In the Matter of the Living Trust Agreement of Virgil C. Morningstar and Agnes M. Morningstar, Teresa J. Morningstar v. Nina Fortunka and STAR Financial Bank ( 2019 )


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  •                                                                            FILED
    Nov 15 2019, 9:18 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT                                    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
    Max A. Myers                                              NINA FORTUNKA
    Myers Law Office                                          John O. Feighner
    Fort Wayne, Indiana                                       Troy C. Kiefer
    Haller & Colvin, P.C.
    Fort Wayne, Indiana
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    STAR FINANCIAL BANK
    Matthew J. Elliott
    Beckman Lawson, LLP
    Fort Wayne, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    In the Matter of the Living Trust                         November 15, 2019
    Agreement of Virgil C.                                    Court of Appeals Case No.
    Morningstar and Agnes M.                                  18A-TR-3044
    Morningstar,                                              Appeal from the Allen Superior
    Teresa J. Morningstar,                                    Court, Probate Division
    Appellant,                                                The Honorable Stanley A. Levine,
    Judge
    v.
    Trial Court Cause No.
    02D03-1604-TR-8
    Nina Fortunka and STAR
    Financial Bank,
    Appellees.
    Brown, Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                           Page 1 of 32
    [1]   Teresa J. Morningstar (“Morningstar”) appeals the trial court’s November 21,
    2018 order finding that she breached various duties as trustee of the Living Trust
    Agreement of Virgil C. Morningstar and Agnes M. Morningstar (the “Trust”).
    The trial court entered judgment in favor of the trust beneficiaries and awarded
    attorney fees in favor of beneficiary Nina Fortunka. The restated issue is whether
    the court erred in finding that Morningstar breached her duties as trustee. We
    affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [2]   In January 2012, Agnes died, predeceasing Virgil. Prior to her death, Attorney
    Max Myers prepared the Trust, which established Agnes and Virgil as trustors
    and Agnes, Virgil, and Morningstar as trustees. 1 Morningstar, a beneficiary of
    the Trust, signed the trust instrument as an attorney-in-fact on behalf of Agnes
    and Virgil as both Trustor and Trustee and as herself as Trustee. The Trust
    provides in part that, in the investment, administration and distribution of the
    trusts created under it, the trustee shall be given “those powers set forth in the
    Indiana Trust Code as amended from time to time hereafter” and, in Article X,
    titled “Compensation of Trustee,” that the trustee shall receive reasonable
    compensation for ordinary services and “shall also receive reasonable
    compensation for unusual and extraordinary services rendered in serving the
    personal needs of the Trustor [sic] and in settling Trustor’s [sic] financial affairs
    1
    As Morningstar points out, the Trust appears to contain a scrivener’s error when it states that it was
    executed on the 7th day of “January, 2011.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 35.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                               Page 2 of 32
    and in making distribution of the assets.” Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at
    37, 41. Article X further provided that “[s]uch compensation shall be adequate
    to cover the work involved, as well as responsibilities assumed, in effecting
    financial disposition of the trust.” 
    Id. At some
    point, Agnes and/or Virgil
    transferred title to certain real estate to the Trust.
    [3]   Virgil died in August 2015 and, in administering the Trust, Morningstar
    completed an accounting for the period covering August 13, 2015, through May
    31, 2016, and submitted it to the trial court on July 19, 2016. The accounting
    lists as an Asset an item titled “Rental Real Estate” valued at $226,000.00, and
    as Income to the “CHASE BANK Account” a “Sale of rental real estate”
    transaction on “1/15/16” valued at $210,342.63 and bearing an asterisk
    notation which states “reduction in amount reflects costs of sale.” Appellant’s
    Appendix Volume II at 45, 47. The accounting also contains an affidavit in lieu
    of receipts, checks, and vouchers that lists a disbursement on “1/20/16” of
    $6,780.00 for “Teri Morningstar – RE finders fee” by means of “ck 4516,” as
    well as monthly or bimonthly disbursements of $845.50 for “Teri Morningstar –
    payroll” from “8/17/15” until “3/1/16.” 2 
    Id. at 49-52.
    [4]   On September 9, 2016, Fortunka as one of twenty-one beneficiaries of the Trust
    filed her Objections to Trustee’s Court Ordered Accounting, which asserted that
    2
    The affidavit does not list monthly disbursements other than “9/16/15” for September 2015 and “1/19/16”
    for January 2016. Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 50-51. The affidavit also contains a disbursement on
    August 25, 2015, of $600.00 for “Teri Morningstar – finders fee” by means of “ck 4454.” 
