Eitel v. PNC Bank, NA

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedNovember 24, 2020
Docket3:20-cv-00012
StatusUnknown

This text of Eitel v. PNC Bank, NA (Eitel v. PNC Bank, NA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eitel v. PNC Bank, NA, (W.D. Ky. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF KENTUCKY LOUISVILLE DIVISION

MARY EITEL Plaintiff

v. Civil Action No. 3:20-cv-12-RGJ

PNC BANK, N.A. ET AL Defendants

* * * * * MEMORANDUM OPINION & ORDER

Plaintiff Mary Eitel (“Plaintiff”) moves to amend her Complaint. [DE 90]. Defendants PNC Bank, N.A. (“PNC”), South State Bank, N.A. (“South State Bank”), Marilyn Casey Eitel (“Marilyn Eitel”), Wells Fargo & Company, Wachovia Bank, N.A., and First Union Corporation (collectively “Wells Fargo Defendants”), and Wiley Ellis (“Ellis”), individually and on behalf of Ellis, Painter, Ratterree & Adams, LLP (“the Firm”), responded. [DE 91, 92, 93, 94, 95]. Plaintiff replied. [DE 99]. In addition, before Plaintiff filed the present Motion to Amend, various Defendants moved to dismiss, including Defendant Michael E. Cofield.1 [DE 23, 37, 41, 43, 44, and 45]. Plaintiff responded [DE 66]. For the reasons below, the Motion to Amend [DE 90] is GRANTED and the motions to dismiss are DENIED [DE 23, 37, 41, 43, 44, and 45]. I. BACKGROUND Plaintiff alleges that Defendants have denied her rightful trust benefits in three trusts created by her paternal grandparents. 1. The testamentary trusts – Senior’s Trust Under Will and Bernice’s Trust Under Will

The first trust at issue was created by Plaintiff’s paternal grandfather, Paul T. Eitel, Sr. (“Senior”): the 1968 Paul T. Eitel, Sr. Trust Under Will (“Senior’s Trust Under Will”) [DE 23-2;

1 Plaintiff’s Proposed Second Amended Complaint drops Michael E. Cofield as a party. DE 90-1 at 1255]. The second trust was created by Plaintiff’s paternal grandmother, Berenice L. Eitel (“Bernice”): the 1977 Bernice L. Eitel Trust Under Will (“Bernice’s Trust Under Will”) [DE 23-3; DE 90-1 at 1257]. Both Senior’s Trust Under Will and Bernice’s Trust Under Will paid income to Plaintiff’s father, Paul T. Eitel, Jr. (“Junior”), during his lifetime. These trusts permitted discretionary distributions of trust principal to Junior for his health, maintenance, and welfare.

Upon Junior’s death, each testamentary trust distributed remaining assets equally (“per stirpes”) to Junior’s then-living children. 2. The inter-vivos trust – Senior’s Trust Under Agreement The third trust is an inter-vivos trust created by Senior: the 1963 Paul T. Eitel, Sr. Trust Agreement (“Senior’s Trust Under Agreement”) [DE 23-4; DE 90-1 at 1245]. Senior’s Trust Under Agreement paid income to Plaintiff’s grandmother, Berenice, during her lifetime. [Id.] Upon Berenice’s death, the trust required the remaining principal be divided equally into separate trusts for the benefit of Senior’s then-living children “and their families.” [Id.] At the time of Berenice’s death in 1977, Senior had two surviving children: Junior and Helen Rollins. Plaintiff

was twenty years old for when Berenice died. [DE 90-1 at 1249]. Senior’s Trust Under Agreement required that the income of the trust created for Junior’s benefit be paid to him during his lifetime. [DE 90-1 at 1255]. Like Senior’s Trust Under Will and Bernice’s Trust Under Will above, Senior’s Trust Under Agreement also entitled the trustee to use “some portion of the fund or funds for the education . . . or the maintenance in health and reasonable comfort of the income beneficiary,” including Junior. [Id.] The parties dispute what should happen under this trust upon Junior’s death. Plaintiff argues that upon Junior’s death the assets of the trust are to be distributed to Junior’s then-living issue.2 South State Bank argues that upon the death of Junior, his then-living spouse, Marilyn, was to continue to receive income and upon her death, the assets of his trust were to be distributed “per stirpes” to the then-living “issue” of Junior. 3. The Present Federal Lawsuit

