NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
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before this opinion goes to press.
2017 VT 70
No. 2016-302
Michael Collins Supreme Court
On Appeal from
v. Superior Court, Caledonia Unit,
Family Division
Lynn B. Collins March Term, 2017
Robert R. Bent, J.
William P. Neylon, St. Johnsbury, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Deborah T. Bucknam of Bucknam & Black, P.C., St. Johnsbury, for Defendant-Appellant.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Dooley, Skoglund, Robinson and Eaton, JJ.
¶ 1. ROBINSON, J. This case calls upon us to consider the effect in a divorce case of
a grantor’s amendment to a revocable trust that changed the beneficiary from husband to husband’s
son, thereby keeping the trust property out of the marital estate and shielding it from wife’s claims.
Wife appeals the family division’s final property division award. In particular, she challenges the
trial court’s refusal to enforce a subpoena requiring grantor father to testify about the trust and his
capacity to change its beneficiary and argues that the family court should have included the trust
assets as part of the marital estate. We affirm.
¶ 2. The material facts are as follows. The parties married in 1984 and have two
children, both of whom are now adults. The parties earned comparable incomes during their
marriage. Their primary asset is their marital home, which the parties stipulated is valued at
$140,000. Each party has two retirement accounts, which are roughly equal in net value after
considering loans, and wife has a vested inheritance from her mother’s estate of around $4000.
Lastly, wife owes $16,000 for a student loan executed on behalf of the parties’ son.
¶ 3. At issue in this appeal is the status of a revocable trust that husband’s parents
established in 1999. The parents placed their real estate properties in the trust, which included
their house—located near the parties’ marital home—and a camp at a lake in Barnet.1 The parents
named themselves as trustees and husband as the sole beneficiary; husband would become a
successor trustee when either of his parents became unable to act as trustee. The trust document
provided that the grantors could amend the trust at any time, and that upon the death of both
grantors, the trust could not be amended or revoked and the trustee would distribute the trust assets
to the beneficiary. The trust also contains a Certificate of Deposit (CD) that was valued at around
$38,000 at the time of the last hearing and a savings account. The parties used the trust’s CD to
secure a $38,000 loan for themselves.
¶ 4. Father moved in with the parties following the death of husband’s mother in 2011;
husband and wife jointly cared for him. The parties separated in early 2014, and husband filed for
divorce in April of that year. About two years after the parties separated, husband moved into his
parents’ house with father. Father’s health declined over the course of the divorce proceedings.
When the family court held a status conference in January 2015, father was living in a
rehabilitation center.
¶ 5. At that January 2015 status conference, the parties discussed the parents’ revocable
trust and considered the relevance of this Court’s decision in Billings v. Billings, 2011 VT 116,
¶ 23, 190 Vt. 487, 35 A.3d 1030, and the Legislature’s subsequent amendment of 15 V.S.A.
§ 751(b)(8) in response to the Billings decision. Shortly thereafter, in February 2015, with the
1
The family division noted that the camp property consisted of two parcels, one of which
was not formally placed in the trust. The court concluded that husband’s parents inadvertently left
this parcel out and therefore considered it as part of the trust. This conclusion has not been
appealed.
2
help of an attorney, father signed an amendment to the trust that changed the sole beneficiary of
the revocable trust from husband to the parties’ son.
¶ 6. In July 2015, shortly before the first day of the contested final hearing,2 wife filed
two subpoenas: one to be served upon the rehabilitation center where father was living, requiring
production of father’s medical records, and the second to be served upon father, requiring him to
testify in the upcoming final divorce hearing. Husband filed motions to quash both subpoenas.
The court apparently did not resolve the motions at the first day of the contested divorce hearing,
and took them up on the second day of the contested final hearing, in March 2016. By that time,
a lawyer for father had entered an appearance and moved on father’s behalf to quash the subpoenas.
After taking some testimony, the court granted the motions to quash.
¶ 7. The court quashed the subpoena for father’s medical records on the basis of father’s
doctor-patient privilege. The court rejected wife’s argument that husband’s procurement of a letter
concerning father’s health from a doctor at the rehabilitation facility amounted to a waiver of
father’s doctor-patient privilege because the court concluded, after taking evidence, that father
himself had not actually authorized this disclosure.
