Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed October 1, 2014.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D12-2977 & 3D12-2457
Lower Tribunal No. 11-10587
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William Kritchman, etc., et al.,
Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
vs.
Hunter Wolk,
Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
Appeals from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Jorge E. Cueto,
Judge.
Gunster, Yoakley & Stewart and Jack J. Aiello and John C. Moran; Heller
Waldman, Glen H. Waldman and Eleanor T. Barnett; Akerman and Gerald B.
Cope, Jr., for appellants/cross-appellees.
Kluger, Kaplan, Silverman, Katzen & Levine and Erin E. Bohannon, for
appellee/cross-appellant.
Before LAGOA, SALTER and EMAS, JJ.
SALTER, J.
William Kritchman and Wells Fargo, N.A.,1 appeal a final judgment against
them, jointly and severally, in favor of the plaintiff below, Hunter Wolk. Mr.
Wolk cross-appeals the judgment insofar as it denied relief on two of the four
counts of his second amended complaint. The cases arise from a magnanimous
settlor’s, Mrs. Lola Kritchman’s, gifts to pay certain educational expenses of her
first cousin’s grandson, Mr. Wolk. Mr. Kritchman is the late Mrs. Lola
Kritchman’s son. Upon her death, Mr. Kritchman became co-trustee (with Wells
Fargo) of her inter vivos trust and the personal representative of her estate.
We affirm the trial court’s rulings relating to the co-trustees’ breach of the
Fourth Amended and Restated Lola Kritchman Revocable Trust Agreement (Trust
Agreement) and the directive for disgorgement of attorney’s fees and costs paid
from the Trust to, or for the benefit of, the co-trustees. We reverse the final
judgment insofar as it determined that the Trust or Mrs. Kritchman’s Estate was
liable for Mr. Wolk’s possible and future graduate school expenses; and we
remand with directions for the entry of an amended final judgment.
Factual and Procedural Background
Mrs. Lola Kritchman created a revocable trust and amended it repeatedly.
The Trust Agreement at issue here was entered into in December 2007. The co-
1 Wells Fargo became successor co-trustee of Mrs. Lola Kritchman’s revocable
trust upon its merger with Wachovia Bank, N.A. For ease of reference, we refer
throughout this opinion to Wells Fargo, though much of the relevant history
occurred when Wachovia served as the co-trustee.
2
trustees were Mrs. Kritchman and Wells Fargo. Article I.A. of the Trust
Agreement specified that, during Mrs. Kritchman’s lifetime, the Trustee was to
“pay such sums from principal as [Mrs. Kritchman] may direct at any time.” The
record establishes that Mrs. Kritchman directed Wells Fargo to make payments for
Mr. Wolk’s private school tuition for seven years, through his high school
graduation in Miami in 2008. Mr. Wolk then entered Yale University as an
undergraduate, and Mrs. Kritchman’s Trust funded his tuition, room, and board for
his freshman and sophomore years.
During Mr. Wolk’s sophomore year, on April 17, 2010, Mrs. Kritchman
signed and delivered a letter to her trust officer at Wells Fargo stating:
As you know, I have agreed to pay for Hunter’s college education at
Yale, as I have for the last 2 years. Thank you for your assistance
with the logistics. He will be beginning his junior year in September
2010 and his senior year in 2011. Please make arrangements so that
his costs will be paid for those 2 years as well. The cost for his
junior year is forty nine thousand eight hundred dollars, which you
will see when the school sends its documentation in the next month
or so.
Thank you for taking care of this on my behalf.
Sincerely,
[/s/ Mrs. Lola Kritchman]
Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive plainly and unambiguously:
Reminded Wells Fargo that she had paid Mr. Wolk’s educational
expenses at Yale for the past two years (which was accomplished with
funds of the Trust remitted by Wells Fargo to the university);
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Notified Wells Fargo that Mr. Wolk would begin his junior year at
Yale in September 2010, five months after the April letter was
delivered to Wells Fargo;
Directed Wells Fargo to “[p]lease make arrangements so that his costs
will be paid for those two years [junior and senior] as well;
Estimated the cost of his junior year would be $49,800.00; and
Advised that a bill documenting his tuition cost would be forthcoming
in the next month or so.
Wells Fargo received this written directive and, consistent with its express
terms, Wells Fargo paid Mr. Wolk’s educational expenses at Yale for the fall
semester of his junior year in September of 2010. But while choosing to comply
with this portion of Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive, Wells Fargo failed to
comply with the remainder of its express terms, which required Wells Fargo to
“make arrangements so that his costs will be paid for those two years [junior and
senior]. . . .” (Emphasis supplied).