Plaintiff filed a pro se complaint in this Court on January 8, 2020 claiming Racketeering, Fraud, Breach of Fiduciary Duty, Civil Conspiracy/Aiding and Abetting, Tortious Interference with an Inheritance, and Professional Negligence. [DE 1]. South State Bank moved to dismiss. [DE 23]. Less than two months later, Plaintiff then filed an Amended Complaint pro se without seeking consent of the other parties or leave of the Court.3 [DE 34]. The Wells Fargo Defendants moved to dismiss [DE 37, DE 41], and motions to dismiss were filed by PNC Bank [DE 43], South State Bank and Savannah Bank and Trust [DE 44], and Michael E. Cofield [DE 45]. Eitel engaged counsel to represent her and now seeks to amend her complaint a second time (“Proposed Second

2 Plaintiff argues that the “spouse” referenced in Senior’s Trust Under Agreement is not Junior’s wife Marilyn. Plaintiff argues that Item IV of this trust provides that “[e]very trust created hereunder shall terminate, in any event, twenty-one (21) years after the death of the last to survive of Settlor’s wife, Berenice Lawson Eitel, Settlor’s children, their spouses and issue, living on the date of the execution of this agreement . . . .” Plaintiff argues the reference to “spouse,” could therefore only be to Plaintiff’s mother to whom Junior was married when this trust was executed. [DE 99, Reply at 1484, n.2].

3 When a pleading is amended without leave of court or consent of opposing parties, it may either be considered a nullity, United States ex rel. Mathews v. HealthSouth Corp., 332 F.3d 293, 296 (5th Cir. 2003), or taken as properly introduced “as long as the amendments do not unfairly surprise or prejudice the defendant,” Hicks v. Resolution Trust Corp., 767 F. Supp. 167, 170 (N.D. Ill. 1991); see 6 Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1484 (noting that an improperly filed amended complaint may be still allowed “when leave to amend would have been granted had it been sought and when it does not appear that any of the parties will be prejudiced by allowing the change.”). Amended Complaint”). [DE 90]. Eitel’s Proposed Second Amended Complaint is sixty-four pages long. [DE 90-1].4 The complete factual allegations of Plaintiff’s claims are discussed below in relation to the claims. Among many complaints, the chief claim is that the various trustees permitted encroachments by Junior of the three trusts’ principal that were unnecessary or improper and

designed to transfer money from the trusts to Junior’s wife, Marylin, and to fund a trust for Marilyn. [DE 90-1 at 1267, 1281]. 4. The Probate Matters relating to Senior’s Trust Under Will and Bernice’s Trust Under Will

South State Bank, as trustee, filed two proceedings in Kentucky state probate court to modify the testamentary trusts in 2016: In re: Paul T. Eitel, Sr. Trust U/W FBO Paul T. Eitel, Jr., Jefferson District Court (Probate), Case No. 16-P-004454 (“Probate Case 4454”) and In re: Berenice L. Eitel Trust U/W FBO Paul T. Eitel, Jr., Jefferson District Court (Probate), Case No. 16-P-004453 (“Probate Case 4453”). After Junior died in November 2018, South State Bank moved the probate court in those proceedings to settle the trusts’ accounts and make final distributions to Plaintiff and her brother, Paul T. Eitel, III. After filing her Complaint in this case, Plaintiff objected to South State Bank’s proposed final distributions and accountings in these

4 Under the Proposed Second Amended Complaint, Eitel alleges: (1) racketeering under 18 U.S.C. 1964

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Eitel v. PNC Bank, NA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eitel-v-pnc-bank-na-kywd-2020.