Miller v. Bank of America

2015 NMSC 022, 8 N.M. Ct. App. 227
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2015
Docket34,554
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2015 NMSC 022 (Miller v. Bank of America) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Bank of America, 2015 NMSC 022, 8 N.M. Ct. App. 227 (N.M. 2015).

Opinion

1 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number:

3 Filing Date: June 15, 2015

4 NO. 34,554

5 GEORGE ROBERT MILLER, 6 BARBARA JEAN MILLER, and 7 CHARLES RICHARD MILLER,

8 Plaintiffs-Petitioners,

9 v.

10 BANK OF AMERICA, N.A., as Trustee 11 of the Qualified Terminable Interest 12 Marital Trust and Family Trust created 13 under the Last Will and Testament of 14 Rudolph C. Miller, Jr., Deceased,

15 Defendant-Respondent.

16 ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI 17 Beatrice J. Brickhouse, District Judge

18 Tucker Law Firm, P.C. 19 Steven Lee Tucker 20 Santa Fe, NM

21 Catron, Catron, Pottow & Glassman, P.A. 22 Michael T. Pottow 23 Santa Fe, NM 1 for Petitioners

2 Keleher & McLeod, P.A. 3 Thomas C. Bird 4 Phil Krehbiel 5 Cassandra R. Malone 6 Albuquerque, NM

7 for Respondent

8 The Cullen Law Firm, P.C. 9 Christopher Cullen 10 Santa Fe, NM

11 Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law 12 Melanie B. Leslie 13 New York, NY

14 for Amicus Curiae Trust Law Professors 1 OPINION

2 DANIELS, Justice.

3 {1} The New Mexico Uniform Trust Code provides that when a trustee breaches

4 its duty of care and causes a loss to the trust, that lost value must be returned to the

5 trust as restoration damages. It also provides that when a trustee breaches its duty of

6 loyalty by self-dealing, any profit from such self-dealing must be disgorged so that

7 the trustee cannot profit from its wrongdoing. Restoration and disgorgement are not

8 mutually exclusive, and recovery need not be limited to the amount of a beneficiary’s

9 loss if more is required to ensure that both remedial goals are met. Because it is

10 unclear whether the principles of disgorgement and restoration have both been

11 satisfied in this case, we remand to the district court to determine whether the profit

12 wrongfully earned by the trustee was included in the restoration award to the

13 beneficiary.

14 I. BACKGROUND

15 {2} In 2007, the remainder beneficiaries (Beneficiaries) of two testamentary trusts

16 sued the defendant Bank of America (the Bank) for its actions as trustee from 1991

17 through 2003. Beneficiaries alleged that the Bank had invested trust assets in an

18 unproductive commercial building in direct violation of express trust provisions and

19 had thereby caused the loss of trust value in breach of its duty of care. Beneficiaries 1 also alleged that, as part of this investment, the Bank arranged loans to the trust from

2 its own affiliates that were secured by mortgages on the building and collected loan

3 fees and mortgage interest from the trust in breach of its duty of loyalty.

4 {3} At trial, Beneficiaries called Henry South to testify as an expert in accounting.

5 South testified that the value of the trust, if the Bank had properly maintained the

6 principal since 1991 and if that amount was adjusted for inflation to 2003 dollars,

7 would have been approximately $894,000. Instead, the value of the trust principal by

8 the reasonable presumed date of distribution was effectively zero. South was unable

9 to reconcile the records to determine where the lost principal had gone, but he

10 testified that “the only place it could have gone was back in the building” and that it

11 was not used to pay “trustee fees or property management fees or something like that”

12 because “[a]ll those were paid out of the rental income and the interest and dividends

13 that were collected.” He did not testify specifically about whether money from the

14 trust principal had been used to pay the mortgage interest and loan fees to the Bank.

15 The Bank did not call a witness to testify concerning the calculation of damages or

16 present other evidence concerning these calculations.

17 {4} The district court found the Bank liable for multiple breaches of different

18 duties under the New Mexico Uniform Trust Code and the specific trust agreement

2 1 but awarded Beneficiaries one lump sum of net damages. The court concluded that

2 the Bank had engaged in improper self-dealing by making loans to the trust and had

3 profited from the transactions by retaining interest and loan fees, and it ordered the

4 disgorgement of this profit in the amount of $540,000. The court also ordered

5 restoration of the lost trust value. It found that $894,000 was necessary to fully

6 compensate the trust, which included an adjustment for inflation that was required to

7 keep Beneficiaries whole. In its letter decision, the district court awarded both of

8 these amounts and asked Beneficiaries’ counsel to prepare the judgment.

9 {5} The Bank objected to Beneficiaries’ proposed form of judgment, arguing for

10 the first time that the award would provide “impermissible double recovery to

11 Plaintiffs, by awarding Plaintiffs damages . . . to restore the trust and loan interest that

12 the Trustee received.” The Bank asserted that Beneficiaries’ recovery must be limited

13 to the amount of their loss and that New Mexico Uniform Trust Code provisions on

14 damages for breach of trust, NMSA 1978, § 46A-10-1002 (2007), did not permit an

15 award of both restoration and disgorgement, but the Bank did not discuss the actual

16 method of calculation for the restoration award or argue that the interest had been

17 included in those calculations. The district court accepted and signed the Bank’s

18 revised form of judgment that altered several findings and conclusions and changed

3 1 the amount of the damages awarded to $171,000. The resulting district court

2 judgment was a mix of inconsistent findings and conclusions. The final damages

3 award deducted the amount of income the Bank had disbursed to Beneficiaries during

4 the time period at issue from the restoration amount, unadjusted for inflation, and did

5 not include the disgorgement award. But the final judgment did not change the

6 conclusion that ordered disgorgement or the finding that adjustment for inflation was

7 required to keep Beneficiaries whole. The findings stated that the award “by

8 definition includes $540,000 in loan interest paid to the Trustee” but did not explain

9 or support this statement.

10 {6} The Court of Appeals reversed the district court’s decisions not to adjust for

11 inflation and to offset income distributions against the damages award, and it awarded

12 Beneficiaries $894,000 to restore the value of the Miller Trusts. Miller v. Bank of

13 America, N.A., 2014-NMCA-053, ¶ 47, 326 P.3d 20. The Court of Appeals held that

14 restoration and disgorgement were alternative remedies, and it did not award an

15 additional $540,000 on a disgorgement theory as requested by Beneficiaries because

16 it “would amount to a double recovery and improperly impose a penalty on the

17 Bank.” Id. ¶¶ 44-45. Both parties petitioned this Court for certiorari, and we granted

18 Beneficiaries’ petition.

4 1 {7} Beneficiaries assert that disgorgement of profit is not an alternate remedy but

2 is separately required under the New Mexico Uniform Trust Code because the Code

3 does not limit an award to the amount of a beneficiary’s loss. While we agree that

4 both restoration and disgorgement are required and reverse the Court of Appeals

5 conclusion on that issue, we remand to the district court for the determination of

6 damages because it is unclear whether the mortgage interest and loan fees paid to the

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2015 NMSC 022, 8 N.M. Ct. App. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-bank-of-america-nm-2015.