¶ 8. Regarding the subpoena wife served upon father, the court relied on 15 V.S.A.
§ 751(b)(8)(C)(ii), which provides that third parties to a divorce shall not be required to provide
documentation or testify about their “revocable estate planning instruments,” unless a party to the
divorce has an interest in the trust that is vested and not capable of modification or divestment.
The court rejected wife’s argument that the trust was not “capable of modification or divestment”
because father did not have the testamentary capacity to amend the trust—an assertion she
contended father’s testimony would support. The court noted the difference between competence
and testamentary capacity, as well as the ebbs and flows in cognitive capacity that often accompany
2
Neither party ordered the transcript from the first day of the contested final hearing, so
we cannot tell whether the court preliminarily addressed the motions at that time, or why the
second day of the hearing did not take place until eight months later.
3
dementia. Concluding that the Legislature did not intend for courts to try to sort through these
issues concerning a third party’s testamentary capacity in connection with a revocable trust, the
court interpreted the statute to be referring to the nature of the trust, and not to the mental state of
the grantor. Because the grantor was still alive, the trust in this case was still capable of
modification.
¶ 9. The court closed the evidence at the conclusion of the March 2016 hearing. Father
died in April 2016 and wife moved to re-open the evidence in the divorce proceeding, arguing that
his death meant that husband had acquired a significant amount of assets from the trust. The court
granted wife’s motion and held a hearing in June 2016.3 At the hearing, the parties primarily
focused on the trust’s CD and the student loan that was taken out in wife’s name for the parties’
son. In documents wife submitted to the court after the hearing she argued that the court should
include the trust assets as part of the marital estate because the son was a nominee beneficiary of
the trust assets, meaning that father named him as the sole beneficiary only to shield the assets
from wife, and in the alternative that husband had equitable ownership over the trust assets.
¶ 10. The family court issued a final order in November 2016. The court considered the
§ 751(b) factors relevant to marital property division and concluded that the parties were roughly
on equal footing: the parties’ incomes were comparable, neither contributed to the vocational skills
of the other, neither had significant health issues, marital fault was not an issue, and the marriage
was long-term. The court did note, however, that husband is ten years older than wife and therefore
has fewer income-earning years left.
¶ 11. Regarding the trust, the court declined wife’s request that it treat the trust assets as
part of the marital estate. It determined that the parties’ son was not a nominee. The court
distinguished this case from our prior cases concerning nominees by noting that, because the assets
3
After granting wife’s motion to reopen the evidence, the court also held a hearing in May
2016. Neither party ordered a transcript of this hearing, so we cannot discern what evidence the
court took or whether the court made any relevant rulings in this hearing.
4
were in a revocable trust, husband never had title to them. Furthermore, the court determined that
there was no evidence of an agreement between husband and the son, by which the son would
transfer the assets back to husband and which would support the conclusion that the son was a
nominee. The court did not directly address the equitable ownership argument.
¶ 12. Although the court did not treat the trust assets as part of the marital estate, it did
consider evidence of husband’s lifestyle as impacted by the benefits he derived from the trust. The
court found it significant that husband continued to live rent-free in his parents’ house, which
belonged to the trust, and that he had no plans to leave in the near future. Considering this factor,
and wife’s extensive involvement in caring for husband’s family members during their marriage,
the court ordered that wife would have the exclusive right to live in the marital home for nine
years, but that the house would be sold if she moved out or if husband moved out of his parents’
home for a period of at least fourteen months. Both parties were ordered responsible for the loan
secured by the CD; if the parties sold the home, they would pay off the loan and divide the
remaining equity, and if husband paid the loan within the following year, wife’s right to stay in
the house would terminate and the parties would sell the home and divide the equity. The court
did not order any spousal maintenance. Wife appealed.
¶ 13. Wife first argues that the family court erred in granting husband’s motions to quash
her subpoenas because this evidence would have showed that father lacked the testamentary
capacity to amend his trust. Second, she makes two arguments for why the trust assets should
have been included in the marital estate. She argues that husband had full control over the trust
assets before and after father’s change in beneficiary and treated the property as if it were his own.
Alternatively, she contends that the parties’ son was a nominee, and father named him as the
beneficiary only to shield the assets from wife.