    Id. at 49.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                         Page 3 of 32
    the Trustee breached her fiduciary duties, committed self-dealing, and carelessly
    and negligently handled trust assets. It stated that among the undervalued
    assets were fourteen rental properties, which were sold in a single sale without
    appraisals performed either at the time of Virgil’s death or at the time of the
    sale, and that the sale was heavily discounted. It further contended that
    Morningstar continued to receive a salary and mileage as property manager
    after the sale, and it objected to several disbursements as unclear and invalid
    expenditures of the Trust, including those “described as finder’s fees, payroll,
    mileage and misc. paid to Trustee.” 
    Id. at 57.
    [5]   On July 17, 2018, and September 4, 2018, the court held hearings. Tom Mack
    testified as to his credentials as an independent real estate appraiser, and the
    court found him to be qualified as an expert in the field of appraisals without
    objection. He indicated that he completed exterior appraisals for 2822 Mauldin
    Drive, 2724 Schaper Drive, 2315 Saint Mary’s Avenue, and 2221 Vance
    Avenue, explained his methodology, and provided an assessed retrospective
    value for each of the properties effective January 15, 2016. 3 During cross-
    examination, he provided an opinion that he had “known parties to
    3
    The court admitted without objection four appraisal reports for real property that had the purpose of
    “estimat[ing] the market value of the property . . . as improved, in unencumbered fee simple title of
    ownership.” Accord Exhibits Volume I at 7. The reports’ Opinion of Value was $11,000 for the property at
    2822 Mauldin Dr, $34,000 for the property at 2724 Schaper Dr, $23,000 for the property at 2315 Saint Marys
    Ave, and $30,000 for the property at 2221 Vance Ave. Each report contained signed pages titled Exterior-
    Only Inspection Residential Report, Property Record Information per Wayne Township Assessor, and
    Comparable Sales.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                          Page 4 of 32
    inaccurately fill out sales disclosures” through his work as an assessor back in
    2000, where he would “see sales disclosures that did not reflect the sales price.”
    Transcript Volume II at 46. 4
    [6]   The court admitted various Objector’s Exhibits, including copies of
    correspondence regarding the administration of the Trust and the sale of the
    properties. A letter by Attorney Myers, addressed to the heirs of Virgil, dated
    August 26, 2015, and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 5, announced that Virgil
    had died on August 13th and stated:
    Upon the death of Agnes [] all of the business real estate which she
    owned was placed into a living trust for which Virgil and
    [Morningstar] were the Trustees. Those properties have been
    managed, improved and a sale off at [sic] fair value has been
    underway. However, there remains [sic] approximately one
    dozen houses unsold in addition to eight (8) that are under
    Contracts which will pay off at various dates over the next three
    (3) years. I will be asking for input from you in the future
    regarding suggestions for distribution of the Contract payments
    and/or the remaining real estate.
    I will happily discuss the strategy and results involved in the
    business real estate since Agnes died, however, I can state up front
    that the plan was to have it all sold at a good price before Virgil
    died.
    *****
    4
    We cite the page numbers as they appear consecutively in the PDF of the Electronic Record. See Ind.
    Appellate Rule 28(A) (The electronic Transcript is to be prepared in accordance with Appendix A, which
    provides in part: “Each volume of the Transcript shall be independently and consecutively numbered at the
    bottom. Each volume shall begin with numeral one on its front page.”).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                           Page 5 of 32
    By virtue of the Estate holding a good deal of real estate, it will be
    necessary for us to come to a consensus of how that is to be
    handled before a complete distribution from the Estate can be
    made.
    I will secure a complete status on all of the real estate and submit it
    to the heirs for comment on how they would prefer it be handled.
    Look for that in another ten (10) days or so.
    Exhibits Volume I at 101-102. A letter by Attorney Myers, similarly addressed,
    dated September 15, 2015, and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 6, stated that it
    appeared that the one asset which would pass through the estate was Virgil’s
    brokerage account valued at $826,215.08. The letter also stated:
    As previously mentioned, there exists [sic] in the trust
    approximately one dozen houses unsold in addition to eight (8)
    that are under Contracts which will pay off at various dates over
    the next three (3) years. The market is such in Fort Wayne that
    the only realistic expectation is that the houses must be sold to an
    investor who will keep them as rentals. The mortgage companies
    will not lend on a property worth what these are worth and
    further, the buyer intending to live in one will not have the down
    payment required to entice a lender.
    *****
    I have already been asked by more than one heir what I think the
    shares are expected to be. I refuse to commit to an exact number
    because the selling price of the real estate is so elusive that I can
    only speculate.
