                             COURT OF APPEALS

In re LARRY S. BERMAN REVOCABLE LIVING
TRUST.

MICHAEL HORDS, KYLE HORDS, and ANDREW                                  UNPUBLISHED
HORDS,                                                                 February 1, 2024

               Appellants,

v                                                                      No. 364315
                                                                       Oakland Probate Court
TERRI A. CHAPMAN, Individually and as                                  LC No. 2022-408351-TV
Successor Trustee of the LARRY S. BERMAN
REVOCABLE LIVING TRUST, and NICHOLAS S.
BERMAN,

                Appellees.

Before: GADOLA, C.J., and MURRAY and YATES, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

       In this dispute over a trust, appellants, Michael, Kyle and Andrew Hords, appeal as of right
the probate court’s order interpreting the trust document, denying partial summary disposition, and
appointing a special fiduciary. We reverse the probate court’s order and remand for entry of an
order granting the petition to terminate the relevant trusts and for further proceedings.

                                         I. BACKGROUND

        The Larry S. Berman Revocable Living Trust was established in the 1980s by Larry
Berman, the founder of MNP Corporation. Shares in MNP Corporation and other related
businesses make up a significant part of the trust’s assets. After forming the trust, Larry amended
it several times, culminating in its final incarnation, the fourth restatement of the trust, executed in
January 2014. Larry died in November 2014, and his three children survived him: appellees
Nicholas Berman and Terri A. Chapman, and Dana Berman. Chapman is the CEO of MNP and
the successor trustee of the trust.

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        The trust provides for the disposition of certain assets held by Larry upon his death.
“Article Fourth” of the trust governs the assets at issue and their disposition. The parties agree
that whether appellants are to receive the assets at issue in trust, or free from trust, is controlled by
§§ (A) and (B)(2) and (7), and that these provisions are unambiguous. They disagree, however,
on the application of these unambiguous provisions.

        Section A of Article Fourth provides for the division of certain assets into three equal shares
for each of Larry’s children, and for the creation of separate trusts for each of his children still
alive at the time of his death to hold each child’s share of the assets. Those trusts are to be
administered as set forth in the parts of the trust (§ (B)(1)(a) and (B)(2)(a)) pertaining to trusts for
Larry’s “Children”:

        Upon my death, all of the remaining principal of the FAMILY TRUST together
        with all accrued and undistributed income shall be divided into equal shares, subject
        to clauses (i) through (iii) below, one for each child of mine who shall then be living
        and one for each child of mine who predeceases me leaving issue surviving. In the
        event that a child of mine predeceases me, his or her share shall be divided into
        equal shares for his or her living issue per stirpes and not per capita. If a deceased
        child of mine leaves no issue surviving, his or her share shall be divided equally
        among the shares of my remaining children and the issue by right of representation
        per stirpes and not per capita of deceased children. Each share set aside for a child
        of mine shall be held in a separate trust and disposed of as set forth below in the
        section applicable to Children. Each share set aside for the issue of a deceased child
        of mine (sometimes referred to as a “beneficiary” below), shall be held in a separate
        trust and disposed of as set forth below in the section applicable to Grandchildren.

This section provides for the division of a deceased child’s share equally among that child’s living
issue with subtrusts (“Grandchild trusts”) established to administer those assets, but only “in the
event a child of [Larry’s] predeceases” him.

        Section (B)(7) of the trust provides for the termination of a trust when its beneficiary dies:

        In any event each beneficiary’s trust shall terminate no later than the beneficiary’s
        death. Trustee shall distribute the then remaining trust property to the issue of the
        deceased beneficiary by right of representation per stirpes and not per capita. If a
        deceased beneficiary leaves no issue surviving, his or her share shall be divided
        equally among the shares of my remaining children and the issue by right of
        representation of the deceased children.

Dana died in February 2021. Appellants expected, under the terms of § (B)(7), that Chapman, as
trustee, would distribute the assets in Dana’s trust to them. They alleged that Chapman first told
them that she would do so, but that she needed to await an audit and closing letter from the Internal
Revenue Service with respect to Larry’s estate-tax return. And, after learning of the completion
of the IRS audit, they sought distribution of the assets but Chapman told them that she was required
to create a subtrust for each appellant, and distribute Dana’s trust’s assets equally among the new
subtrusts.

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        As a result, appellants filed a petition seeking in relevant part to terminate Dana’s trust, as
they assert § (B)(7) requires. Nicholas and Chapman argued that, because § (B)(7) did not provide
that a terminated trust’s assets be paid to a deceased beneficiary’s issue “outright,” and because
the trust contained instructions for administering “Grandchild trusts” which would be meaningless
if Dana’s trust assets were not to be transferred to new trusts for appellants’ benefits, Chapman
was compelled to continue to hold the assets in trust.

