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RESPONDENT: How did you do that?
ROBERT HOGUE: By my own wishes.
RESPONDENT: Do you have the trust instrument on a
computer?
ROBERT HOGUE: Do I have it on a computer?
RESPONDENT: How did you, physically, how did you
make the change to the trust instrument?
ROBERT HOGUE: I had the documents to do it. The
little disk.
RESPONDENT: A computer disk?
ROBERT HOGUE: Sure.
RESPONDENT: So you put the computer disk into a
computer and you typed over the earlier terms of the
trust?
ROBERT HOGUE: I didn’t type over. I just modified
it.
* * * * * * *
RESPONDENT: * * * I direct your attention to the
eighth article, where it states how a successor trustee
is appointed.
* * * * * * *
RESPONDENT: Okay. In the version of the trust
instrument that was presented into evidence in the
earlier case, it stated as Judge Halpern quoted in his
opinion, that a successor trustee could be appointed
either by a court or by concurrence between the trust
beneficiaries.
So again, is it your testimony that you * * * replaced
this provision with what was in the earlier version of
the trust instrument?
ROBERT HOGUE: Absolutely.
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Last modified: May 25, 2011