“The clause reads: ‘The bequest to my son, Thomas Richard Mitchell, of controlling voting interest in Mitchell Shipping Company and related family trusts is conditional upon my wife, Eleanor Grace Mitchell, exercising sole discretion regarding his conduct during my final illness, death, funeral arrangements, and immediate family obligations. Should Eleanor determine that Thomas’s behavior has been disrespectful, negligent, exploitative, or incompatible with the values necessary to steward the Mitchell legacy, she may invoke this clause to redirect his inheritance pursuant to Alternative Distribution Plan C.’”
The room went still.
Thomas stared at Walter.
“That can’t be legal,” he said.
“It is,” Walter replied. “Your father had the provision reviewed by three independent legal teams, including counsel specializing in high-value estate litigation. The language is specific, the discretion is clearly assigned, and the alternative plan is fully defined.”
Victoria gripped Thomas’s arm. “What does this mean?”
Walter turned to Eleanor.
“Mrs. Mitchell,” he said, “do you wish to invoke the moral character clause?”
All eyes moved to her.