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Schwerin v. Ratcliffe

Conn.March 30, 2020No. SC20208, SC20209
Defendant WinRatcliffe

Case Details

Judge(s)
Robinson; Palmer; McDonald; D’Auria; Mullins; Kahn; Ecker
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
summary judgment - plaintiffs' motion denied, defendants' motions granted; appeal pending

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

Trial court granted defendants' motions for summary judgment and declared that trust principal should be distributed in equal shares to the three children of H (per stirpes), rather than to six grandchildren as plaintiffs claimed.

Excerpt

The plaintiffs, potential beneficiaries of two family trusts, sought a judgment declaring the proper distribution of assets from those trusts. Each trust contained explicit language that, upon the expiration of the trust term, the trust principal was to be distributed to the grantor's issue then living, per stirpes. The plaintiffs claimed that, upon the passing of the last measuring life, the principal of the trusts should be distributed in six equal amounts to the six grandchildren of H, the grantor of one of the trusts, and the son of the grantor of the other trust, and that the refer- enced distribution will be per stirpes, such that the one-sixth share that would have gone to any deceased grandchild of H will instead go to the issue of that grandchild. The plaintiffs filed a motion for summary judgment, claiming that there was no genuine issue of material fact that the trusts grant the principal to the grandchildren of H or their families in equal shares. Certain defendants, other potential beneficiaries of the trust, also filed motions for summary judgment, claiming that there was no genuine issue of material fact with respect to the interpretation of the two trusts and that the court should render judgment declaring that, at the expiration of the term of those trusts, the principal of the trusts should be distributed such that each of the three children of H shall be the head of each stirpe. The trial court denied the plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment, granted the defendants' motions for summary judgment, and rendered judgment declaring that, upon the termination of the two trusts, the corpus of each trust will be distributed in equal shares to the three children of H, with living descendants of each of the three children succeeding to the shares of their deceased ancestors. The plaintiffs and the defendant C filed separate appeals from the trial court's judgment. On appeal, although the parties generally agreed that the grantors of the trusts intended a

What This Ruling Means

**What Happened** This case involved a family dispute over how money should be distributed from two family trusts. The plaintiffs (people who expected to inherit money) believed that when the trusts ended, the money should be split equally among six grandchildren of someone named "H." However, the defendants argued that the trust documents required the money to be distributed differently - to H's three children instead, following a legal principle called "per stirpes" (meaning each family branch gets an equal share). **What the Court Decided** The court sided with the defendants and granted summary judgment in their favor. The judge ruled that the trust language was clear: the money should be distributed equally to H's three children, not split among the six grandchildren as the plaintiffs had claimed. The court determined that the trust documents explicitly required this type of distribution. **Why This Matters for Workers** While this case primarily deals with family trusts rather than employment issues, it highlights the importance of carefully reading and understanding legal documents. For workers, this serves as a reminder that language in contracts, benefit plans, and retirement accounts matters greatly. Always review beneficiary designations and understand how your employer-sponsored benefits will be distributed to ensure your intentions are properly documented.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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