    If these dozen houses average in value around $12,000.00* and the
    balance on the contracts adds another $25,000.00, we can expect
    the real estate to add another $160,000.00 to the distributive
    amount for a total approaching $990,000.00. This amount is
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019             Page 6 of 32
    subject both to the marketability of the real estate and any
    fluctuation in the value of the brokerage account.
    *****
    * They are mostly 1,000 sq. ft. rental properties in the bad parts of
    Fort Wayne.
    
    Id. at 103-104.
    Fortunka responded affirmatively when asked whether the
    September 15, 2015 letter was the first time she had received the information that
    the only realistic expectation was to sell the properties to an investor.
    [7]   A letter by Attorney Myers, addressed to the Trust beneficiaries, dated October
    30, 2015, and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 7, indicated that he had held a
    meeting to address questions by Kyle Foreman and others. 5 It further stated:
    Let me start by saying that I was truly dumbstruck by the amount
    of false information that is circulating among some of you. Some
    of the rumors which Kyle related as having been suggested by
    some of you are not just a little wrong; they are nowhere close to
    any conceivable possibility of misunderstanding. They are
    outright fabrications with no basis in fact whatsoever.
    I do not intend to waste my time and your money (for attorney fee
    bills) chasing these wild stories to ground. If any of you have a
    specific question, ask it of me. If it is a relevant inquiry, you will
    receive a prompt and complete answer. If I am asked a question
    that has no role in moving the estate/trust to closure and
    distribution, I will not waste trust assets looking into it.
    5
    Fortunka testified that Foreman was her brother and that he lived in south Florida as of October 2015.
    Transcript Volume II at 64. Plaintiff’s Exhibit 34, which lists the names and addresses of the beneficiaries of
    the Trust, indicates that Foreman was a beneficiary as of September 2017. Exhibits Volume II at 22.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                               Page 7 of 32
    *****
    In about 45 days from the date of this letter, the Estate can be
    closed and the funds transferred to the Trust. The Trust was
    originally constructed to run Agnes’ real estate business so it has
    only a modest amount of liquidity – with the bulk of the assets
    being real estate[.]
    *****
    [] The remaining assets in the Trust will be the real estate which
    appears on a list enclosed herewith.[ 6] Note that the top items are
    under contract, some of which will last almost three (3) more
    years. There is little that can be done with these except let them
    pay out and periodically distribute the accumulated payments to
    you beneficiaries.
    The second set is the rental houses which can be sold at any time
    for a reasonable fair value, if a buyer can be located. Kyle was
    visibly shocked when I informed him that several of these houses
    were valued in the $8,000.00 to $12,000.00 range. I proved it to
    him by showing him sales documents for properties in these
    neighborhoods which have sold in the last three months for this
    price range.
    THIS JUST IN: [Morningstar] has just informed me that an
    individual has indicated a willingness to purchase all of these
    houses and will give us a written offer with his price early next
    week.
    6
    Attached to the October 30, 2015 letter was a document titled “V & A Morningstar Trust Properties,”
    which listed eight Fort Wayne addresses as “Currently Being Sold On Contract,” including “5226 Winter
    Street,” and the following Fort Wayne addresses as “Rentals”: “2822 Mauldin Drive,” “2724 Schaper
    Drive,” “2315 Saint Marys Avenue,” “2221 Vance Avenue,” “5714 Holiday Lane,” “2602 Lynn Avenue,”
    “4115 Robinwood,” “4809 Spatz Avenue,” “4310 Standish Drive,” “2620 Trentman Avenue,” “436 Violet
    Court,” “3724 Winter Street,” and “1302 Sinclair Street.” Exhibits Volume I at 108.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                       Page 8 of 32
    Once received, I will share it with you on the following basis: A) If
    you have a valid objection to the price or terms, that objection
    must be sent to me in writing, within 10 days, detailing the
    objection with documented or statistical support; or B) that you
    submit a valid written offer to purchase the lot of the properties
    (either by you or someone else as buyer) for a greater price and
    terms as good as the offer given to [Morningstar].
    If the offer we receive next week is of reasonable value and we
    have not received any qualifying response (as set forth in the
    preceding paragraph) then said offer will be accepted.
    *****
    Please take this letter as my request to each of you to propose a
    solid alternative to the options which I have outlined above. Some
    that come to my mind that you may consider are:
    a. Sell all to a company/person engaged in the rental of low value
    housing;
    b. Have [Morningstar] continue to market each unit seeking a
    cash buyer for them; or
    c. One or more of the beneficiaries come up with the money to
    buy them or agree to take them as a distribution rather than cash[.]
