In the Matter of the Trust of Kyle Mark Hane

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 18, 2024
Docket24-0756
StatusPublished

This text of In the Matter of the Trust of Kyle Mark Hane (In the Matter of the Trust of Kyle Mark Hane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In the Matter of the Trust of Kyle Mark Hane, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 24-0756 Filed December 18, 2024

IN THE MATTER OF THE TRUST OF KYLE MARK HANE,

KYLE MARK HANE, Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Chad A. Kepros, Judge.

The petitioner appeals from the dismissal of his request for relief in a trust

enforcement matter. AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED AND REMANDED.

Kyle Mark Hane, Hiawatha, self-represented appellant.

Considered by Greer, P.J., and Ahlers and Badding, JJ. 2

GREER, Presiding Judge.

As the settlor and beneficiary of a “private expressed trust,” Kyle Hane, a

self-represented litigant, petitioned for relief from the district court to address a

vacancy in the office of the trustee. Hane alleged that individuals had declined the

role of trustee in writing. The request for relief directed the district court to act in

three ways:

(a) This court appoint a person or persons as trustee and/or co-trustees pursuant to [Iowa Code section] 633A.4105 §1, §2(b)(2), and 633A.6104 §2 [(2024)]; (b) This court review the additional trust deed enclosed for potential combination pursuant to [section] 633A.2207(2),(3); (c) Seal all documents in this cause and schedule an in- chambers evidentiary hearing to review all trust instruments, as per the trust instrument terms, and pursuant to [section] 633A.1105.

No trust instrument was attached to the petition, although Hane indicated that he

was “pleased to present to the court valuable and private trust papers for review,

however trust terms dictate all trust documents are for private in-camera review

only and never for public disclosure.” Along with the petition, Hane requested the

court seal certain trust documents because the:

[S]ettlor and beneficiary have allowed Limited Authorization and approval for private disclosure of trust instruments for this cause which states: “All trust instruments, trust res, or other trust information, both verbal and written, shall remain completely confidential, private, and privileged and never in any way shape or form publicly revealed, disclosed to the public, or divulged to any person not a party to this trust.” and; The trust instrument specifies that any enforcement by beneficiary of any provision of this trust shall “be sealed and conducted in-chambers to protect the confidentiality of the trust, its beneficiaries, and its assets.” 3

Hane then objected to the court docket showing the filings that mentioned the trust

in the EDMS1 court filing system. In response to Hane’s filings, the court noted:

[Hane] has submitted a series of Proposed In-Camera Exhibits, including documentation that purports to appoint members of the Iowa Supreme Court and others as trustees for the secret private trust. The Court finds that the provisions of Iowa Code Chapter 633A do not provide the relief sought within the Petition. The Court further finds that no member of the Court or court administration have agreed to be appointed as trustee, and that it is not appropriate to appoint trustees who are unwilling to serve. It is not appropriate or even permissible for the Court or members of court staff to serve as trustee. Moreover, there is no process available for the Court to approve a secret private trust, nor will the Court undertake in camera review of documents under these circumstances.

(Emphasis added.) The district court ruled the “petition was denied” and dismissed

the action with prejudice.

Next, under a restricted-access designation, Hane moved to reconsider the

ruling, but wanted none of the documents or the motion to be public. The district

court refused to accept the motion as filed, stating:

A motion pursuant to [Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure] 1.904(2) has been submitted to the Court. However, the motion has not been filed in the public court file and has instead been submitted to the undersigned through EDMS as a proposed document for restricted access. As has been found by the Court previously, there is no basis for the Court to receive the filing as a sealed document not available to public view. The Court could elect to approve the document for filing as a sealed document, and then enter an order directing the clerk to release the restriction and instead hold the filing for public view. However, it is clear to the Court that the Petitioner wishes such filings to remain private and confidential, so the Court will not receive it on that basis and then change the status. The Court has therefore not approved the filing and has removed it. If the Petitioner wishes the Court to rule on a Rule 1.904(2) motion, he must refile the document in the public court file. Any such motion must be filed within fifteen days of the order to which the Rule 1.904(2) motion is directed.

1 EDMS stands for Electronic Document Management System. 4

Shortly after that order, the district court denied the rule 1.904(2) motion; the next

day, Hane appealed.

Once Hane appealed, he asked our supreme court to allow him to complete

the record for review. When addressing the request, the supreme court stated:

Turning to his motion, appellant does not identify the specific documents he believes should be included in the record. The court notes the record on appeal consists, among other things, of “[o]riginal documents and exhibits filed in the district court case from which the appeal is taken,” Iowa R. App. P. 6.801(a). See also Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.201(3) (defining “court record”). A review of the district court’s docket does not reveal any proposed exhibits. The docket does, however, show that on April 26, 2024, the court dismissed appellant’s petition for the enforcement of a “secret express trust,” and stated there was “no process available for the Court to approve a secret private trust, nor will the Court undertake in camera review of documents under these circumstances.” [O]n May 1, 2024, the court entered an order indicating appellant “submitted” a motion pursuant to Iowa Rule of Civil Procedure 1.904(2) that was “not . . . filed in the public court file and [was] instead . . . submitted to the undersigned through EDMS as a proposed document for restricted access. . . . ;” the court indicated it would not act on “a sealed document not available to public view,” but allowed appellant to file a Rule 1.904(2) motion “in the public court file.” [A]nd on May 2, 2024, the court again denied a Rule 1.904(2) motion, citing among other reasons the impropriety of “private” submission of motions. The court finds that whatever documents appellant may have submitted to the district court, they are not being maintained by the clerk of the court. Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.201(3)[.] Upon consideration, appellant’s motion is denied.

(First and third alterations in original) (citations to docket omitted.)

To confront the supreme court order, Hane tried again to get the court to

include the documents in a sealed designation and to show specifically the status

of the submissions maintained within the EDMS system. He provided: “A screen

capture of these filing submissions serves as evidence that proposed in camera

exhibits were indeed submitted through EDMS, provided system filing IDs, [and]

are being maintained by the trial court.” This screen shot was part of his motion: 5

Hane then requested

[the supreme] court’s guidance on how to include “PROPOSED IN CAMERA EXHIBIT(S)” from the trial court into this appeal for de novo review.

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