         The probate court agreed with appellees that § (B)(7) rendered the text of Subsection (2)
“nugatory” because “that provision does not exist in a vacuum. It just doesn’t. So it is not
dispositive.” The probate court, in an “attempt to read the [instrument] as a whole,” reasoned that
§ (B)(7) “makes no sense” because the trust provided that Dana would never receive trust assets
outright so the trust should not be read to conclude that appellants would either. The probate court
accordingly ruled that Chapman should transfer the assets from Dana’s trust in equal parts to
subtrusts for the three appellants. The probate court also determined that it was necessary to have
further investigation of appellants’ other claims, and ordered the appointment of a special fiduciary
charged with the power and duty to fully investigate appellants’ claims and the nature and extent
of trust assets. This appeal followed.

                                           II. ANALYSIS

        The dispositive question involves a determination whether the probate court’s
interpretation of the trust was consistent with the plain language of the trust.

        This Court reviews the interpretation of trusts de novo. In re Estate of Stan, 301 Mich App
435, 442; 839 NW2d 498 (2013). “The intent of the settlor is to be carried out as nearly as possible.
This intent is gauged from the trust document itself, unless there is ambiguity.” In re Kostin, 278
Mich App 47, 53; 748 NW2d 583 (2008), citing In re Maloney Trust, 423 Mich 632, 639; 377
NW2d 791 (1985). “The fact that litigants disagree regarding the meaning of a trust, however,
does not mean that it is ambiguous.” Bill & Dena Brown Trust v Garcia, 312 Mich App 684, 693;
880 NW2d 269 (2015). Although a court “must attempt to construe the instrument so that each
word has meaning,” In re Kostin, 278 Mich App at 53, “a court must enforce the plain and
unambiguous terms of a trust as they are written,” Brown Trust, 312 Mich App at 694.

         In reviewing the unambiguous language of the relevant trust provisions, we conclude that
upon Dana’s death, the assets in her trust were to be distributed to her children, and not placed into
Grandchild trusts. The plain language of § A shows that Larry’s intent was to divide the trust
property equally among his three children to benefit and support them during their lives, and to
provide for a contingency if one of his children did not survive him. In the latter scenario, the
share intended to be held in trust for the predeceased child would instead be held in trust for that
predeceased child’s issue under the provisions applicable to “Grandchild trusts.” This is the
inescapable conclusion from the language of Article A and Article Fourth, §§ (B)(1)(a) and (B)(7).
Under these provisions, upon Larry’s death the income shall be divided between his children, one
share per child whether living or not at the time of his death. For his children that were alive at
the time of his death, the assets were to be placed into a trust “and disposed of as set forth below
in the section applicable to Children.” For any child of his that did not survive his death, the share
was to be divided amongst the issue of that child, and “be held in a separate trust and disposed of
as set forth below in the section applicable to Grandchildren.” Because all three children survived

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Larry’s death, the provision for placing assets into trusts under the section dealing with
Grandchildren did not come into play.

        Pursuant to these clear directives, upon Larry’s death trusts for Children were established
for Dana, Nicholas and Chapman, as they each survived Larry’s death. And, upon Dana’s death,
section (B)(7) provided that the trust created for her “shall terminate” no later than on her death.
At that point, the trustee “shall distribute the then remaining trust property to the issue of the
deceased beneficiary [appellants] by right of representation per stirpes and not per capita.” This
Chapman failed to do, and by instead creating Grandchildren trusts, acted contrary to the express
language of the trust.

        Appellees argue, and the probate court agreed, that transferring the property from Dana’s
trust to new “Grandchild trusts” was required because the trust provided instructions for
administration of Grandchildren trusts, and if Dana’s death did not trigger the transfer of her trust’s
property to Grandchildren trusts, those provisions would be rendered nugatory. But this is not the
case. That the contingency of one of Larry’s children not surviving his death was never triggered,
and thus the alternate plan never put into place, does not render the language regarding
Grandchildren trusts nugatory. Those words had meaning—they set forth a plan for the
unexpected but possible death of one of his children (who also had issue) before his own death.
Having provided a contingency for dividing his property if a child predeceased him, it stands to
reason that he would also need a contingency for administering the trust property that would go to
any grandchildren who would be the beneficiaries in place of their parent who was a predeceased
child of his—that is why the portions of § B dealing with “Grandchild trusts” are included. Trust
language included for a contingency that is never triggered is not devoid of meaning simply
because the contingency does not occur.

       Chapman also quotes a portion of Article Fourth, § (B)(4), which empowers the trustee to
delay making distributions under certain circumstances:

       Discretion to Delay Distributions. Notwithstanding anything in this Section
       regarding Income and Principal to the contrary, the Trustee may, in its discretion,
       delay income or principal distributions to any Child or any Grandchild for as long
       as the Trustee determines to be necessary under the circumstances, if the Trustee
       deems such delay advisable because of financial, medical, physical, educational,
       marital or other problems or needs of such Child or such Grandchild.