    Please don’t perpetuate the misunderstanding that Kyle was
    operating upon: We cannot put a sign in the front yard of most of
    these places and then drive over with the key for a showing. Most
    likely a call to see it is the precursor to an armed robbery.
    Furthermore, you do not go into these neighborhoods after 4:00
    pm for any reason, without a police escort.
    
    Id. at 105-106.
    Fortunka testified that she understood the statement in
    paragraph c. of the letter to mean that if she or any of the other beneficiaries
    “wanted to buy them we could exchange our shares of cash for the properties.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019        Page 9 of 32
    Transcript Volume II at 68. She also testified that, in reliance upon the letter,
    she then began “[t]o purchase the properties” and “sent a letter to [Attorney
    Myers] and [Morningstar] saying that [she] would like to take the properties in
    lieu of cash and that [she] had other beneficiaries that would also trade their
    cash distributions for property.” 
    Id. at 69.
    [8]   A letter by Attorney Myers, addressed to the beneficiaries of the Trust, dated
    November 10, 2015, and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 8, indicated that the
    offer mentioned in the previous letter had arrived and stated: “[i]n the interest
    of saving a few trees, I can tell you that the offer is for $220,000.00 to purchase
    those properties shown on page 6 of the offer (a copy of which page I have
    attached),” 7 and that, “[a]s the Trustee, [Morningstar] is inclined to accept this
    offer, however yields to any honest concerns that the beneficiaries may have.”
    Exhibits Volume I at 109. It stated:
    So, as indicated in my letter of October 30th: A) if you have a
    valid objection to the price, that objection must be sent to me in
    writing and be in my hands no later than November 25, 2015; or
    B) You or a conglomerate must submit a valid written offer to
    purchase all of those properties shown on the enclosed page for a
    greater net cash price than the offer just given to [Morningstar] by
    that November 25th date.
    7
    Following Attorney Myers’s November 10, 2015 letter, the Exhibits Volume contains a photocopy of a
    single page of what appears to be a form document with largely-indecipherable handwriting under the header
    “Further Conditions.” Exhibits Volume I at 110. The numbers “1302,” 2602,” and “2822” can be
    deciphered. See 
    id. Court of
    Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                         Page 10 of 32
    
    Id. [9] A
    letter by Fortunka addressed to Morningstar, dated November 18, 2015, and
    admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 9, responded to Attorney Myers’s November 10,
    2015 letter; disagreed with “selling the 14 properties for $220,000” which, as it
    indicated, “appear to be liquidated at too far below fair market value”; and
    provided examples of what Fortunka deemed to be appropriate average prices for
    specific units. 
    Id. at 111.
    It stated that she expressed a preference for selling the
    properties individually as the “letter from [Attorney Myers] dated October 30,
    2015 [had] proposed.” 
    Id. With regard
    to the “option for Trust Beneficiaries to
    receive distribution as a combination for property and cash,” it indicated that
    Fortunka was in the process of contacting all Trust beneficiaries, several of whom
    had expressed a desire to take that option, and stated: “As a group we offer
    $225,000 for the 14 properties in question. We consider this a great opportunity
    for [the Trust] to minimize costs and for the Beneficiaries to receive better
    values.” 
    Id. The letter
    requested that Morningstar provide relevant property
    information and inquired into the properties under contract. When asked about
    the letter, Fortunka testified that she considered $225,000 to be her offer and that
    she did not receive the rent amounts, occupancy details, property conditions, or
    known defects from the trustee or Attorney Myers.
    [10]   Attorney Myers’s response to Fortunka, dated November 24, 2016, and
    admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 10, indicated he had discussed her letter with
    Morningstar and stated:
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019        Page 11 of 32
    Clearly, your simple mention of the willingness of a group of
    heirs to purchase the properties falls short of a real offer and
    cannot be treated as such. But, it does raise the specter that
    failing to allow a validly formulated offer to be prepared would
    be to neglect the interests of all beneficiaries.
    
    Id. at 112.
    The letter stated that Fortunka’s suggestion – of selling the properties
    individually resulting in a larger sale price – was “accurate as stated,” however
    the process “could easily take six months to a year,” during which “time the
    costs to manage and maintain the properties would likely eat up more than the
    extra funds from an individual sale.” 
    Id. The letter
    stated that a realtor
    handling the sales would result in “an immediate six percent loss of sale price
    due to commission” and provided that, accordingly, the Trustee
    will entertain the “best and final” offer of any and all interested
    purchasers, subject to the criteria set forth below. The best offer
    received by the date set forth below which meets all of the stated
    criteria will be accepted by the Trust as the final purchaser.
