US Bank N.A. v. Bittner

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedJune 15, 2022
Docket21-0455
StatusPublished

This text of US Bank N.A. v. Bittner (US Bank N.A. v. Bittner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
US Bank N.A. v. Bittner, (iowactapp 2022).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 21-0455 Filed June 15, 2022

U.S. BANK NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

JEFFREY S. BITTNER, Individually and as Trustee of the JOAN Y. BITTNER MARITAL TRUST, Defendant-Appellant,

and

MIDWESTONE BANK, as Conservator of the JOAN Y. BITTNER MARITAL TRUST, Defendant-Appellee,

JOAN Y. BITTNER, KIMBERLY MONTGOMERY, TODD RICHARD BITTNER and LYNN VON SCHNEIDAU, Defendants. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Thomas Reidel,

Judge.

A son appeals the judgment declaring his mother the sole beneficiary of his

deceased father’s individual retirement account. AFFIRMED.

Jeffrey S. Bittner, Davenport, for appellant.

Lynn W. Hartman and Nicholas Petersen of Simmons Perrine Moyer

Bergman PLC, Cedar Rapids, for appellee U.S. Bank National Association. 2

Timothy J. Krumm and Danica L. Bird of Meardon, Sueppel & Downer

P.L.C., Iowa City, for appellee MidWestOne Bank.

Considered by Tabor, P.J., Badding, J., and Blane, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2022). 3

BLANE, Senior Judge.

Jeffrey Bittner challenges the district court’s declaratory judgment that his

deceased father, Richard Bittner, left his individual retirement account (IRA) to his

wife Joan rather than to a family trust or a marital trust. The district court declined

to consider extrinsic evidence to the IRA agreement and beneficiary designation

and determined on their clear language that Richard intended to leave his IRA to

Joan. We agree with that reading and affirm.

I. FACTS AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

Richard, an attorney, died in 2019. His family included his wife, Joan, and

their four children: Kimberly Montgomery, Jeffrey Bittner, Todd Bittner, and Lynn

Von Schneidau. Joan is under a conservatorship, with MidWestOne Bank

(MidWestOne) serving as her conservator.

Richard had a final will and testament, executed January 2014, which

superseded all prior wills, including one executed in 2010. After his death, the

2014 will was admitted to probate. The co-executors were Richard’s son Jeffrey,

who is also an attorney, and U.S. Bank. Richard’s will also created two trusts to

be funded after his death: the R. Richard Bittner Family Trust and the Joan Y.

Bittner Marital Trust. One of Richard’s assets at his death was his IRA,

administered also by U.S. Bank. Back in 2010, at the same time he executed his

2010 will, Richard executed a beneficiary designation form for the IRA, which was

still in place when he died.

In July 2020, U.S. Bank, as trustee of the IRA, petitioned for declaratory

judgment that the IRA should be transferred in its entirety to Joan, according to the

beneficiary designation form. Jeffrey, as trustee of the Joan Y. Bittner Marital 4

Trust, resisted.1 He argued that Joan is not the primary beneficiary of the IRA; that

the beneficiary designation makes her an income beneficiary of the marital trust

for life, then passes the IRA to the family trust.2 MidWestOne appeared in the

action as Joan’s conservator and took U.S. Bank’s position—that the IRA should

be transferred to Joan. Kimberly, Todd, and Lynn joined U.S. Bank’s position as

well.

At the January 2021 hearing, Jeffrey wanted to introduce documents and

testimony that he believed revealed Richard’s true intent for his IRA beneficiaries.

Among the documents were Richard’s 2010 will and a written opinion from U.S.

Bank’s in-house counsel concluding the marital trust was the proper beneficiary, a

position that U.S. Bank held before it asked for declaratory judgment and later

disavowed. Jeffrey also sought to introduce testimony about Richard’s intent from

Richard’s long-serving legal secretary, several of Richard’s colleagues, and

himself. The court heard this testimony as Jeffrey’s offer of proof. But ultimately

it determined there was no need to resort to extrinsic evidence to interpret the

1 The court denied Jeffrey’s request to allow Richard’s estate to intervene. It found the estate was not an indispensable party to the proceeding. The estate had no interest in the IRA funds because it was not named in the beneficiary designation. The only connection to the estate was that the marital trust had been named in the beneficiary designation, and Jeffrey was representing those interests as the marital trust’s trustee. 2 Jeffrey also raised a counterclaim that U.S. Bank had a conflict of interest in being

both co-executor of Richard’s estate and advocating that Joan is the owner of the IRA. Later, he deferred trial on that question. Ultimately, the court did remove U.S. Bank as co-executor, not based on Jeffrey’s conflict-of-interest argument but because Richard’s will permitted Jeffrey to remove U.S. Bank if dissatisfied with their performance and the dissatisfaction did not arise from Jeffrey’s conflict of interest. The removal order was not included in the declaratory judgment file, only the probate file. But U.S. Bank remains the administrator of the IRA and still needs direction on where to transfer that asset. 5

designation saying, “The court finds that the intent of Richard is clear and

unambiguous from the words of the contract itself, and can decide this matter

without the necessity of extrinsic evidence.” The court found, “Richard Bittner

clearly name[d] his wife, Joan Y. Bittner, as his primary beneficiary. Joan Y. Bittner

is to receive a 100 percent share.” That intent, the court further found,

is clear and unambiguous from the words of the contract itself. Richard did not name the trust as the primary beneficiary. Richard used clear and unequivocal language designating his wife, Joan, as the 100 percent primary beneficiary. The remaining language in the IRA beneficiary designation does not support a contrary interpretation nor does it create ambiguity.

Other significant factors included Richard’s designation of his children as

“contingent beneficiaries” of the IRA, despite the form stating contingent

beneficiary designations are not necessary if the primary beneficiary is a trust or

estate. The court also found significant that Richard in his will stated the IRA would

not become part of the family trust which included all his assets “with the exception

of the IRA corpus and/or income.” Jeffrey appeals.

II. SCOPE OF REVIEW

Our review of a declaratory judgment action depends on how the case was

tried below. See In re Coe College, 935 N.W.2d 581, 586 (Iowa 2019). The parties

agree they tried the case at law, so our review is for errors at law. Id. But U.S.

Bank adds, if we admit the extrinsic evidence to determine the terms of the

beneficiary designation, we must use de novo review. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.907

(“Review in equity cases shall be de novo.”). 6

III. ANALYSIS

While there have been many issues surrounding execution of Richard’s will

and disposal of his IRA, the question in this appeal is narrow: who gets Richard’s

IRA, Joan or the Bittner Family Trust? This case is heard at law; it is not a probate

matter. Still, as with any contract, we read the IRA agreement seeking the intent

of the parties from the words of the contract itself. Lange v. Lange, 520 N.W.2d

113, 119 (Iowa 1994). We give the language of the contract effect “in accordance

with its commonly accepted and ordinary meaning.” Id.

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