Horsley v. Wardwell

CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedJanuary 4, 2023
Docket1:22-cv-00217
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Horsley v. Wardwell, (D. Idaho 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO

NORMAN HORSLEY, an individual, Case No. 1:22-cv-00217-BLW

Plaintiff, MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER v.

WILLIAM WARDWELL, individually and as Trustee of the Shirley Packer Trust,

Defendant.

INTRODUCTION Defendant William Wardwell’s Motion to Dismiss (Dkt. 10) is fully briefed and before the Court. The Court will grant the motion and dismiss Horsley’s claims with prejudice. BACKGROUND The great American satirist, Ambrose Bierce, once cynically observed that “death is not the end. There remains the litigation over the estate.”1 Sadly, that dim

1 Ambrose Bierce Quotes, BRAINYQUOTE, https://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/ambrose_bierce_128141 (last visited Dec. 29, 2022). view of reality was borne out in this case. Shirley Packer, the grantor of the Shirley Packer Trust, passed away in 2008.

Unfortunately, the administration of her Trust quickly broke down. What ensued, in one arbitrator’s words, is a “tragic true story of a family gone asunder” and a “family inheritance materially depleted or diverted because of real and imagined

misconduct.” Verified Petition at 72, Dkt. 10-3. Today’s iteration of the trust dispute involves claims by Plaintiff Norman Horsley, a Trust beneficiary, against Defendant William Wardwell, a court- appointed trustee. Horsley has two main complaints. First, he claims that all state

court orders and judgments previously entered regarding distribution of the Trust are void because the state courts lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter them. And second, Horsley claims that Wardwell violated fiduciary duties in his

capacities as a trustee and an attorney. Before analyzing these claims, the Court reviews the relevant litigation history.2 1. The Arbitration Agreement

2 Both parties request judicial notice of numerous exhibits under Federal Rule of Evidence 201. Wardwell’s exhibits include pleadings of the Magistrate and District Courts of Owyhee County, Idaho. Dkt. 10-16. Horsley’s exhibits include many of the same records as well as the Rules of the American Arbitration Association. Dkts. 22-2 & 23. The Court finds that the exhibits offered by both parties constitute “matter[s] of public record” not subject to reasonable dispute, and the Court therefore takes judicial notice of each. Fed. R. Evid. 201(b). The Trust named Norman and Scott Horsley, Shirley’s sons, as co-trustees of the Trust. Id. at 73. Right out of the gates, alleged misconduct by both led to

litigation, mediation, and a settlement in 2009. Id. The parties memorialized the settlement in a Settlement Memorandum adopted by the Honorable Dan Grober of the Third Judicial District. Id. at 54. The Memorandum contained the following

arbitration provision: Any dispute arising between or among Beneficiaries, or between or among any Beneficiary and the Trustee shall be resolved by binding arbitration in Owyhee County, Idaho, situs of the Trust Registration, in accordance [with] the rules of the American Arbitration Association. Any party to such arbitration must be represented by an attorney in the proceedings. The prevailing party in arbitration shall be entitled to an award of reasonable attorney's fees and costs incurred. Id. at 58. In April 2010, Judge Grober affirmed that the arbitration provision “binds all beneficiaries and successor trustees to resolve all issues concerning The Shirley Packer Trust through binding arbitration.” Def.’s Br. at 3, Dkt. 10-1. 2. Past Arbitration Proceedings In the years following the 2009 settlement, Horsley invoked the arbitration provision to initiate two arbitration proceedings.3 Id. at 4. In the first, Horsley

3 The first arbitration began in 2012 and concluded in 2013. The second began in 2016 and concluded in 2017. Def.’s Br. at 3, Dkt. 10-1. brought claims against Scott and other beneficiaries. On April 17, 2013, the arbitrator issued a final award against Horsley based on claim preclusion and

awarded over $65,000 in attorneys’ fees against Horsley. Verified Petition at 75, Dkt. 10-3. In the second arbitration, Horsley brought claims against Wardwell, whom

the Court had appointed in January 2014 to administer the Trust. Id. at 76. The arbitrator issued a Partial Final Award in February 2017. After a scathing review of Horsley’s conduct—“bordering on paranoia”—the arbitrator addressed Horsley’s claims point-by-point. Id. at 85–86. One issue presented was “[w]hether the

Trustee has breached his duties to the beneficiaries” by: expending trust funds to resist arbitration; expending trust funds to resolve disputes between the Trustee and the Beneficiaries outside of arbitration and engaging in self-dealing by hiring his own law firm to represent him in disputes with the beneficiaries; failure to pay attorney fees pursuant to the agreement, even the attorney fees that he agreed were to be paid; using trust funds to engage in actions which represented a conflict of interest between himself and a beneficiary; failure to provide an accounting; and failure to allocate receipts and disbursements to principal and income.

Id. at 86. The arbitrator concluded that “Wardwell has [not] committed any breaches of duty.” Id. And in his Final Award in May 2017, the arbitrator again affirmed that “Will convincingly established at the final hearing that [Horsley’s] objections to Will’s performance as trustee were invalid.” Id. at 91. In November 2017, the Honorable Thomas Ryan of the Third Judicial District issued an order and

judgment confirming the arbitrator’s Partial and Final awards. Id. at 101–06. 3. Subsequent Attempts to Arbitrate In July 2018, ten years after the Trust became irrevocable, Wardwell

petitioned the Third Judicial District to confirm his final accounting of Trust assets and liabilities and approve a final plan of distribution. Id. Shortly thereafter, Horsley filed an answer to Wardwell’s petition objecting that the petition—a judicial action—could not be filed with the court because the arbitration provision

prohibited Wardwell from litigating rather than arbitrating Trust matters. Memo. Decision at 3, Dkt. 10-4. Wardwell moved for summary judgment because Horsley’s objections were

similar to those previously raised in the 2016–2017 arbitration. The court agreed and granted summary judgment on April 8, 2019. Id. at 7. Res judicata barred Horsley’s objections because the prior arbitration “gave all involved a full and fair forum to be heard” and “resulted in an arbitrator’s award which was reduced to a

judgment.” Id. Horsley promptly filed a formal application for arbitration, asking the court to refer the Trustee’s petition and related disputes to arbitration. Def.’s Br. at 7, Dkt. 10-1. Shortly thereafter, the court entered a final judgment approving Wardwell’s final accounting and plan of distribution and authorizing him to

distribute Trust assets to the beneficiaries. Final Judgment ¶ 6, Dkt. 10-5. The Judgment stated that “[a]ll potential claims by Beneficiaries have been fully arbitrated or released.” Id.

With a judgment in hand finalizing the Trust accounting and distribution, Wardwell moved to dismiss Horsley’s application for arbitration. Before the court could resolve the motion for arbitration and motion to dismiss, Horsley made yet another attempt to initiate arbitration, this time in the form of a motion to

reconsider the court’s April 8 order. Def.’s Br. at 8, Dkt. 10-1. On August 30, 2019, the court resolved the outstanding motions, denying Horsley’s application for arbitration, motion to reconsider, and request for a stay of the litigation. Memo.

Decision, Dkt. 10-6.

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