Notwithstanding this directive, Mr. Wolk’s Yale tuition, room, and board
were not paid by Wells Fargo for his last three semesters at Yale, nor did Wells
Fargo “make arrangements”—whether by establishing a reserve or prepaying the
costs—to obey Mrs. Kritchman’s written, lifetime instruction. Mrs. Kritchman
passed away on November 8, 2010. On November 23, 2010, a trust officer from
Wells Fargo’s wealth management division sent an email to Mr. Wolk’s mother
assuring her that a check for Mr. Wolk’s tuition bill would be sent to Yale by the
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end of November. Thereafter, Mrs. Kritchman’s son and Mr. Wolk’s mother
disagreed regarding Mrs. Kritchman’s last will and testament (and a disputed
fourth codicil), and Mr. Kritchman countermanded his mother’s written
instructions to Wells Fargo. The check for tuition and other expenses was not sent
to Yale, nor were those costs paid for his senior year.2
Ultimately, Mr. Wolk filed a lawsuit against Wells Fargo and Mr.
Kritchman (in Mr. Kritchman’s dual capacities as co-trustee of his late mother’s
revocable trust and as personal representative of her estate). The second amended
complaint alleged breaches of written and oral contracts, promissory estoppel, and
breach of trust. Mr. Wolk’s claims included both the unreimbursed Yale
University undergraduate expenses as well as future graduate school expenses.
The graduate school claim under the Trust was based on a broad definition of
“education” in Article XIX.D. of the Trust Agreement (“In this Agreement. . . .the
term ‘education’ shall be interpreted broadly to include, but not be limited to, the
following: precollege private school tuition, vocational school tuition, college or
postgraduate school tuition, educational travel, room, board, books, school supplies
and travel to and from any of said schools away from home”). However, the Trust
2 Indeed, at the time of oral argument in June 2014, two years after Mr. Wolk’s
graduation from Yale, Mr. Wolk had not been reimbursed for those expenses by
the co-trustees or Mrs. Kritchman’s estate. The co-trustees did, however, make a
separately-specified pre-residuary gift of $25,000.00 to Mr. Wolk pursuant to
article V.D. of the Trust Agreement.
5
Agreement itself included no specific gifts for “education” for Mr. Wolk, and Mrs.
Kritchman had not issued any written directive regarding graduate school expenses
to her trust officer at Wells Fargo.
The defendants asserted affirmative defenses based on the statute of frauds
and an interpretation of the Trust Agreement that nullified (upon Mrs. Kritchman’s
death) her directive in her letter of April 17, 2010. The parties then cross-moved
for partial summary judgments and, thereafter, a final judgment.
The trial court granted final judgment in favor of Mr. Wolk on (a) the breach
of oral contract count for the unpaid Yale tuition, room, and board ($85,826.76)
plus prejudgment interest, and (b) the breach of trust claim, for the unpaid tuition,
room, and board, as well as other expenses, such as books and health insurance (a
total of $101,491.93) plus prejudgment interest.3 The trial court reserved
jurisdiction to consider future damages for graduate school tuition, and it
concluded that the co-trustees were required to disgorge any amounts removed
from the Trust to pay their respective legal expenses. The trial court granted Mr.
Kritchman’s and Wells Fargo’s motions for summary judgment on the claims for
breach of a written contract and for promissory estoppel, finding that these were
duplicative of the oral contract and breach of trust claims. Mr. Kritchman and
3 The judgments on the oral contract and breach of trust claims are not cumulative;
payment of one is creditable against the judgment debt on the other claim as well.
6
Wells Fargo appealed the final judgment, and Mr. Wolk cross-appealed the denial
of relief on the written contract and promissory estoppel claims.
Analysis
Wells Fargo was obligated to carry out Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive,
issued while she was still alive, to “make arrangements” to pay Mr. Wolk’s last
three semesters of undergraduate tuition, room, and board at Yale. There is no
summary judgment evidence indicating that the Trust lacked the ability to make
the payments or to establish a reserve to pay them. Indeed, Wells Fargo not only
could, but did comply with a portion of Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive, by
paying Mr. Wolk’s tuition, room and board for the fall semester of his junior year.
Moreover, the record below includes written communications after the date of Mrs.
Kritchman’s death whereby (a) Wells Fargo represented to Mr. Wolk’s mother that
“A check will be going out at the end of the week for Hunter’s tuition payment [for
the Spring 2011 semester], which is due December 1, 2010,” and (b) Wells Fargo
secured from Mr. Kritchman a written authorization for his late mother’s trust4 “to
continue the promise that your mother made to pay for the tuition, room and board
for Hunter Wolk while attending Yale University.”
Wells Fargo’s attempt to impose additional procedural requirements—none
of which are set forth in the Trust Agreement—is unavailing. The record
4 It is noteworthy that the letter authorized the trust to make the payments rather
than Mr. Kritchman’s late mother’s estate.
