In the Matter of Trust T-1 of Mary Faye Trimble, Judith R. Cunningham, Trustee

826 N.W.2d 474, 2013 WL 275637, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 25, 2013
Docket11–1967
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 826 N.W.2d 474 (In the Matter of Trust T-1 of Mary Faye Trimble, Judith R. Cunningham, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 Trust T-1 of Mary Faye Trimble, Judith R. Cunningham, Trustee, 826 N.W.2d 474, 2013 WL 275637, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 8 (iowa 2013).

Opinion

WATERMAN, Justice.

In this appeal, we. review probate court orders compelling trustee Judith R. Cunningham to personally pay $54,120 in attorney fees and costs incurred litigating whether her sister, Marylynn Miller, a beneficiary, was entitled to an accounting for the period their aunt, settlor Mary Faye Trimble, was alive and the trust revocable. We also review the ruling compelling that accounting. This appeal provides an opportunity to address the criteria for allocating attorney fees under Iowa Code section 633A.4507 (2009) 1 and to decide the accounting issue — a question of first impression under our trust code.

We hold the accounting issue is governed by section 633A.3103, under which the settlor alone is entitled to an accounting for the period the trust is revocable, even if the beneficiary’s request for the accounting is made after the trust becomes irrevocable. Accordingly, we reverse the probate court ruling that Cunningham had a duty to account to Miller for the period preceding their aunt’s death. Cunningham’s interpretation of that statute was reasonable and, as we decide today, correct. There is no evidence Cunningham was guilty of malfeasance, fraud, or abuse. For the reasons explained below, we reverse the order requiring her to personally pay the fees and costs incurred litigating that issue. We remand the case for an order directing the trust to pay Cunningham’s fees and costs (including her appellate fees) and the fees of the temporary administrator, with Miller to bear her own fees.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Mary Faye Trimble died in Cherokee, Iowa, on December 16, 2009, at the age of 104. Trimble’s husband had predeceased her, and they had no children; however, she was survived by family on both her and her husband’s sides, including several nieces and nephews. This case involves a revocable trust created by Trimble on September 29, 1999. From that date until eight months before her death, Trimble acted as trustee and was the sole beneficiary of the trust. The trust expressly provided that Trimble during her lifetime was “exclusively entitled to all income accruing from the Trust Property. No beneficiary named herein shall have any claim upon any such Trust Income or profits.” Trimble amended the trust on several occasions to add beneficiaries and modify the *479 percentages allocated to them and to change the successor trustee.

Trimble’s final amendment to the trust, on April 8, 2009, substituted Cunningham in the position of trustee. Cunningham had already been designated to succeed Trimble as trustee at her death. Although Trimble was still managing the trust’s assets at that time, she executed the amendment recognizing that she may need assistance with that task in the future. Trimble continued to receive the trust bank account statements and write checks from the trust after the substitution until the end of June when she moved to an assisted living facility. Trimble’s health continued to decline, eventually requiring her to move into a nursing home. During the time Cunningham was acting as trustee, she made verbal reports to Trimble on the status of the trust and regularly consulted with Trimble regarding investment decisions. No provision of the trust required an accounting or reports to beneficiaries while Trimble was alive. As of the date of Trimble’s death, the trust had eighteen beneficiaries, including Miller and Cunningham.

On February 8, 2010, Miller sent a letter to Cunningham stating: “As a trust beneficiary of the Mary Faye Trimble Trust # T-l, I kindly request annual accounts of the trust property, liabilities, receipts, and disbursements from its inception to the present.” Cunningham agreed to account to the beneficiaries for the time period beginning after Trimble’s death, but declined to do so for the period when Trim-ble was still alive and the trust revocable. Miller later limited her request to an accounting for the period beginning when Cunningham was substituted as trustee, April 8, 2009, until the present. Cunningham again declined to provide an accounting for any time when Trimble was still alive.

Miller petitioned the court to intervene in the internal affairs of the trust on May 12. In her petition, Miller asked the court to order Cunningham, who was both the trustee and named executor of Trimble’s estate, “to account for the condition and activities of the Trust since her appointment on April 8, 2009, or such earlier date as the Court may direct.” Miller also requested the court to order Cunningham to reimburse her for her attorney fees incurred in the suit, pursuant to Iowa Code section 633A.4507. Cunningham filed her answer to Miller’s petition on May 17. The answer alleged that, under section 633A.3103,

Trimble retained her competency and retained the power to revoke the Trust in its entirety ... and therefore ... no remainder beneficiaries ... have the right to compel an accounting for the period from April 8, 2009 to December 16, 2009 because the Trustee had no duty to account to anyone other than Mary Faye Trimble for that period.

Fourteen of the sixteen nonparty beneficiaries joined Cunningham’s answer resisting Miller’s request for an accounting. None joined Miller’s request for an accounting.

On July 8, Miller served a request for production on Cunningham seeking:

A complete copy of each Trust accounting prepared by Judy R. Cunningham as trustee of the above named Trust, together with copies of all financial records, account statements, ledgers, notes, and records of any kind from which information used in the preparation of such Trust accounting(s) was obtained, from and after April 8, 2009. In the event no such accounting has yet been prepared, this request extends to include all documents from which an accounting of the condition and activities of the above named Trust will be pre *480 pared, from and after the period beginning April 8, 2009.

Cunningham objected to this discovery request, as well as two others. Miller filed a motion to compel on September 2. Cunningham filed a resistance. In her motion, Miller suggested for the first time that Trimble may have been incompetent during this time period and that Cunningham knew that she was incompetent; however, Miller acknowledged that “this motion is not the proper time to decide the issue of Mary Faye Trimble’s competence.” The probate court granted Miller’s motion to compel on October 13.

In its ruling, the probate court determined Miller had the right to request the accounting for this time period pursuant to Iowa Code section 683.4213 (2001) and, for that reason, enforced Miller’s discovery request. The court determined section 633.4213 (2001) controlled and that section 633A.3103 (2009) did not apply because, “[a]t the time of [Miller’s] request, the Trust was irrevocable.” Essentially, the probate court ruled that a beneficiary could request an accounting for a period during which the trust was revocable so long as the request was made after the trust became irrevocable. The pi-obate court made no determination regarding Trimble’s competency in its ruling.

In a separate action, at Miller’s request, John Wibe was appointed as the temporary administrator of Trimble’s estate to seek an accounting for the period preceding Trimble’s death.

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826 N.W.2d 474, 2013 WL 275637, 2013 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-trust-t-1-of-mary-faye-trimble-judith-r-cunningham-iowa-2013.