Ex parte Judy D. BYROM. .

Decision Date09 April 2010
Docket Number1061806.
Citation47 So.3d 791
PartiesEx parte Judy D. BYROM. (In re Jerry T. Byrom, Jr., as administrator of the estate of Jerry Thomas Byrom v. Judy D. Byrom).
CourtAlabama Supreme Court

OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE

George M. Beason, Jr., and Terry L. Bynum II of Martinson & Beason, P.C., Huntsville, for petitioner.

William B. Tatum, Edward E. Wilson, Jr., and Scott W. Faulkner of Lanier Ford Shaver & Payne, PC, Huntsville, for respondent.

MURDOCK, Justice.

Judy D. Byrom (“Judy”) petitioned this Court for a writ of certiorari to review the Court of Civil Appeals' decision in a plurality opinion in Byrom v. Byrom, 47 So.3d 783 (Ala.Civ.App.2007). We granted the writ; we now affirm.

Judy and Jerry Thomas Byrom (“Jerry”) married in October 1982. In 1999, Judy and Jerry executed a trust agreement creating a revocable trust known as the Desoto Star Holdings trust (“the Desoto trust”), and they conveyed certain real property into the Desoto trust. Richard G. Pridmore served as the initial trustee of the Desoto trust.

The trust agreement provided that Judy and Jerry were the “beneficiaries” of the trust. As “beneficiaries,” Judy and Jerry were “entitled to all of the earnings, avails and proceeds of the Trust Property according to their interests set opposite their respective names” on Exhibit “B” to the trust agreement. Exhibit “B” stated that Judy and Jerry each held a 50% interest in the trust. The trust agreement continued:

“4. INTERESTS. The interests of the Beneficiaries shall consist solely of the following rights respecting the Trust Property:

“a. The right to direct the Trustee to convey or otherwise deal with the title to a Trust Property as hereinafter set out.

“b. The right to manage and control the Trust Property.

“c. The right to receive the proceeds and avails from the rental, sale, mortgage, or other disposition of the Trust Property.

The foregoing rights shall be deemed to be personal property and may be assigned and otherwise transferred as such. No Beneficiary shall have any legal or equitable right, title or interest, as realty, in or to any real estate held in trust under this Agreement, nor the right to require partition of that real estate, but shall have only the rights, as personalty, set out above, and the death of a Beneficiary shall not terminate this Trust or in any manner affect the powers of the Trustee.”

(Emphasis added.)

Also, the trust agreement states that [t]he terms and conditions of this Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and be binding ... upon the executors, administrators, heirs, assigns and all other successors in interest of the Beneficiaries. (Emphasis added.)

Jerry died in June 2001. He was survived by Judy, and by his three children: Jerry T. Byrom, Jr., Lisa B. Ratcliff, and Julee B. Couch. Jerry's will was admitted to probate in the Madison Probate Court. 1 Jerry's children and Judy are beneficiaries under Jerry's will. 2 In April 2002, the administration of Jerry's estate was removed to the Madison Circuit Court (“the trial court).

After Jerry's death, certain creditors obtained judgments against his estate. Thereafter, in September 2003, Paul Frederick, as personal representative of Jerry's estate, filed a complaint in the trial court seeking, among other things, a declaration that Jerry's interest in the Desoto trust became the property of Jerry's estate upon his death. In May 2005, Frederick filed a report of insolvency in the trial court concerning the estate. The report described approximately $2,373,735 in “potential unpaid debts,” including in part the creditors' claims described above, and substantially less in assets belonging to the estate, though the value of certain assets was allegedly unknown. In July 2005, after conducting a hearing on Frederick's petition, the trial court entered an order declaring Jerry's estate insolvent. Thereafter, Frederick resigned as personal representative, and the trial court appointed Jerry T. Byrom, Jr., as personal representative of the estate (“the personal representative”). 3

Judy opposed the personal representative's claim that Jerry's beneficial interest in the Desoto trust passed to his estate at his death. She argued that Jerry's beneficial interest in the Desoto trust passed to her upon Jerry's death.

After conducting a proceeding at which evidence was presented ore tenus, the trial court entered a judgment on the personal representative's claims. The judgment stated that the Desoto trust agreement

“d[id] not provide for what happens to the beneficial interest of the deceased upon ... death. Therefore, this Court must look to Alabama law to decide this issue. Accordingly, pursuant to the ‘residue of the residue rule’ of Alabama Code (1975) Section 43-8-225(b), as well as the intent of Jerry and Judy as Settlors of [the Desoto trust], Jerry's interest in [the Desoto trust] passed to Judy upon the death of Jerry.”

The personal representative appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals. He argued, in part, that the trial court had wrongly applied Ala.Code 1975, § 43-8-225(b), to the Desoto trust. In a plurality decision, the Court of Civil Appeals “reverse[d] the trial court's judgment insofar as it declared that Jerry's beneficial interest in [the Desoto trust] passed to Judy upon Jerry's death.” 4 Byrom, 47 So.3d at 790. Judy filed an application for rehearing, which the Court of Civil Appeals denied. Judy then filed a petition for a writ of certiorari with this Court on the ground that the case presented a material question of first impression. See Rule 39(a)(1)(C), Ala. R.App. P. We granted the writ to consider her argument that Ala.Code 1975, § 43-8-225(b), was applicable to the Desoto trust and that, under § 43-8-225(b), Jerry's beneficial interest in the Desoto trust passed to her at Jerry's death and not to Jerry's estate.