    The criteria for the offer to be considered are as follows:
    1. The cash price must be stated and must be for all of the
    real estate titled to the Trust;
    2. The purchase must be “AS IS” meaning no warranty as
    to representations regarding physical condition, tenancy,
    right to immediate possession, status of rents, status of
    contract payments, balances due on contracts or any other
    expectation or assumption not specifically required as an
    essential element of the written offer;
    3. The offer must be complete and in writing with no oral
    terms or considerations;
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019       Page 12 of 32
    4. The offer must be accompanied by a five percent (5%)
    earnest money deposit paid to the Escrow account of the
    Myers Law Office (which will be applied against the
    purchase price at closing or refunded if the offer is not the
    best and, thus, not accepted).
    5. The conforming written offer and earnest money must
    be received in this office no later than 4:30 pm on
    December 7, 2015.
    
    Id. At the
    bottom of the second page, under Attorney Myers’s signature, the
    letter stated: “P.S. This same letter will be sent to the other offering party and
    make [sic] known to others in the local community.” 
    Id. When asked
    about
    Objector’s Exhibit 10, Fortunka testified that the real estate commission
    mentioned in the letter factored into her decision to make the offer for $225,000
    and she thought the benefit of her offer would be “less charges to the Trust.”
    Transcript Volume II at 75.
    [11]   Fortunka’s response, addressed to Attorney Myers, dated December 7, 2015, and
    admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 11, mentioned his November 24, 2015 letter,
    stated that “[f]or the second time we are communicating with [sic] you [n]ot to
    sell the 14 properties for $220,000,” indicated that “running an unadvertised two
    party auction is not in the benefit” of the Estate or the beneficiaries, and advised
    that the properties should be marked individually utilizing real estate
    professionals. Exhibits Volume I at 114. When asked about Objector’s Exhibit
    11, Fortunka testified that she considered, at that time, her offer to take the
    property in lieu of cash to still be valid, that her letter did not contain the earnest
    money because she was “already basically as an heir own [sic] the property” and
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019         Page 13 of 32
    she “didn’t feel it was necessary to give money that they already had.”
    Transcript Volume II at 78.
    [12]   A Purchase Agreement, also dated December 7, 2015, and admitted as
    Objector’s Exhibit 13, indicates that AM Fire Properties, LLC (“AM Fire”)
    agreed to purchase fourteen houses for $226,000. The Agreement contains, on
    the “Seller’s Signature” line, the signature of “Teresa Morningstar trustee,”
    provides that AM Fire would submit $12,000 as earnest money, and states in a
    typed paragraph under the heading “Further Conditions” that “Myer Law
    Office [is] to hold Earnest Money” until title is approved for each of the
    houses. 8 Exhibits Volume I at 121. After Objector’s Exhibit 13 was admitted,
    Fortunka testified that she had a conversation with Morningstar on December
    1st about the pending sale, in which she explained her thought that Morningstar
    was selling the properties too low and Morningstar said the properties were “in
    such disrepair that whoever brought these properties would have a lot of
    headaches and a lot of expense.” Transcript Volume II at 82.
    [13]   Attorney Myers’s response to Fortunka’s December 7, 2015 letter, dated the
    following day and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 12, stated that Fortunka’s
    correspondence “fell short of compliance with the bidding criteria established
    and therefore does not qualify for consideration” and that the other nineteen
    8
    Objector’s Exhibit 17 is a photocopy of a check in the amount of $12,000 from “AMFIRE PROPERTIES”
    and made out to “Myers Law Office/ Escrow Acct” for “earnest $ Morningstar Estate.” Exhibits Volume I
    at 131. The date on the check is “12/7/12.” 
    Id. Court of
    Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                     Page 14 of 32
    heirs besides Fortunka and Foreman “have been silently waiting for the sale
    and to receive their proceeds from the trust,” which was the reason that
    Attorney Myers was “convinced that [Fortunka’s] opinion is not reflective of
    the best interests of the beneficiaries as a whole.” Exhibits Volume I at 115. It
    further indicated that the properties
    are offered “As Is” because the cost of rehabilitating them to the
    local standards of marketability would be prohibitive. Almost
    every property sold in these zip codes is sold “As Is” which is
    ample evidence that your statements have no basis in reality for
    application to the south east side of Fort Wayne, IN.
