North American Savings Bank v. Volkland

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedOctober 2, 2015
Docket112145
StatusUnpublished

This text of North American Savings Bank v. Volkland (North American Savings Bank v. Volkland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Savings Bank v. Volkland, (kanctapp 2015).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 112,145

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

NORTH AMERICAN SAVINGS BANK, FSB, Appellant,

v.

DOUGLAS O. VOLKLAND, as Trustee of the E. KEITH VOLKLAND and ANNA W. VOLKLAND TRUST of 1985 and/or the VOLKLAND FAMILY TRUST, Appellees.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Johnson District Court; Thomas M. Sutherland, judge. Opinion filed October 2, 2015. Affirmed and remanded with directions.

Thomas M. Franklin, of The Franklin Law Firm, of Kansas City, Missouri, for appellant.

Kevin J. Odrowski, of Kansas City, Missouri, for appellee.

Before PIERRON, P.J., MCANANY, J., AND BURGESS, S.J.

Per Curiam: In 2004 and 2006, E. Keith Volkland signed a guaranty as an individual to two separate notes that his son Douglas O. Volkland and Douglas' wife, Janet Swinson, had taken out with North American Savings Bank (NASB). As proof of his financial health, Keith provided financial statements that listed various accounts and certificates of deposit. Many of the assets were actually titled to the Volkland Family Trust, Keith's revocable trust. Keith's death in 2012 triggered a default of both notes. NASB accelerated one note and the second matured. After NASB made a demand on the

1 notes and accelerated them, Douglas and Janet stopped paying on the first note and failed to pay back the second note.

Six months and a few days after Keith died, NASB filed a petition against Douglas as trustee of the family trust seeking declaratory judgment that it could reach trust assets to satisfy Keith's indebtedness under the guaranties. NASB also requested the court to order Douglas as trustee to pay the amount due under the notes, which was roughly $800,000. NASB sued under the trust code, not the probate code. The trustee asserted a defense under the probate code. The trustee claimed the nonclaim statute, which required a creditor to make a demand on the decedent's estate within 6 months of the decedent's death, forever barred the suit because NASB failed to make a demand on Keith's estate within 6 months of Keith's death.

Both parties filed for summary judgment. The district court denied NASB's motion and granted the trustee's. The court determined the trust code was merely a vehicle for payment, not an independent cause of action to obtain a judgment, and determined NASB had failed to establish that Keith's probate estate was insufficient to satisfy the indebtedness as required by the trust code. The court granted the trustee's motion for the same reasons.

After a bench trial, the district court ruled in favor of the trustee and determined NASB could not reach trust assets because it failed to prove the probate estate was insufficient to satisfy the indebtedness and because the trust code was merely a right to payment, not an independent cause of action to obtain a judgment allowing a creditor to obtain a money judgment against a deceased settlor's revocable trust assets.

NASB appeals all adverse rulings. Finding no error, we affirm.

2 Before the district court, NASB pursued two separate cases related to the notes and mortgages at issue here in an effort to satisfy the debt owed by Douglas and Janet. The cases were never consolidated but were tried together and are considered companion cases. This appeal, No. 112,145, focuses on NASB's unsuccessful attempt to reach trust assets in 12-CV8619. The companion case, 12-CV-9467, dealt with NASB's petition to foreclose on the mortgages and sell the collateral to satisfy the indebtedness. It too is being appealed in this docket, captioned North American Savings Bank vs. Douglas O. Volkland, No. 112,097.

This particular case takes us to the murky intersection of the trust code and the probate code.

The Volkland Family Trust

In 1985, Keith and his wife Anna, who is now deceased, executed their revocable trust, originally the "Keith Volkland and Anna W. Volkland Trust of 1985." In 1999, after Anna's death, Keith amended the trust, commonly referred to as the "Volkland Family Trust." The trust was a revocable living trust for the purposes of avoiding probate at Keith's death, avoiding death taxes, managing his financial affairs should he become disabled, and planning for the orderly distribution of his assets upon his death. It was to be governed by the law of California "unless otherwise expressly provided." The trust indicated that Schedule A listed the trust estate, but Schedule A is not in the record so the contents of the trust are unknown. The trust provided that Douglas was Keith's sole child, living or deceased, and that Keith was unmarried.

The trust provided that upon Keith's death, the trustee could pay any of his debts but was not directed to. The trust indicated that a life estate in a residence would go to a woman named Hattie V. Baxter but it is undisputed that she died prior to Keith's death. It

3 was provided that the "rest, residue, and remainder of the trust estate shall be allocated to the Trustor's son, Douglas O. Volkland."

The trust provided that the share allocated to any beneficiary under the age of 25 would be held until the beneficiary turned 25. However, once the beneficiary turned 25, "the trust shall terminate and the Trustee shall distribute the then remaining trust estate (including any accumulated income), outright and free of trust, to the beneficiary." Douglas was named as the successor trustee.

In 2004, Douglas and Janet executed a promissory note (Note 1) for $590,000 payable to NASB. Keith also personally guaranteed Note 1. The guaranty provided that Keith "unconditionally guarantee[d] the payment and performance, upon demand, of all Obligations of Borrower to Lender." Keith was required to provide financial statements at least once a year. The guaranty also indicated it was governed by the laws of Missouri.

The financial statements Keith provided to NASB for years 2004, 2005, 2006, and 2008 are included in the record. The 2004 statement indicates he had in excess of $1.8 million in assets. Proof of his various assets included in the record on appeal indicate the assets were actually titled in the trusts name, not Keith personally. For example, the 2006 statement lists a certificate of deposit worth $100,000 with Heartland Bank as an asset, but the actual certificate of deposit indicates it was an asset of the Volkland Family Trust, not Keith personally.

In 2006, Douglas and Janet executed a second promissory note (Note 2) for $155,000 payable to NASB. Note 2 originally matured on February 1, 2007. The parties agreed to extend the maturity date on more than one occasion, and its final maturity date was in October 2012. Documentation of these extensions is not included in the record on appeal for this case, but it is included in the companion case record on appeal. Note 2 included the same provisions regarding occurrences which constituted a default.

4 Douglas and Janet signed a second mortgage (Mortgage 2) with NASB. Mortgage 2 covered three tracts of land: the Moonlight Road Tracts; and "Tract III: Lot 425, Leawood Estates, a subdivision in the City of Leawood, Johnson County Kansas." Tract III's address was 9714 Belinder (Belinder House). Keith also guaranteed Note 2.

It appears Douglas and Janet generally paid their payments on time.

In 2009, Keith resigned as sole trustee and Douglas immediately became the sole trustee since Hattie Baxter had died in 2002. On May 4, 2012, Keith died. On May 14, 2012, Douglas emailed Michael Braman, an employee of NASB, to inform him of Keith's passing.

On September 18, 2012, Braman emailed Douglas indicating that they needed to discuss curing the default triggered by Keith's death.

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