Mulcaire v. mongini/wallace

CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 11, 2014
Docket1 CA-CV 13-0612
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mulcaire v. mongini/wallace (Mulcaire v. mongini/wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mulcaire v. mongini/wallace, (Ark. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

NOTICE: NOT FOR PUBLICATION. UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION DOES NOT CREATE LEGAL PRECEDENT AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS AUTHORIZED.

IN THE ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS DIVISION ONE

In the Matter of: THE DOBYNS FAMILY TRUST dated July 10, 1998

KAMILLE MULCAIRE, as the Personal Representative of the Estate of THOMAS E. MULCAIRE and MICHAEL MULCAIRE, Petitioners/Appellants,

v.

DAVID MONGINI and CECIL WALLACE, Co-Trustees, Respondents/Appellees.

No. 1 CA-CV 13-0612 FILED 12-11-2014

Appeal from the Superior Court in Yavapai County No. V1300PB201280021 The Honorable Patricia A. Trebesch, Judge

AFFIRMED

COUNSEL

Dennis P. Bayless PC, Cottonwood By Dennis P. Bayless Counsel for Petitioners/Appellants J. Leslie McLean PLLC, Cottonwood By J. Leslie McLean Co-Counsel for Respondents/Appellees

and

Choi & Fabian PLC, Chandler By Veronika Fabian and Hyung S. Choi Co-Counsel for Respondents/Appellees

MEMORANDUM DECISION

Judge Andrew W. Gould delivered the decision of the Court, in which Presiding Judge Margaret H. Downie and Judge Samuel A. Thumma joined.

G O U L D, Judge:

¶1 Thomas Mulcaire and Michael Mulcaire (the “Mulcaires”), appeal from the trial court’s judgment in favor of David Mongini and Cecil Wallace (the “Co-Trustees”). For the reasons discussed below, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2 This appeal is based on a dispute between family members over the administration of two trusts. In 1998, Erma and Faires Dobyns (the “Dobyns”) established the Dobyns Family Trust (the “Family Trust”). The Dobyns served as the initial co-trustees of the Family Trust. The beneficiaries of the Family Trust are Erma Dobyns’ four children from a prior marriage: Sheila Mongini, Michael Mulcaire, Patricia Wallace, and Thomas Mulcaire.

¶3 The Family Trust was, by its express terms, fully revocable while both of the Dobyns were alive, and it placed no restrictions on how the Dobyns used the assets in the trust. The Family Trust provided that upon the death of either Erma or Faires Dobyns it became irrevocable, and was to be divided into two trusts: the Marital QTIP Trust (“Marital Trust”) and the Decedent’s Trust.

2 MULCAIRE v. MONGINI/WALLACE Decision of the Court

¶4 The terms of the Family Trust govern the administration of both the Marital Trust and the Decedent’s Trust. The Family Trust provides that upon the death of either Erma or Faires as the surviving spouse, the remaining principal in the Marital Trust is to be added to the Decedent’s Trust and distributed according to the terms of the Decedent’s Trust, in this case to the four beneficiaries equally.

¶5 The initial assets conveyed to the Family Trust were three parcels of real property. There were no bank accounts, investment accounts, or personal property listed as assets in the Family Trust.

¶6 In December 2003, the Dobyns sold a portion of one of the parcels of property in the Family Trust for approximately $910,000. The Dobyns received $100,000 in cash, an assigned promissory note from Robert Flynn for $260,000,1 and a promissory note from G.M. Fratelli for approximately $550,640 (the “Fratelli Note”). At the time of the sale, the Family Trust was still revocable because both of the Dobyns were living; therefore, under the terms of the Family Trust, the Dobyns were not obligated to deposit any of the cash they received from the sale into the trust.

¶7 In January 2004, Erma and Faires Dobyns opened a Chase Bank Account ending in 1779 (the “Chase Account”). The Chase Account was originally titled to Faires Dobyns or Erma Dobyns or Sheila Mongini, as individuals and not as Trustees of the Family Trust. After Erma Dobyns died on May 17, 2005, the Chase Account was retitled to Faires Dobyns or Sheila Mongini, as individuals and not as Trustees of the Family Trust. The signature card for the Chase Account did not state whether there was a right of survivorship in the account.

¶8 Upon the death of Erma, Faires Dobyns retained an attorney, Alexandra Shroufe, to assist in allocating the assets in the Family Trust into the Marital Trust and Decedent’s Trust. Ms. Shroufe prepared the allocation of assets for Faires Dobyns to sign and approve on August 24, 2009. However, in the allocation, Ms. Schroufe erroneously listed the Chase Account as an asset of the Marital Trust.

¶9 On August 29, 2009, Faires Dobyns, the sole remaining trustee, appointed David Mongini, the husband of Sheila Mongini, and

1 The Robert Flynn Note was paid off before the completion of the sale.

3 MULCAIRE v. MONGINI/WALLACE Decision of the Court

Cecil Wallace, the husband of Patricia Wallace, “to act as current [successor] Co-Trustees with him” of the Marital and Decedent’s Trusts.

¶10 When Faires Dobyns discovered that he had erroneously allocated the Chase Account to the Marital Trust, he directed Shelia Mongini and the Co-Trustees to remove the Chase Account from the Marital Trust. In October 2011, Ms. Shroufe prepared an amendment to the August 24, 2009 allocation removing the Chase Account from the Marital Trust; at the direction of Faires Dobyns, the amendment was approved by the Co-Trustees.

¶11 Faires Dobyns died on December, 11, 2011. The Mulcaires sent a written request for a trust accounting to the Co-Trustees on February 9, 2012. The Co-Trustees sent a preliminary accounting along with some financial documents to the Mulcaires on February 29, 2012. Less than two weeks later, the Mulcaires filed a Petition for Remedy of Breach of Trust (“Complaint”) seeking an accounting and removal of the Co-Trustees.

¶12 The Co-Trustees then retained Phil Schutte, a certified public accountant, to complete an accounting of the trusts, and submitted Mr. Schutte’s accounting to the Mulcaires on June 21, 2012. The trial court then ordered the Co-Trustees to prepare a second accounting, which Co- Trustees did, again, through the services of Mr. Schutte.

¶13 The court held a bench trial on three separate days in September and October 2012 and in May 2013. Following the trial, the court found the accountings provided by the Co-Trustees (1) satisfied their fiduciary duties under the trusts, and (2) established that all of the assets of the trusts were accounted for and intact. Further, the court found there was no evidence showing the loss of any trust asset or depreciation of value of any trust asset while the Co-Trustees were responsible for administering the trusts. Finally, the court determined that the Chase Account was not a trust asset and belonged to Sheila Mongini.

¶14 Based on the above findings, the trial court determined that the Co-Trustees did not materially breach their fiduciary duties to the Mulcaires, and denied the relief sought in the Complaint. The Mulcaires timely appealed.

DISCUSSION

¶15 We apply a de novo standard of review to the trial court’s legal conclusions, In re Estate of Newman, 219 Ariz. 260, 265 ¶ 13, 196 P.3d

4 MULCAIRE v. MONGINI/WALLACE Decision of the Court

863, 868 (App. 2008), and we accept the trial court’s factual findings unless they are clearly erroneous, In re Estate of Zaritsky, 198 Ariz. 599, 601 ¶ 5, 12 P.3d 1203, 1205 (App. 2000).

I. Chase Account

¶16 The Mulcaires assert that the Co-Trustees violated their duty to control and protect trust assets by permitting Shelia Mongini to take possession of the funds in the Chase Account after Faires Dobyns’ death. Ariz. Rev. Stat.

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