This subsection has no application here, for no one has asserted that Chapman, as trustee, had any
basis under § (B)(4) to withhold from appellants any distributions of trust property.

         Chapman also insists § (B)(6) mandates that the trust property be held in trust for appellants
rather than distributed outright. But this argument is premised on a selective reading of the section
that fails to acknowledge that § (B)(6) applies to only trusts created under § (B)(5), and Dana’s
trust is not the kind of trust to which either § (B)(5) or (B)(6) actually applies. Instead, through a

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combination of omission and selective editing, Chapman appears to attempt to make § (B)(6) more
generally applicable than it actually is.1

        We likewise reject Chapman’s argument that § (B)(7) actually supports her position
because § (B)(7) does not explicitly state that a deceased beneficiary’s issue is entitled to an
“outright” distribution, as well as the curious assertion that the inclusion of the term “per stirpes”
mandates the result ordered by the probate court. Although the word “outright” does not appear
in § (B)(7), it does not need to in order to convey that point, as the words used are clear that the
remaining trust property be transferred to appellants under that subsection. And the term “per
stirpes” does not refer to the mechanism for distributing trust property, but only to the method of
dividing it into shares. And it is not inconsistent with the terms of this trust to have a descendant
of Larry receive trust property outright after the original beneficiary dies—indeed, appellees’
proposed construction of the trust language would essentially require perpetual reconveyance of
trust property into new trusts.

         Further, § (B)(7) specifically uses the word “terminate” to describe what happens to a
beneficiary’s trust when that beneficiary dies: that trust “shall terminate no later than the
beneficiary’s death.” “The use of the word ‘shall’ denotes mandatory action.” Wolfenbarger v
Wright, 336 Mich App 1, 31; 969 NW2d 518 (2021). And Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed)
defines “terminate” as “[t]o put an end to; to bring to an end” or “[t]o end; to conclude.” See also
Hecht v Nat’l Heritage Academies, Inc, 499 Mich 586, 621 n 62; 886 NW2d 135 (2016) (“If the
definitions are the same in both a lay dictionary and legal dictionary, it is unnecessary to determine
whether the phrase is a term of art, and it does not matter to which type of dictionary this Court
resorts.”).2 The probate court’s construction of the trust does not “put an end to” Dana’s trust—
instead it perpetuates it. And, as appellants point out in their brief, MCL 700.7821 provides that
“[u]pon the occurrence of an event terminating or partially terminating a trust, the trustee shall
proceed expeditiously to distribute the trust property to the persons entitled to it, subject to the
right of the trustee to retain a reasonable reserve for the payment of debts, taxes, and expenses
. . . .” MCL 700.7821(2) (emphasis added).

       Here, the trustee simply withheld the entire trust, and not for the purpose of retaining a
reserve for expenses, but instead for the purpose of maintaining control over the trust property.
Accordingly, Chapman cannot be said to have retained the trust property for a permissible reason

1
  Section (B)(6) does not have general application, but instead applies only to generation skipping
trusts (GST)-exempt trusts created under § (B)(5): “[i]f a Grandchild dies before receiving all the
trust property held for him or her in a GST Exempt Trust, leaving issue surviving him or her, then
the remainder of such trust property shall be allocated per stirpes among the then surviving issue
of such deceased Grandchild, and the trust property allocated to each such issue shall be held in a
separate trust . . .” (emphasis added)). The parties nowhere assert that any of the trust property is
being held, or would need to be held, in a GST-exempt trust. Contrary to Chapman’s assertion, §
(B)(6) relates only to property that may be held for appellants’ benefit in a “GST Exempt Trust,”
and has no bearing on the issue presented here.
2
 Merriam-Webster’s dictionary contains a similar definition.           Merriam-Webster Collegiate
Dictionary (11th ed), p 1289.

                                                 -5-
under the statute, nor does she assert that there is any provision of the trust that overrides the
statutory mandate to distribute the remaining trust property in Dana’s trust to appellants. Both the
statute and § (B)(7) mandate that the trustee terminate Dana’s trust and distribute the property to
appellants. Because Chapman has refused to do so, the probate court improperly denied
appellants’ petition to terminate the trust, and improperly ordered Chapman to transfer the property
to new subtrusts for appellants’ benefit with Chapman as trustee.

        We reverse the probate court’s order and remand for entry of an order granting the petition
to terminate the trust and ordering Chapman to transfer the property from Dana’s trust to
appellants, and for any further proceedings. We do not retain jurisdiction. Appellants may tax
costs, having prevailed in full. MCR 7.219(A).

                                                             /s/ Michael F. Gadola
                                                             /s/ Christopher M. Murray
                                                             /s/ Christopher P. Yates

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