HONOLULU — A 92-year-old Native Hawaiian heiress doesn’t have sufficient mental capacity to manage her $215-million trust, a judge ruled Monday in a bitter case that has raised allegations her wife is trying to wrestle control over her assets.
Abigail Kawananakoa inherited her wealth by being the great-granddaughter of James Campbell, an Irish businessman who made his fortune as a sugar plantation owner and one of Hawaii’s largest landowners.
Native Hawaiians, who consider her a princess because she’s a descendant of the family that ruled the islands before the overthrow of the Hawaiian kingdom in 1893, have been watching the case closely because they are concerned about the fate of the foundation she set up to benefit Hawaiian causes.
The judge appointed First Hawaiian Bank to serve as trustee and removed Jim Wright, Kawananakoa’s longtime former attorney who stepped in as trustee after she suffered a stroke last year.
Kawananakoa said she’s fine, fired Wright and then married her girlfriend of 20 years. She attempted to amend her trust to remove Wright and replace him with three others, including her wife, Veronica Gail Worth.
Removing a trustee is less complex than replacing one, Judge Robert Browning said in not allowing her to select new trustees. Browning said he spent many days pondering his decision, which he said didn’t change after hearing arguments Monday.
It’s an important decision, partly because Kawananakoa is revered, he said. “She is someone for who many years … dedicated her life, energy and money to promoting and preserving Native Hawaiian culture,” he said.
Wright’s court filings raised allegations that Worth physically abused her. As trustee, Wright appointed Native Hawaiian leaders to serve as board members of Kawananakoa’s $100-million foundation. Those members accused Worth of exploiting Kawananakoa.
Worth’s attorney, Michael Rudy, denied the allegations. A special master’s report found no evidence of undue influence caused by physical abuse, Kawananakoa’s attorney, Michael Lilly, said.
Lilly said Kawananakoa intends to leave the bulk of her estate to Native Hawaiians. He argued that opponents have inaccurately portrayed the case as a controversy.
Roseanne Goo, an attorney representing the foundation, cried as she urged the judge to consider what is right for Kawananakoa.
Even though she doesn’t have a relationship with her, she and others “hold her in this special place because she is a vulnerable kupuna,” Goo said.