    
    Id. [14] A
    letter by Attorney Myers addressed to the beneficiaries of the Trust, dated
    December 23, 2015, and admitted as Objector’s Exhibit 14, indicated that “[t]he
    accounting I offered is in process” and “should be done by the end of January,”
    that he had conducted record searches and responded to numerous inquiries,
    which he billed to the trust, due to “baseless accusations” by “a certain few of
    the beneficiaries . . . seeking to create anxiety in the remainder of the
    beneficiaries,” and that he had
    a demand that the Trust have appraisals made. Had that been
    done, the cost would have been nearly $8,000.00 more of your
    money. [Morningstar] is unwilling to spend those funds when
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019        Page 15 of 32
    our own market analysis tells us that the prices being received are
    competitive for this type of real estate and its location.[9]
    
    Id. at 123-124.
    When asked about Objector’s Exhibit 14, Fortunka testified that
    she did not believe that the letter informed the beneficiaries that there was
    already a pending transaction pursuant to the December 7, 2015 Purchase
    Agreement and that before the closing for the properties, which occurred on
    January 15, 2016, she did not know it was going to occur.
    [15]   The court admitted, as Objector’s Exhibit 31, affidavits of the custodian of
    records at the Allen County Assessor’s Office and certified sales disclosure
    forms for “the subject properties, fourteen [] in total which were sold at closing
    January 15, 2016,” 10 over Morningstar’s objection regarding their reliability.
    Transcript Volume II at 131. With the exception of the form disclosing the sale
    of 5714 Holiday Lane by the Estate of Virgil C. Morningstar, the sales
    disclosure forms with a conveyance date of January 15, 2016 list the Trust as
    9
    At the bottom, under the signature line, the letter states: “AMOUNT SPENT ON BASELESS
    ALLEGATIONS: (Remember that this included dealing with a challenge to the sale of the 642 sq. ft. lake cottage for
    $300,000.00, suggesting that it was valued nearer $700,000.00) From September 15, 2015 through December 15,
    2015 the costs to you for the baseless claims which I have addressed now total: $2,693.50.” Exhibits Volume I
    at 124.
    10
    The Affidavits of the Records Custodian in Objector’s Exhibit 31 affirm they are from the “custodian of the
    records at/for the Allen County Assessor’s Office, including those related to the ( ) Property Record Card or
    (XXX) Sales Disclosure Form” for locations at “5226 Winters St,” “2822 Mauldin Dr,” “2724 Schaper Drive,”
    “2315 St Marys,” “2221 Vance Ave,” “5714 Holiday Lane,” “2602 Lynn Ave,” “4115 Robinwood Dr,” “4809
    Spatz Ave,” “4310 Standish Dr,” “2620 Trentman Av,” “436 Violet Ct,” “3724 Winter St,” and “1302 Sinclair
    St,” as well as for a location at “6030 Kent Rd.” Exhibits Volume I at 156, 161, 166, 171, 176, 181, 189, 192,
    200, 205, 210, 215, 223, 228, and 233. Further, the affidavits affirm that the representations were “true this 13
    day of July, 2018,” and the Sales Disclosure Forms attached to each include a stamp, located at the top, which
    states “Jul 13 2018 [] Stacey O’Day Allen County Assessor.” See 
    id. Court of
    Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                                 Page 16 of 32
    the Seller/Grantor and Kaufmann LLC as the Buyer/Grantee. Forms sharing
    that same conveyance date indicate varying sales prices, ranging from $8,000 to
    $37,000. The exhibit contains several sales disclosure forms for subsequent
    sales of the same properties that list AM Fire as the Seller/Grantor.
    [16]   During direct examination by Fortunka’s counsel, Morningstar indicated that
    “Kaufmann, LLC” “somehow had an assignment under the purchase agreement
    with AM Fire” and “came to the closing and actually paid” $226,000 for the
    fourteen parcels. 
    Id. at 133.
    Morningstar further testified that she had never been
    a realtor, was not trained as such, and did not have a real estate license. She
    answered, “No I do not,” when asked if she knew how it “came to be that AM
    Fire made a second offer” for the properties, and she answered “No sir” when
    the court asked if she knew what happened between the initial offer of $220,000
    and the offer of $226,000 that would explain the increase of $6,000. 
    Id. at 158.
    When the court asked if the increase was “in anyway related to the fact” that
    “between those two [] contracts that this lady had made an offer to buy the
    properties,” she answered “No sir. I mean I didn’t do – I didn’t contact anybody.
    It was just – it came in,” and when asked if she knew whether or not Attorney
    Myers communicated to AM Fire that one of the beneficiaries had made an offer
    of $225,000, she answered that she did not know. 
    Id. at 158-159.
    When asked if
    the only thing she did to charge the finder’s fee was have a meeting with Fred
    Webb of AM Fire at some point in time, she answered “I found him, yes,” and
    indicated she did not conduct any negotiation. 
    Id. at 167.
