Pepper v. Zions First National Bank, N.A.

801 P.2d 144, 147 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1990 Utah LEXIS 92, 1990 WL 178606
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1990
Docket20807, 20958
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 801 P.2d 144 (Pepper v. Zions First National Bank, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pepper v. Zions First National Bank, N.A., 801 P.2d 144, 147 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1990 Utah LEXIS 92, 1990 WL 178606 (Utah 1990).

Opinion

STEWART, Justice:

Phillip C. Pepper and other members of the Pepper family (“the Peppers”), the beneficiaries of the Jerome B. Pepper trust, filed this action against Zions First National Bank as the executor of the Jerome B. Pepper estate and as the trustee of the Jerome B. Pepper inter vivos trust. The trust is the sole beneficiary of the estate, and Jerome B. Pepper’s wife and children, the appellants here, are the beneficiaries of *146 the trust. The Peppers appeal from an adverse summary judgment on counts I and II of their five-count second amended complaint. Count I of the complaint alleged that Zions, as the executor of the estate, was guilty of fraud, mismanagement, and self-dealing, which caused a dissipation of the assets of the estate. Count II of the complaint alleged that Zions, as trustee, failed to charge Zions as executor with breach of its fiduciary duty as executor in failing to transfer to the trustee the assets of the estate undiminished by Zions’ alleged unlawful acts as executor.

Zions filed a protective, or conditional, cross-appeal from a summary judgment dismissing Zions’ third-party indemnification claim against Fred M. Rosenthal, who had managed the Pepper family businesses for and on behalf of Zions as executor. The trial court dismissed the above claims and certified that there was no just reason for delay and entered a final order pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure.

I. FACTS

On April 15, 1975, Jerome B. Pepper executed the Jerome B. Pepper inter vivos trust, which named Zions as the trustee, for the benefit of his wife and children. After he died in 1976, Zions was appointed the executor of his estate, and in that capacity, Zions obtained the probate court’s approval to continue the ordinary operations of the Pepper family businesses. Zions also obtained court approval to appoint Fred M. Rosenthal to manage several businesses that Pepper had owned. Rosen-thal served as general manager of the Pepper businesses for the estate from February, 1976, to December, 1980.

In December, 1978, Pamco, one of the estate’s businesses, made application to Zions Bank to increase its line of credit with the bank to obtain additional working capital and to pay $250,000 in estate taxes. The net worth of the Jerome B. Pepper estate at about that time was represented to be $2,119,468. The net worth of the estate in December, 1979, increased to $2,555,248. In February, 1981, the line of credit with Zions reached a high of $930,-000. A few months later, Zions, as executor, filed a final accounting that showed a negative net worth for the estate.

In July, 1981, Zions filed a petition with the probate court for approval of its first and final accounting, the only formal accounting Zions filed. Zions also sought an order that approved Zions’ administration of the estate, closed the estate, and discharged Zions. In addition, the petition sought judicial approval of Zions’ transfer of the estate’s interest in the Lerner-Pepper joint venture, a Pepper estate asset, to the Pepper trust for sale to Hugh Neu Steel Products, Inc., for $1,000,000 and the subsequent use of a portion of those proceeds to purchase a debt from Kennecott Metals for $225,019.36, which was owned by Pamco, a Pepper business, and a debt from Teledyne National for $24,356.22. No mention was made in the petition to the probate court of using the proceeds of the sale to pay off the security interest that Zions, as a commercial bank, had securing its line of credit. The Peppers allege, inter alia, that defendant Zions, as trustee of the Jerome B. Pepper inter vivos trust, had represented to the plaintiffs that the sale of the interest in the Jerome B. Pepper joint venture was to benefit the beneficiaries, when in fact the sale was to protect the defendant’s commercial line of credit which the defendant had increased to approximately $930,000.

As executor, Zions mailed to the Pepper family members written notice of Zions’ petition for closure of the estate and for court approval of the sale of the Lerner-Pepper joint venture interest. The notice stated that the estate’s liabilities exceeded its assets. The Peppers did not appear at the hearing, and on October 8, 1981, the probate court entered a decree that approved the estate’s first and final accounting and closed the estate. The closing order approved the executor’s transfer of the assets to the trustee, the trustee’s sale of the Lerner-Pepper joint venture interest to Hugh Neu Steel Co., and Zions’ subsequent payment of the debts of Pepper’s Allied Metals. The final accounting showed that *147 as of September 22, 1981, the estate had only liabilities and no assets to pass on to the Jerome B. Pepper inter vivos trust.

On July 1, 1982, the Peppers filed a motion in the probate court to set aside the closing order under Rule 60(b)(7) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure on the ground that there was excusable neglect in failing to appear to oppose the closing order. Before the probate court ruled on that motion, the Peppers filed an amended complaint in the district court against Zions, alleging fraud and misrepresentation. Thereafter, the probate court denied the Peppers’ Rule 60(b)(7) motion to vacate the closing order on the ground that the motion was untimely. The Peppers appealed the denial of the motion, and this Court affirmed. In re Estate of Pepper, 711 P.2d 261 (Utah 1985).

Again, the Peppers amended their complaint in the district court, this time alleging five claims for relief. The first claim for relief alleged fraud and misrepresentation against Zions as executor. The complaint alleges, inter alia:

The misrepresentations made by the Defendant were made with the intent that the Plaintiffs rely upon said misrepresentations for the purpose of inducing the Plaintiffs to acquiesce to the continuance of the operations of the various companies in the control of Defendant Zions while Personal Representative.
The misrepresentations made by the Defendant were made with the intent that the Plaintiffs rely upon such misrepresentations with the purpose of continuing non-profitable businesses in order to protect the commercial line of credit with Defendant Zions Sugarhouse Branch, which the Defendant had allowed to increase to as high as $930,000.

The second claim for relief alleged that Zions breached its fiduciary duty in failing to object to the entry of the order closing the estate. The third and fourth claims alleged negligence and breach of fiduciary duty by Zions as trustee of the Fannie N. Pepper inter vivos trust and the Jerome B. Pepper irrevocable trust. The fifth claim sought punitive damages for the misconduct alleged in the first four claims for relief.

Zions filed a third-party complaint against Fred M. Rosenthal and several other third-party defendants, alleging that if Zions were held liable to the Peppers, the third-party defendants were liable to indemnify Zions for any dissipation of assets caused by mismanagement of the businesses by Rosenthal and the other defendants. Zions also specifically alleged misrepresentation and breach of contract against Ro-senthal and the other third-party defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
801 P.2d 144, 147 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 1990 Utah LEXIS 92, 1990 WL 178606, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pepper-v-zions-first-national-bank-na-utah-1990.