I. Motions to Quash
¶ 14. The family court did not err in granting husband’s motions to quash. Wife argues
that father’s testimony was relevant to her argument that he did not have the testamentary capacity
5
to amend his trust and that husband exerted pressure on him to do so, and therefore the amendment
was invalid. She argues that § 751(b)(8)(C) does not bar her subpoena to father because at the
time of the subpoena, the trust in this case was not capable of modification or divestment, as father
did not possess the testamentary capacity to amend it.4 We conclude that even if the family
division was a proper forum for making her claims—a proposition that we doubt—the statute bars
wife’s subpoena for father’s testimony.
¶ 15. As an initial matter, we question whether the family division is a proper forum in
which to challenge the validity of the trust amendment on the ground that father lacked the requisite
testamentary capacity. The Legislature has given the probate division exclusive jurisdiction over
matters involving the administration of trusts. See Vermont Comment, 14A V.S.A. § 201; 14A
V.S.A. § 203(a). The appropriate forum for challenging father’s testamentary capacity to change
his beneficiary is the probate division, not the family division. Allowing the family division to
rule on the question in the context of husband’s divorce action—in which the newly named
beneficiary, the son, is not even a party—would ignore the statutory scheme for trust
administration, create the possibility of inconsistent judgments on the same issue between two
divisions, and potentially deprive the parties’ son of his right to participate in any litigation on the
subject.5
4
Wife also asserts that father’s medical records were relevant to the question of whether
father was competent to amend his revocable trust to substitute the parties’ son, rather than father,
as the trust beneficiary. But she identifies no potentially applicable exception to the evidentiary
privilege for father’s medical records in this case, and no basis for compelling father—a third
party—to disclose his medical records. See V.R.E. 503 (describing doctor-patient privilege and
identifying exceptions to general rule of privilege); 12 V.S.A. § 1612(a) (providing that health
providers may not disclose medical information “[u]nless the patient waives the privilege” or
statute does so expressly). Although wife purports to appeal the trial court’s ruling quashing the
subpoena for father’s medical records and excluding those documents from evidence, because she
has not adequately briefed the salient legal issue, we decline to further address wife’s arguments
relating to father’s medical records.
5
We do not mean to suggest that wife would have standing to bring this claim in the
probate court; we decline to address that question in this case.
6
¶ 16. Even if the family division did have jurisdiction to determine father’s testamentary
capacity, the superior court correctly interpreted the statute to bar wife’s subpoena for father’s
testimony. We review questions of statutory interpretation without deference, and we enforce the
language according to its plain meaning. Wright v. Bradley, 2006 VT 100, ¶ 6, 180 Vt. 383, 910
A.2d 893. 15 V.S.A. § 751(b)(8)(C) states in relevant part that, “a person who is not a party to the
divorce shall not be subject to any subpoena to provide documentation or to give testimony
about: . . . (ii) his or her revocable estate planning instruments . . . unless a party’s interest in an
instrument is vested and not capable of modification or divestment.” The statutory exception
allowing a subpoena for testimony about a party’s vested interest in a trust is concerned with the
terms of the trust and not with the capacity of the grantor to amend the trust. To hold otherwise
would create a circular process: father can be compelled to testify only if husband’s interest in the
trust has effectively vested due to father’s incapacity, and wife seeks to rely on father’s compelled
testimony to prove his incapacity and thus her right to compel his testimony.
¶ 17. In this case, on the face of the trust, husband’s interest in the trust assets had not
vested before wife’s subpoena. The trust documents allowed the grantors to amend the trust until
both died, at which time the beneficiary’s interest in the trust would vest and the trustee would
distribute the assets. Father was still alive when wife served the subpoena, so any beneficiary’s
interest in the trust assets could be modified or divested. In fact, by the time of the subpoena,
father had changed the beneficiary to the parties’ son and on the face of the trust document husband
had no interest in the trust assets at all. Accordingly, the plain language of the statute applies and
the family court properly determined that wife could not subpoena father to testify about the trust.
II. Husband’s Interest in the Trust Assets
¶ 18. The family court did not err in excluding the trust assets from the marital estate.
