Estate of Draper v. Bank of America, N.A.

205 P.3d 698, 288 Kan. 510, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 77
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 17, 2009
Docket96,060
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 205 P.3d 698 (Estate of Draper v. Bank of America, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Draper v. Bank of America, N.A., 205 P.3d 698, 288 Kan. 510, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 77 (kan 2009).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

This case involves questions concerning the availability of a constructive trust remedy when an estate attempts to bring into the estate some assets that the decedent wrongfully transferred. In addition, issues are raised regarding the applicability of the nonclaim statute and various other statutes of limitation to claims brought by the estate against those who possess the assets.

We hold a constructive trust was appropriately imposed by the district court. Uncontroverted facts establish that the decedent executed an antenuptial agreement in which she promised to devise a specified portion of her entire estate to her husband’s sons from a prior marriage. Decedent violated the duty of good faith implied in that agreement by placing almost all of her assets in irrevocable trusts that did not benefit her husband’s sons. We further hold that tire nonclaim statute does not apply to the Estate’s action to marshal assets and the Estate’s action did not accrue until the decedent’s death, at the earliest.

Background

In April 1967, Clark Draper and Ethel Catlin executed an antenuptial agreement in contemplation of their marriage. Although Ethel had no children, Clark had three sons from a previous marriage. The antenuptial agreement stated that both Clark and Ethel had “substantial property and property rights” and provided that each would retain his or her separate assets and that neither would dispose of property without the consent of the other. Income from the assets would be shared in “a common fund for their mutual support and living expenses.” The parties acknowledged that each of them had prepared wills to be executed after the marriage and agreed they would not revise or revoke the wills “during the lifetime of both the parties hereto without both parties hereto consenting to such change.” Ethel agreed that she would consent to Clark’s will and, if she survived Clark, she would maintain a valid will devising to Clark’s sons “not less than one-fourth to each of them of her entire estate remaining after the payment of debts, *514 administrative expense, taxes or other obligations.” Clark executed a will leaving a substantial portion of his estate to Ethel should she survive him.

Clark died testate in January 1977, and Ethel (Ethel F. Draper) received her share of his estate as Clark’s surviving spouse. In September 1977, before Clark’s estate was settled, Ethel created and funded an irrevocable trust whose successor trustee is UMB Bank, N.A. (UMB). This trust allowed Ethel to receive the income and corpus during her lifetime. Upon her death, the trust income and corpus were to be distributed to, among others: First Christian Church of Olathe, the Kansas City Chapter of the American Cancer Society (American Cancer Society), Olathe Medical Center, Mary Helen Moeller, and Janis M. Waleski Murphy. Clark’s sons were not mentioned.

In April 1982, Ethel executed a will which divided her estate equally among Clark’s three sons. That same day, Ethel created another irrevocable trust whose successor trustee is Bank of America. As with the other trust, Ethel was to receive income from the trust and could receive the corpus. The remainder beneficiaries of this trust were the same as those listed in the 1977 UMB trust. When Ethel died in October 2002, she left a probate estate' of less than $10,000, while the total assets in the two irrevocable trusts exceeded $1 million. Ethel’s will was admitted to probate in January 2003.

In December 2003, Clark’s son Gerald T. Draper, executor of the Estate of Ethel F. Draper, deceased (Estate), filed this action on behalf of the Estate against Bank of America and UMB. In the petition and a subsequently filed first-amended petition, the Estate alleged Ethel “was beyond her authority and capacity under the constraints of the antenuptial agreement” when she transferred most of her assets into the two irrevocable trusts. As a result, the transfers were void and the assets “remain assets of her probate estate.” More specifically, the Estate alleged that Ethel committed intentional fraud and “fraud implied in the law” and that she breached the antenuptial contract and her fiduciary duties. All of these claims are based on the obligations imposed on Ethel in the antenuptial agreement, which according to the Estate made Ethel *515 a “continuous trustee of all of her assets” and created a special, fiduciary duty to act in good faith to preserve the assets for disposition by will. The requested remedy was primarily the imposition of a constructive trust on three-quarters of the trust assets and to place diese assets in die Estate. Later, the petition was amended to add the trust beneficiaries as defendants.

In its answer to the petition, the American Cancer Society claimed that the Estate’s action was barred by the statutes of limitation and repose in K.S.A. 60-511, K.S.A. 60-513, and K.S.A. 60-515. It also claimed that the limitations period under K.S.A. 59-2239 for filing estate claims had expired. The American Cancer Society filed a motion to dismiss based on these statutes, and the other named defendants joined in this motion.

The Estate’s response to the motion to dismiss was that none of the statutes cited could apply to the Estate, which exists as a separate entity from Ethel herself. The district court agreed with the Estate and denied the defendants’ motion to dismiss, stating that this was “an action on behalf of the estate to marshal the assets, period.” Following this ruling, the Estate reached a settlement with Olathe Medical Center and American Cancer Society. Next, First Christian, Waleski Murphy, and Moeller filed a motion for summary judgment, and the Estate did as well. In its memorandum decision, the district court concluded that the antenuptial agreement contained an implied duty which prevented Ethel from divesting Clark’s sons of their share of the trust assets. In the district court’s view, the antenuptial agreement had created a life estate for Ethel in the marital property.

The district court also found that Ethel’s transfers to the irrevocable trusts were void because the transfers exceeded her authority under the agreement. The court granted the Estate’s summary judgment motion and ordered that the property be placed in a constructive trust for Clark’s sons. The defendants’ motions for summary judgment were denied.

First Christian, Waleski Murphy, and Moeller appealed the district court’s decision. UMB and Bank of America were also parties to the appeal because of their roles as trustees. First Christian contended on appeal that (1) the district court erred in ordering a *516 constructive trust in favor of the Estate on the assets of the irrevocable trusts because it did not make a finding of fraud; (2) K.S.A. 60-515

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 P.3d 698, 288 Kan. 510, 2009 Kan. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-draper-v-bank-of-america-na-kan-2009.