Jeffrey H. Stanley v. Lisa Stanley

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 24, 2024
Docket23A-DN-02810
StatusPublished

This text of Jeffrey H. Stanley v. Lisa Stanley (Jeffrey H. Stanley v. Lisa Stanley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jeffrey H. Stanley v. Lisa Stanley, (Ind. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FILED Jun 24 2024, 9:35 am

CLERK Indiana Supreme Court Court of Appeals and Tax Court

IN THE

Court of Appeals of Indiana Mark D. Stanley, Appellant-Respondent

and

Karlynne D. Akos, Jeffrey H. Stanley, Kevin A. Stanley and Hire Holdings, LLC, Appellants/Intervenors

v.

Lisa Stanley, Appellee-Petitioner

June 24, 2024 Court of Appeals Case No. 23A-DN-2810 Appeal from the Kosciusko Superior Court The Honorable Christopher D. Kehler, Judge Trial Court Cause No. 43D04-2009-DN-242

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-DN-2810 | June 24, 2024 Page 1 of 15 Opinion by Judge Bailey Chief Judge Altice and Judge Mathias concur.

Bailey, Judge.

Case Summary [1] Lisa Stanley filed a petition for dissolution of her marriage to Mark Stanley and

requested a division of the marital property pursuant to Indiana Code Section

31-15-7-4.1 Mark’s siblings – Karlynne Akos, Jeffrey Stanley, and Kevin

Stanley – and Hire Holdings, LLC (an Ohio corporation created by Mark and

his siblings) (collectively, “Intervenors”) intervened in the dissolution

proceedings to assert an interest in lake front property deeded to Mark in

settlement of the estate of Karol Stanley (“Lake House”). Intervenors sought to

establish that Mark holds four-fifths of the Lake House in trust for his siblings,

and they requested findings and conclusions pursuant to Indiana Trial Rule

52(A). The trial court concluded that the entirety of the Lake House is marital

property and entered a final judgment upon that interlocutory order. Mark and

Intervenors (collectively, “the Stanleys”) appeal, raising the issue of whether the

judgment is clearly erroneous because estate and rental agreement documents

[1] 1 Indiana Code Section 31-15-7-4 requires the trial court to divide all property of the parties, including property acquired by either spouse in his or her own right after the marriage and before final separation of the parties.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-DN-2810 | June 24, 2024 Page 2 of 15 collectively evince an express trust or because uncontroverted testimony of

intent supports recognition of a resulting trust. We reverse and remand for

further proceedings.

Facts and Procedural History [2] Lisa and Mark married on May 26, 2006, and in 2011, they moved into the

Lake House with Mark’s parents, Karol and Sasha Stanley. The Lake House

had been acquired by a Stanley ancestor in the early 1900’s and was then

owned jointly by Mark’s parents. Sasha died in 2011 and Karol died in 2015.

[3] Karol’s will left two parcels of real estate in equal shares to his five children:

the Lake House (appraised at over $900,000) and a house in Ohio, which was

in a state of disrepair (the “Banyon House”). Jeffrey and Mark served as co-

representatives of the estate. They and their siblings agreed that they needed to

mortgage the Lake House and renovate the Banyon House for use as a rental

property. Mark was the only one of the siblings without a mortgage and he

agreed to obtain a mortgage using the Lake House as collateral.

[4] After consultation with the estate’s attorney, Laura Kaufman, the co-

representatives executed a deed transferring the Lake House to Mark and the

remaining siblings executed consents to distribution. Mark obtained a $125,000

mortgage; he used some of the funds to pay off Karol’s debt and some to

renovate the Banyon House. The siblings also contributed some of their

personal funds for renovation projects at both properties. In 2017, Jeffrey

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-DN-2810 | June 24, 2024 Page 3 of 15 prepared and signed a rental agreement naming Mark and Lisa as tenants of the

Lake House.

[5] In February of 2020, one of the Stanley siblings passed away, leaving a will that

divided her interest in the Banyon House between her four remaining siblings

and naming Karlynne as her residuary estate beneficiary. On August 26, 2020,

the surviving siblings incorporated Hire Holdings and thereafter they registered

Hire Holdings as a foreign corporation in the State of Indiana. On September

10, 2020, Lisa filed her petition for divorce; she also obtained a temporary

restraining order prohibiting transfer of marital assets. Mark subsequently

transferred the Lake House by quit claim deed to Hire Holdings. The siblings

individually, and on behalf of Hire Holdings, successfully moved to intervene in

the dissolution action.

[6] On April 24, 2023, Intervenors filed a pre-hearing memorandum. They

asserted the position that “distribution of the Real Estate to Mark was

impressed with a trust for the benefit of himself and his four other siblings and,

accordingly, that 4/5 of the Real Estate should be withheld and/or excluded

from being considered marital property in this matter.” App. Vol. II, pgs. 45-

46. The memorandum described requirements for either an express trust or a

resulting trust.

[7] The trial court conducted hearings on May 8 and May 25, 2023. Mark, Jeffrey,

and Karlynne testified that they, together with their other siblings, had intended

that Mark hold the Lake House for the benefit of all the siblings. The

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-DN-2810 | June 24, 2024 Page 4 of 15 Intervenors submitted into evidence the 2017 lease, denominated a Real Estate

Agreement, designating the “Stanley Family” as landlord and Mark and Lisa as

tenants. The agreement provided, among other things, that Mark would pay

the mortgage payments in lieu of rent payments, he would perform minor

maintenance tasks, the family would be responsible for larger repairs, and the

agreement would terminate in ten years.

[8] According to the testimony of his siblings, Mark had been appointed to obtain a

mortgage because he was in the best financial position to do so; mortgage

proceeds were to be used for family debts and renovations; and eventually, the

Lake House would be transferred into either a holding company or family trust.

The sibling testimony was in part corroborated by attorney Kaufman. She

testified that, notwithstanding the execution of consents to distribution, there

had been “no buyout of siblings” and no “swap of estate assets.” (Tr. Vol. II,

pg. 59.) Rather, Mark had been deeded the Lake House “with no strings

attached” but in the context of family anticipation that there would be a rental

arrangement and a transfer of the Lake House in the future when the siblings

decided upon whether a holding company or family trust was the best course of

action. (Id. at 61.) Kaufman clarified that she had advised the estate heirs that

the conveyance to Mark was not equivalent to creation of a trust. Her

understanding was that Mark would hold the Lake House as an

“intermediary.” (Id. at 48.)

[9] On August 22, 2023, the trial court issued its findings of fact, conclusions

thereon, and order. The trial court concluded that Intervenors had not met the

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 23A-DN-2810 | June 24, 2024 Page 5 of 15 burden of showing an express trust was created and declined to recognize a

resulting trust because “precluding Lisa from having an interest in the Lake

House would be neither equitable or just.” Appealed Order at 15. The trial

court thus determined that the Property is a marital asset, in which Intervenors

have no interest. On October 31, the trial court directed the entry of the order

as a final judgment.

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Jeffrey H. Stanley v. Lisa Stanley, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffrey-h-stanley-v-lisa-stanley-indctapp-2024.