Wife makes multiple arguments to support her assertion that the family court should have treated
the trust assets as if they belonged to husband. She contends that the parties’ son was a nominee
because father named him as the beneficiary only to shield assets from the divorce. She also argues
7
that for various reasons, husband’s control over and use of the trust property means that the
property should have been included in the marital estate. We conclude that wife’s suggestion that
father’s change of trust beneficiary was improper or suspicious is unfounded, that wife’s
arguments that the trust assets should be included in the marital estate because the son was a
nominee fail on the law and the facts, and that wife’s other legal theories in support of her claim
that the court should have included the trust in the marital estate, to the extent we understand them,
are unpersuasive. The court properly considered whatever benefit husband was deriving from the
trust in dividing the marital property, while declining to treat the trust itself as part of the marital
estate.
¶ 19. We first emphasize that wife’s general premise, that there was something fraudulent
or legally improper in the change of trust beneficiary during the divorce proceedings as an attempt
to keep the trust property out of the marital estate, is unfounded. By their nature, revocable trusts
may be freely modified or revoked. See 14A V.S.A. § 602(c) (stating that “settlor may revoke or
amend revocable trust” by complying with trust terms, executing a will or codicil explicitly doing
so, or by “any other method manifesting clear and convincing evidence of the settlor’s intent”).
The trust in this case explicitly provided that the grantors could revoke, alter, or amend the trust at
any time. During a trust grantor’s lifetime, any interest of a beneficiary is subject to the grantor’s
control. 14A V.S.A. § 603(a). Husband does not dispute that father changed the beneficiary to
the parties’ son in order to bypass husband as a beneficiary, thereby keeping the trust property out
of the marital estate. However, father was always entitled to name a new beneficiary, regardless
of timing or purpose of the amendment. The fact that he made this change during the pending
divorce in order to avoid a circumstance in which his assets would devolve to his son and become
part of the marital estate is not legally improper or fraudulent. The assets were father’s to transfer
as he wished.
¶ 20. Wife’s argument that the parties’ son was a nominee is not supported by the law or
the facts. On the law, she relies on cases that are inapposite. On the facts, wife relies on argument
8
rather than record evidence, and has failed to provide the necessary transcripts to facilitate our
review.
¶ 21. The cases wife relies on are distinguishable in a critical way. Pursuant to statute
and our jurisprudence, when a party to a divorce transfers property to a third person, a “nominee,”
with the intent of reducing the other party’s share of marital property, that property will be
considered part of the marital estate. See 15 V.S.A. § 751(a) (establishing that “[a]ll property
owned by either or both of the parties” is subject to equitable distribution and that “[t]itle to the
property, whether in the names of either or, both parties, or a nominee, shall be immaterial”);
Nevitt v. Nevitt, 155 Vt. 391, 400, 584 A.2d 1134, 1139 (1990). Wife relies partly on Nevitt, a
case in which one party to a divorce put a third person’s name on the deed of the marital home in
an attempt to “avoid distribution of the property.” 155 Vt. at 400, 584 A.2d at 1140. This Court
affirmed the trial court’s determination that the third person was a nominee and its decision to
disregard the deed when distributing property, and stated that we “will not condone such actions
when taken with intent to deprive one’s spouse of a fair portion of the marital assets.” Id. Wife
also cites Clayton v. Clayton, 153 Vt. 138, 569 A.2d 1077 (1989), a case in which the husband
transferred his stock in a family business to his sister in anticipation of a divorce proceeding. This
Court affirmed the trial court’s decision to “disregard an agreement that would have conveyed
marital assets in contemplation of divorce in return for little to no consideration,” as this sort of
agreement “has long been contrary to public policy and unenforceable as a fraudulent transfer.”
Id. at 142, 569 A.2d at 1079.
¶ 22. Nevitt and Clayton are inapposite to this case. Those cases involved the transfer of
property owned by a party to the divorce. Here, husband did not own the trust assets when his
father changed the trust beneficiary; he had only a future interest in the assets, contingent on
remaining the beneficiary of the trust. See 14A V.S.A. § 603(a) (“While a trust is revocable, rights
of the beneficiaries are subject to the control of . . . the settlor). And, as explained above, father
had the authority to change the trust beneficiary, even if done purposefully to keep the trust assets
9
out of the marital estate. The trust assets never belonged to husband; his interest was always
subject to the whims of the settlors. The property was never part of the marital estate, and father’s
decision to bypass husband and identify the parties’ son as the trust beneficiary did not improperly
deprive wife of marital property in the way that the transfers at issue in Nevitt and Clayton did.