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establishes that the real reason Wells Fargo neither paid for Mr. Wolk’s last three
semesters at Yale from the Trust assets, nor set aside sufficient assets to pay those
costs, is that Mr. Wolk’s mother had produced a fourth codicil in Mrs. Kritchman’s
estate, to Mr. Kritchman’s detriment.5 Wells Fargo failed to comply with the
express terms of Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive, and with Mr. Kritchman’s
written authorization, to make necessary arrangements to pay for the entire
remaining two years of Mr. Wolk’s tuition, room, and board at Yale. Wells Fargo
has offered neither summary judgment evidence nor a supportable explanation for
parsing Mrs. Kritchman’s written directive in such a way as to justify its inaction.
The failure of Wells Fargo to carry out the terms of the Trust, under the
factual circumstances of this case, violated sections 736.0801, Florida Statutes
(2010) (duty to administer the trust in good faith, in accordance with its terms and
purposes and the interests of the beneficiaries), 736.0803 (duty to act impartially as
among beneficiaries), and 736.0804 (duty to prudently administer the trust by
considering the purposes, terms, distribution requirements, and other
circumstances of the trust). These breaches of duty establish the liability of the co-
trustees for a breach of trust. § 736.1001(1), Fla. Stat. (2010); Covenant Trust Co.
v. Guardianship of Ihrman, 45 So. 3d 499, 504 (Fla. 4th DCA 2010). Upon the
5 This dispute gave rise to an adversary proceeding in the probate case relating to
Mrs. Kritchman’s estate, Case No. 2011-1562-CP, and a separate (pending) appeal
from the final order admitting the codicil to probate, Kritchman v. Spiegel, Case
No. 3D14-94.
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finding of breach of trust, the co-trustees failed to give notice as required by
section 736.0802(10), Florida Statutes (2010), justifying the trial court’s
prohibition of further attorney’s fees and costs from assets of the Trust and its
order for a refund of previous attorney’s fees and costs paid to Wells Fargo from
the Trust.6
There was also uncontroverted summary judgment evidence establishing
Mrs. Kritchman’s promise to Mr. Wolk, his reliance on that promise (applying to,
and attending, Yale rather than utilizing his prepaid tuition account for a Florida
university), and the partial performance of that agreement through the first
semester of his junior year. Nonetheless, the trial court did not err in denying the
claims for written contract and promissory estoppel, as these were merely
duplicative of the other claims. See Laufen, Inc v. Andrew, 83 So. 3d 898, 899
(Fla. 5th DCA 2012) (final judgment should make it clear that plaintiffs are only
entitled to a single damages award on two theories of recovery); J&L Enter. v.
Jones, 614 So.2d 1151, 1153 (Fla. 4th DCA 1993) (party entitled to relief only on
one of several alternative claims).
6 We reject Wells Fargo’s argument that it should not be held liable for the breach
of trust because it reasonably relied on the language of the Trust Agreement;
§ 736.1009, Fla. Stat. (2010). This argument was not raised in the trial court, and
in any event the Trust Agreement states that the co-trustee “shall” pay such sums
as Mrs. Kritchman might direct at any time. Institutional trustees charge and are
paid fees for following such directions, and they are exposed to liability when they
do not.
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Finally, the appellants’ claim of error with regard to any future award of
expenses for graduate school is well taken. The Trust Agreement did not include
any such gift or provision for the benefit of Mr. Wolk, despite its broad definition
of “education.” A promise of an indeterminate amount, for an indeterminate
number of years of graduate school, commencing at an indeterminate time, runs
afoul of the Statute of Frauds. We thus reverse the final judgment insofar as it
purports to include an award for graduate school expenses “to be determined,” and
insofar as it awarded Mr. Wolk expenses beyond the tuition, room, and board at
Yale as specified by Mrs. Kritchman in separate written instructions under Article
I.A. of the Trust Agreement.
Conclusion
For the reasons detailed above, (a) we affirm the final judgment against
Wells Fargo and Mr. Kritchman, jointly and severally, for breach of oral contract
and breach of trust, although we reduce the amount of damages to the single
amount of $85,826.76,7 plus prejudgment interest, (b) on the cross-appeal, we
affirm the final judgment relating to the written contract and promissory estoppel
claims, as they are duplicative, (c) we affirm the trial court’s prohibition on
payment of the co-trustees’ attorney’s fees and costs from the Trust assets, and the
7 The higher award on one of the counts was apparently computed using the
expansive definition of “education” in the Trust Agreement instead of the narrower
“tuition, room, and board” specified by Mrs. Kritchman and established over Mr.
Wolk’s previous five semesters at Yale.
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directive for disgorgement of any such amounts previously paid from the Trust,
and (d) we reverse the final judgment insofar as it contemplated any future liability
of the co-trustees, the Trust, or Mrs. Kritchman’s estate for future graduate school
expenses. We remand the case to the trial court for amendment of the final
judgment to modify the damages award as set forth above.
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings in
accordance with this opinion.
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