Standard of Review

[1] The trial court's judgment and the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals turned on the interpretation and application of § 43-8-225(b). Because the issue before us presents a pure question of law, we review the matter de novo, without any presumption of correctness. Simcala, Inc. v. American Coal Trade, Inc., 821 So.2d 197, 200 (Ala.2001).

Analysis

[2] Section 43-8-225(b), Ala.Code 1975, is an “antilapse” statute contained in the article of the Probate Code addressing the construction of wills. See Ala.Code 1975, Title 43, Article 8 (“Construction of Wills”). Section 43-8-225(b) states:

“Except as provided in section 43-8-224 if the residue is devised to two or more persons and the share of one of the residuary devisees fails for any reason, his share passes to the other residuary devisee, or to other residuary devisees in proportion to their interests in the residue.”

The Court of Civil Appeals concluded that because the Desoto trust was not a will, § 43-8-225(b) was inapplicable. Byrom, 47 So.3d at 788.

In Baldwin v. Branch, 888 So.2d 482 (Ala.2004), this Court considered the issue whether another antilapse statute, Ala.Code 1975, § 43-8-224, which is referenced in § 43-8-225 and which is also included within Article 8 of the Probate Code, should apply to a revocable trust. 5 As this Court described it, § 43-8-224 “operates, in the case of a will, to prevent a lapse when a devisee dies before the testator.” 888 So.2d at 484. This Court held that § 43-8-224 did not apply to trusts. We explained that “there is no similar statutory provision to prevent a lapse of a gift made in a revocable trust,” that § 43-8-224 “mentions only wills, not trusts,” and that, [t]herefore[,] the plain language of § 43-8-224 indicates that it does not apply to trusts.” 888 So.2d at 484. We further rejected the argument that we should follow some other “jurisdictions in which courts have found that an antilapse statute, on its face applicable only to wills, reaches trusts as well.” 888 So.2d at 485.

This Court has previously expressed a reluctance to rewrite the Alabama Probate Code to accommodate the use of a revocable trust as a substitute for a will. In Russell v. Russell, 758 So.2d 533, 538 (Ala.1999), this Court refused to read into the Alabama Probate Code the ‘augmented estate concept’ rejected by the Legislature in 1982 when it reenacted the Probate Code. To hold that Alabama's antilapse statute applies to trusts, this Court would have to invade the Legislature's power to amend statutes. We are not willing to do so; therefore, Branch['s] ... argument that Alabama's antilapse statute applies to trusts fails.”

Baldwin, 888 So.2d at 485.

The reasoning of Baldwin applies with equal force in the present case. By its terms, § 43-8-225 is applicable to wills, not trusts, and is thus inapplicable, absent a legislative act that directs its application to trusts.

Judy does not argue that Baldwin was erroneously decided. Instead, she notes that § 19-3B-112, Ala.Code 1975, which is part of the Alabama Uniform Trust Code, states:

“Except as otherwise provided in this chapter, the rules of construction under Title 43, Chapter 8, Article 8, and the miscellaneous provisions of Article 9 that apply in this state to the interpretation of and disposition of property by will also apply as appropriate to the interpretation of the terms of a trust and the disposition of the trust property.”

[3] Judy's argument as to the application of § 19-3B-112 in the present case is incorrect. The Alabama Uniform Trust Code, Ala.Code 1975, § 19-3B-101 et seq., including § 19-3B-112, was adopted in March 2006 but did not become effective until January 1, 2007, several months after the trial court entered the judgment at issue in this case. See Ala. Acts 2006, Act No. 2006-216, § 6 (This act shall become effective January 1, 2007, following its passage and approval by the Governor, or its otherwise becoming law.”). Although the Uniform Trust Code contains a retroactivity provision that makes it applicable to, among other things, “judicial proceedings concerning trusts commenced before January...

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8 cases
  • E.L. v. V.L. (Ex parte E.L.)
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    ... ... Accordingly, we review those issues de novo. Ex parte Byrom, 47 So.3d 791, 794 (Ala.2010). We emphasize, however, that our review of those issues does not extend to a review of the legal merits of the Georgia ... ...
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1 books & journal articles
  • When Beneficiaries Predecease: an Empirical Analysis
    • United States
    • Emory University School of Law Emory Law Journal No. 72-2, 2022
    • Invalid date
    ...v. Safer, 208 N.W.2d 619, 623 (Mich. Ct. App. 1973); First Nat'l Bank v. Tenney, 138N.E.2d 15, 18-20 (Ohio 1956); see also Ex parte Byrom, 47 So.3d 791, 794-96 (Ala. 2010) (holding that the lapse statute for wills fails to apply to living trusts); Hinds v. McNair, 413 N.E.2d 586, 595-99 (In......

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