¶ 23. More importantly, wife’s arguments are not supported by the record. In arguing
that the son in this case was a nominee and husband was the true effective beneficiary of the trust
estate wife offers no citations to the record, and points to no evidence, other than the
“suspiciousness” of the timing of the change of beneficiary, to support the contention that the son
has merely accepted the trust estate in a nominal capacity, holding it for father’s benefit upon
request. Wife has not identified any testimony showing that the son is merely a nominal holder of
the trust assets, or collusion between the son and father. Although she identifies factors from
which the court may infer such collusion, including husband’s apparent continued access to trust
assets for his own use, she has not shown based on the record in this case that the family division
abused its discretion in deciding that the son was not a nominee. See Nevitt, 155 Vt. at 400-01,
584 A.2d at 1139-40 (reviewing trial court’s decision regarding nominee for abuse of discretion).
¶ 24. Not only are wife’s arguments unsupported by citations to the record, but the record
itself is not sufficiently complete to enable us to thoroughly evaluate them. Wife ordered
transcripts of only the second day of the final divorce hearing—the day when she testified—and
ordered transcripts of only one of the two hearings the court held after reopening the evidence
upon father’s death. We have no way of knowing what evidence the court heard during those two
sessions. In fact, wife’s brief references without citation the testimony of father’s attorney relating
to the change of beneficiary, but wife has not produced any transcripts containing testimony by
this witness. See V.R.A.P. 10(b)(1) (“By failing to order a transcript, the appellant waives the
right to raise any issue for which a transcript is necessary for informed appellate review.”); Evans
v. Cote, 2014 VT 104, ¶ 7, 197 Vt. 523, 107 A.3d 911 (“Without the transcript, this Court assumes
that the trial court’s findings are supported by the evidence.”).
10
¶ 25. We are also not persuaded by wife’s litany of arguments that the trust assets should
be treated as though they belong to husband because he had full use and control of the trust before
and after father changed the beneficiary, as well as after father’s death. Wife emphasizes that
while father was alive, husband co-mingled trust funds with his own, used the trust checking
account as though it were his own account, and lived in his parents’ house as if it were his own.
She additionally stresses that after father died, the trust property should have been distributed to
the beneficiary, the parties’ son, but husband continued to control the property and live in his
parents’ house. Wife’s translation of these factual claims into a viable legal argument that the
family division should have treated the trust as part of the marital estate is not entirely clear, and
her arguments evolved over the course of this case. However, none of the arguments are
meritorious.
¶ 26. We are not convinced by wife’s contention that husband had “equitable ownership”
over the trust assets and they should therefore be included in the marital estate. Wife raised this
argument before the family division only tangentially, and the court did not address it in on the
record or in its written order. Wife also did not brief this argument on appeal, but her counsel did
raise it during oral argument.
¶ 27. Without more support for this argument, it is unclear exactly what wife is arguing.
In the context of trust law, all beneficiaries have equitable ownership in the trust assets.
Restatement (Third) of Trusts Intro. Note (2003) (“Inherent in the Anglo-American trust is a
separation of interests in its subject matter, the beneficiaries having equitable property interests
and the trustee having a property interest that is normally a legal interest.”); see also Equitable
Ownership, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining term “equitable ownership” as “[a]
beneficiary’s interest in trust property”). Insofar as the term “equitable ownership” is typically
used in trust law, wife’s argument is nothing more than a reassertion of her position, discussed
above, that notwithstanding the beneficiary designation on the face of the trust, husband was the
actual beneficiary.