    She testified that she
    did not inform the beneficiaries of her plans to charge the finder’s fee at any time
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019      Page 17 of 32
    or ask permission of the court to charge it. She indicated that she “did three
    percent (3%) which was half of a what a realtor would charge,” in response to
    being asked how she determined the amount for the finder’s fee. 
    Id. at 169-170.
    The court sustained an objection based on the Dead Man’s Statute when her
    counsel asked during cross-examination whether Virgil was aware that she had
    received a percentage of the sale proceeds of a lake cottage, and Morningstar
    answered affirmatively when asked if she sold “the other properties while Virgil
    was alive and retain[ed] a percentage fee for that activity,” indicated she did not
    know how many times and stated“[a] few, yes,” and answered “[y]es I did”
    when asked if she consulted Virgil when she did so. 11 
    Id. at 179.
    She answered in
    the negative when asked if she negotiated for a price with the buyer on any given
    property. During recross-examination, the court asked her if she expected it to
    believe that, when she signed her name on the disclosures and “they put a value
    on each of the properties,” she did not realize what she was doing, Morningstar
    answered “[h]onestly, I just signed the papers,” and when the court asked in
    follow-up “[a]nd you stick by that you didn’t realize what you were doing,” she
    responded “I stick by that. I really didn’t realize what I was doing.” 
    Id. at 193.
    [17]   Christopher Lasley, who worked for the Trust as a property manager until 2014,
    testified as to his recollections about three properties and answered questions
    about another property. When Morningstar moved to submit Trustee’s Exhibit
    11
    The court later sustained an objection based on the Dead Man’s Statute when counsel asked whether, at
    any point in time, Virgil threatened to fire Morningstar from her job as Trustee. (179)
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                         Page 18 of 32
    F, a list in which Lasley “put down what [he] fe[lt] was the value” for the
    fourteen Trust properties in question, Fortunka objected and Lasley indicated in
    response to preliminary questions that he was not a licensed realtor or appraiser
    of Indiana real estate, had not ever taken classes in real estate appraisal, did not
    conduct real estate appraisals for his current employer, and that he had not given
    an opinion as to residential real estate values before he was given the list by
    Attorney Myers. Transcript Volume III at 54. The court sustained the objection.
    [18]   Kyle Roemmich, a licensed realtor and owner of a property management
    company testified that potential rental property owners ask to “look at houses
    that they’re thinking about buying and giv[e an] opinion on what it would cost
    to get it rent ready, make the repairs, things like that,” and testified that he
    prepared upon request a list of valuations for certain properties. 
    Id. at 62.
    When Morningstar moved to admit the list, Fortunka objected as to the
    competency of the witness. After Roemmich answered in the negative to each
    of the court’s questions of whether he went into any of the properties, knew the
    status of the units’ plumbing, heating, air conditioning, or electric, or used any
    comparables or Allen County or Township records in preparing the valuations,
    the court sustained the objection. 
    Id. at 66.
    [19]   Fred Webb of AM Fire testified about purchasing the fourteen properties and,
    when asked about how he increased his offer to $226,000, stated “I got a call. I
    think it was that my offer wasn’t good enough, wasn’t high enough and that I
    needed it best and final.” 
    Id. at 97.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019       Page 19 of 32
    [20]   On November 21, 2018, the court issued its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of
    Law and Judgment on Trustee’s First Accounting and the Objections Thereto.
    In its Findings of Fact the court found: from December 7, 2015, until the real
    estate closing on January 15, 2016, neither Attorney Myers nor Morningstar
    ever disclosed the acceptance and new purchase price sum of $226,000 from
    AM Fire to any of the Trust beneficiaries; Morningstar accepted AM Fire’s
    offer to purchase the Trust real estate as evidenced by the December 7, 2015
    purchase agreement; Webb heard from Morningstar “that his first offer to
    purchase of $220,000.00 wasn’t good enough”; that the conflict in testimony
    between Webb and Morningstar concerning the request for new bids and the
    vague discussion about what “highest and best offer” meant is “very
    suspicious”; and that it concluded that either Morningstar or Attorney Myers
    must have communicated Fortunka’s offer to Webb “prior to his alleged
    submission of his second ‘best and highest offer.’” Appellant’s Appendix
    Volume II at 20. The court found: that the check purporting to be AM Fire’s
    earnest money deposit, which was dated three years prior to the time in
    question, was not credibly the earnest money deposit made by AM Fire; that
    none of the evidence presented was consistent with AM Fire submitting an
    earnest money deposit on December 7, 2015; and that AM Fire did not meet
    Morningstar’s bidding criteria. It further found: Morningstar did not order the
    Trust real estate appraised “so the values of the parcels at the time of sale or at
    the time of Virgil’s death were not established”; that by using the values of the
    Trust real estate “as determined by the Allen County Sales Disclosure forms,”
    twelve of the properties “were sold by [Morningstar] for a price less than the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019      Page 20 of 32
    appraised values or subsequent sales price”; that based on the appraisals and
    subsequent sales disclosure information, the purchase price of $226,000 “in the
    aggregate is $128,100 less” than the fair market value of the Trust real estate,
    and that Morningstar’s “unilateral action” deprived the Trust of that amount.
