In re Phillips Living Trust

2022 UT App 12, 505 P.3d 1127
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 27, 2022
Docket20200381-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2022 UT App 12 (In re Phillips Living Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Phillips Living Trust, 2022 UT App 12, 505 P.3d 1127 (Utah Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

2022 UT App 12

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

IN THE MATTER OF THE JOHN EDWARD PHILLIPS FAMILY LIVING TRUST.

PETER O. PHILLIPS, Appellant, v. BANK OF UTAH, ET AL., Appellees.

Opinion No. 20200381-CA Filed January 27, 2022

First District Court, Logan Department The Honorable Angela Fonnesbeck No. 183100095

Adam S. Affleck, Attorney for Appellant Brett N. Anderson and Scott R. Taylor, Attorneys for Appellee Bank of Utah James K. Tracy, Robert S. Tippett, James C. Dunkelberger, and Hyrum Jacob Bosserman, Attorneys for Appellee Rachel Phillips Selby Fred D. Essig and Troy L. Booher, Attorneys for Appellees Shaun Phillips, Michelle Mittleman, Doris Rubio, and Charlene Phillips

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGE GREGORY K. ORME and SENIOR JUDGE KATE APPLEBY concurred.1

1. Senior Judge Kate Appleby sat by special assignment as authorized by law. See generally Utah R. Jud. Admin. 11-201(7). In re Phillips Living Trust

CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER, Judge:

¶1 This case concerns the administration of the testamentary trust of John Edward Phillips (the JEP Trust). The terms of the JEP Trust provided that upon the death of John Edward Phillips (John),2 the trust assets were to be divided in three shares among John’s three sons. The shares of two of the sons, James E. Phillips and Peter O. Phillips, were to be held in separate trusts for their respective benefit. The third son, John C. Phillips (Johnny), was named trustee of the JEP Trust and of his brothers’ subtrusts.

¶2 After Johnny died, Bank of Utah (the Bank) became the successor trustee of the JEP Trust and Peter’s daughter, Rachel Phillips Selby, was appointed successor trustee of the Peter O. Phillips subtrust (POP Trust). The Bank distributed by selling a valuable trust asset, a farm property, to the highest bidder, which was Johnny’s estate (the JCP Estate).

¶3 Peter, the main beneficiary of the POP Trust, took issue with the Bank’s sale of the farm property to the JCP Estate. Peter filed a petition seeking to have the farm property returned to the JEP Trust and to remove the Bank as its successor trustee.

¶4 The Bank moved to dismiss Peter’s petition on the ground that Peter lacked standing to challenge the distribution by sale of the farm property and its role as trustee because Peter was not a beneficiary of the JEP Trust. The district court agreed but did not dismiss the petition. Instead, it substituted Selby as the petitioner because, as the trustee of the POP Trust, she was the real party in interest and therefore was the one with standing to pursue the claims.

2. As is our practice, because the parties share the same last name, we refer to each by their first name, with no disrespect intended by the apparent informality.

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¶5 Selby and the other parties eventually executed an agreement in which they settled all claims in the lawsuit. The parties then submitted the signed agreement to the court for approval. After this, Peter filed a motion to intervene. The court denied Peter’s motion as untimely and approved the settlement agreement.

¶6 Peter now challenges the district court’s decisions to (1) dismiss him for lack of standing and substitute Selby as the real party in interest and (2) deny his motion to intervene. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶7 John created the JEP Trust through a restated trust agreement and three amendments. The terms of the final JEP Trust provided that the relevant JEP Trust assets were to be divided into three shares for his sons: 45% to Johnny; 30% to James; and 25% to Peter.3 The manner of distribution for each share was also provided. Per the terms of the original JEP Trust document, James’s share was to “be held in a separate Trust for the benefit of James E. Phillips and his issue,” with Johnny as trustee. And under the terms of the third amendment to the JEP Trust, Peter’s share should be “distributed in the identical manner” as that of James’s; that is, through a subtrust.

¶8 John died in May of 2014, triggering the distribution of the JEP Trust assets. In accordance with the second amendment to the JEP Trust, Johnny became sole trustee of the JEP Trust.

¶9 Shortly after John’s death, Peter filed a petition in the district court asking to (1) invalidate the second and third amendments to the JEP Trust, (2) remove Johnny as trustee of

3. John also has a daughter who was awarded “zero percent” of the trust assets.

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the JEP Trust and appoint a successor trustee, (3) order Johnny to provide an accounting for the JEP Trust, and (4) declare that Peter’s share of the JEP Trust would not be held in a separate trust.

¶10 Peter, Johnny, and James signed a stipulation that resolved all these issues except the accounting issue. As relevant here, the stipulation (1) declared the second and third amendments to the JEP Trust to be valid; (2) kept Johnny as trustee of the JEP Trust but named Peter’s daughter, Rachel Phillips Selby, as successor trustee of the POP Trust; and (3) declared that Peter’s share of the JEP Trust would be paid to the POP Trust, not to Peter. With regard to the accounting issue, the stipulation provided that Peter would retain his claims “related to the accounting of and the distribution of the assets of the JEP Trust.”

¶11 In 2015, while serving as trustee of the JEP Trust, Johnny died. Johnny’s undistributed share of the JEP Trust passed to the JCP Estate. The Bank was appointed as the successor trustee of the JEP Trust.

¶12 In 2017, the Bank, as trustee, began to market approximately 47.75 acres of farm property held by the JEP Trust. After weeks of formal listing, the Bank received multiple offers from third parties to purchase the farm property. The “highest and best offer” received was an offer of $2,350,000 from a local homebuilder. The Bank disclosed these offers to the JEP Trust beneficiaries and other members of the Phillips family and invited them to submit competing offers to purchase the farm property; offers could include “a credit against the beneficiary’s anticipated distribution.”

¶13 Thereafter, Charlene Phillips, Johnny’s estranged wife, made an initial offer (the JCP Offer) to purchase the farm property for a credit against her share of the JEP Trust on terms

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equal to the net value of the highest third-party offer.4 The JCP Offer was then modified a number of times to ensure that the purchase price was equal to or greater than the third-party offer. In the end, the Bank accepted the modified JCP Offer, netting an increase to the POP Trust of $1,179 over the highest third-party offer, and conveyed the farm property to the JCP Estate.5

¶14 Unhappy with the transaction, Peter filed a petition in the district court seeking relief on three claims related to the Bank’s distribution of the farm property. First, Peter sought a declaration that Johnny’s share of the JEP Trust should have been distributed to Johnny’s children instead of to the JCP Estate. Second, Peter sought to remove the Bank as trustee of the JEP Trust. Third, Peter sought to set aside the Bank’s transfer of the farm property to the JCP Estate.

¶15 The Bank moved to dismiss Peter’s petition for lack of standing. The Bank argued that Peter lacked “standing to assert the subject claims and [was] not the real party in interest” because he was “not a beneficiary of the JEP Trust, but [was] instead the beneficiary of” the POP Trust.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 UT App 12, 505 P.3d 1127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-phillips-living-trust-utahctapp-2022.