11
¶ 28. If wife is instead requesting that the Court craft an equitable remedy on the basis
that husband is unjustly enriched by his use of the trust assets, we are similarly unpersuaded. See,
e.g., Weed v. Weed, 2008 VT 121, ¶ 17, 185 Vt. 83, 968 A.2d 310 (recognizing constructive trust
as equitable remedy “to avoid unconscionable results and to prevent unjust enrichment”). The
parties’ son’s interest has vested, and he therefore has a legal ownership interest in the trust
property, regardless of husband’s continued use of it. It would not be equitable to divest the son
of his interest in the trust in order to subject the property to the distribution of marital property. If
the son wants to bring a claim against husband for breaching trustee duties by using trust property
for his own benefit and failing to distribute trust property as required by the trust documents, he
may do so. See 14A V.S.A. § 802(a) (“A trustee shall administer the trust solely in the interests
of the beneficiaries.”); 14A V.S.A. § 817(b) (providing that, when trust terminates, trustee is to
“proceed expeditiously to distribute the trust property to the persons entitled to it”). The probate
division would be the proper forum in which to bring this claim. 14A V.S.A. § 201(c). However,
the remedy for husband’s alleged misconduct would not be to subject the trust property to equitable
distribution in husband’s and wife’s divorce proceeding. See 14A V.S.A. § 1001(b) (listing
remedies probate court may impose after concluding breach of duty occurred).
¶ 29. In another attempt to argue that the trust funds should be included in the marital
estate, wife contends that the Court should pierce the trust “veil,” similar to the way a court may
pierce the corporate veil, and include the trust assets in the marital estate. Wife did not frame the
argument this way before the family division, and the court therefore did not have a chance to rule
on it. This Court need not address arguments not properly preserved below. See State v. Ben-
Mont Corp., 163 Vt. 53, 61, 652 A.2d 1004, 1009 (1994). Nonetheless, we note that this appears
to be a novel legal theory that is not supported by our law.
¶ 30. Even if we were to import this concept into the area of trust law, it is unclear how
it would apply to this context. First, there is no indication of fraud or improper behavior. We have
held that a court may pierce the corporate veil “where the corporate form has been used to
12
perpetrate a fraud, and also where the needs of justice dictate.” Agway, Inc. v. Brooks, 173 Vt.
259, 262, 790 A.2d 438, 441 (2001) (citation omitted). The record does not reflect that fraudulent
or otherwise improper behavior was involved in this case. As explained above, it was father’s
prerogative to change the trust’s beneficiary at any time and for any purpose. And, if wife is
arguing that husband’s actions in using the trust funds as his own were fraudulent or unjust, then
that claim would again more properly be raised as a breach of fiduciary duty in the probate division
because it deals with the administration of a trust. 14A V.S.A. § 201(c).6
¶ 31. Furthermore, it is unclear what “piercing the veil” would mean in this case. A court
may pierce a corporate veil to hold a shareholder personally liable to corporate creditors when the
shareholder intentionally used the corporation to shield personal assets from creditor claims. See
Agway, Inc., 173 Vt. at 263, 790 A.2d at 442 (reasoning that piercing corporate veil proper when
sole shareholder “purposefully undercapitalized [a corporation] with the intention of isolating his
debt from business and personal assets”). Wife is analogizing the corporate form to a trust, arguing
that the trust in this case was used to intentionally shield husband’s property from the divorce. Her
analogy, however, falls short for several reasons. For one, in contrast to the corporate scenario
above, the trust assets here did not belong to husband. Secondly, we reiterate that after father died,
the beneficiary’s interest vested and the trustee was obligated to distribute the assets. The parties’
son now has a present legal interest in the trust property; husband, as trustee, has no interest in the
property so “piercing the veil” would require depriving a third party—the parties’ son—of assets
to which he is entitled.
¶ 32. Although the family division was correct to exclude the trust assets from the marital
estate, it properly considered husband’s lifestyle and the benefits husband derived from the trust
when dividing marital property. For example, the court emphasized that husband is living in his
parents’ house rent-free and will stay there for the foreseeable future. Consequently, the court
6
We again decline to consider whether wife would have standing to bring this claim in
the probate division.
13
awarded wife exclusive rights to live in the marital home for nine years, contingent on her staying
in the home and husband staying in his parents’ house. Which is now owned by the trust. This
was an appropriate way to consider husband’s use of the trust property. See, e.g., 15 V.S.A.
§ 751(b)(8)(A) (providing that court “may consider the parties’ lifestyle and decisions made during
the marriage and any other competent evidence as related to their expectations of gifts or an
inheritance”). This was the proper way to take into account the facts wife relies on in her
arguments, and the family division did not err in declining to include the trust itself in the marital
estate.
Affirmed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
14