    
    Id. at 25-26.
    [21]   With regard to the three percent “finder’s fee” of $6,780, the court found:
    18. The Trustee’s witness, Cindy Wirtner, C.P.A. testified that a
    finder’s fee is paid to someone as a fee for finding a buyer or a
    seller in a transaction. [Morningstar] did not find the buyer of the
    13 properties; and was being compensated as Trustee on a bi-
    monthly basis when she received a $6,780 “finder’s fee”.
    19. Ms. Wirtner also testified that the 3% “finder’s fee” paid to
    [Morningstar] was not a “finder’s fee”, but was a commission.
    Although Virgil’s lake property was not in the trust when it was
    sold, the 4% “finder’s fee” was in fact a $12,000 commission. The
    “finder’s fee” paid to the Trustee on sales of 20-25 parcels of real
    estate sold before the trust was funded were also commissions.
    20. That the Trustee’s attorney approved the $6,780 “finder’s fee”
    does not render said payment as a commission to be proper or
    legal.
    *****
    22. The Trustee’s first accounting disclosed that on January 26,
    2016, she received a distribution of Trust property in cash in the
    sum of $8,000. She had also received a $26,000 distribution of
    cash from the Trust on December 18, 2015.
    23. In addition to the Trustee’s receipt of her beneficiary
    distributions of $8,000 and $26,000 . . . she also received the
    finder’s fee of $6,780 from the sale of the Trust Real Estate. She
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019         Page 21 of 32
    had previously received a four percent (4%) finder’s fee from the
    Estate of Virgil Morningstar for the sale of the lake property in
    Michigan for the sum of $300,000, which reduced the funds to be
    distributed to the Trust. The Trustee also collected reimbursement
    for mileage, cell phone and bi-monthly payroll payments of
    $849.50 while the Trust Real Estate property was under
    management by the Trust.
    
    Id. at 28-29
    (internal citations omitted).
    [22]   In its Conclusions of Law, the court concluded that: “[b]ased upon review of the
    exhibits in this case in assessing the demeanor and consistency of her testimony,
    [Fortunka] was a credible witness at the hearings”; “[b]ased upon the exhibits,
    testimony of other witnesses, including [Webb] and [Fortunka], [Morningstar]
    was not a credible witness concerning her communications with [Webb] relating
    to the Trust Real Estate transaction and events leading up to the closing in
    January 2016, as well as in other parts of her testimony, including at the signing
    of sales disclosure documents she claimed ‘she didn’t realize what she was
    doing’”; and that Morningstar’s history of collecting finder’s fees from prior real
    estate properties, although not part of the issues before the court, demonstrate a
    past practice of unsupervised collection of finder’s fees without court approval or
    disclosure to Trust beneficiaries. 
    Id. at 29.
    It further concluded that Morningstar
    breached her duty to preserve Trust property by failing to adequately determine
    the value of Trust Real Estate through appraisals and selling it against the
    objections of multiple beneficiaries at less than fair market value and at a loss of
    at least $128,100; she breached her duty “against self-dealing pursuant to I.C. §
    30-4-3-5” by paying herself a finder’s fee without consultation or consent from
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019       Page 22 of 32
    the beneficiaries or the court despite her failure to demonstrate any actions on her
    part to cultivate a buyer, to maximize the sales price, or to close the sale of the
    property, resulting in a loss of $6,780; and she breached her duty of loyalty to the
    beneficiaries by requiring “Fortunka to strictly adhere to certain bidding criteria,
    such as submission of an earnest money deposit, while at the same time granting
    the third party special treatment by allowing the third party to forego submitting
    an earnest money deposit with its bid.” 
    Id. at 32-33.
    It ordered Morningstar
    liable to the beneficiaries in the amount of $128,000 and to disgorge the $6,780
    she received as finder’s fees, that the total judgment of $134,880 “shall be a
    charge against [her] beneficial interest in the Trust,” and that the “Trustee is
    liable to [Fortunka] for reasonable costs and attorney’s fees,” who along with her
    counsel was “authorized to submit their petition for fees within fourteen (14)
    days of this Order. The Court will then determine an Order for
    Reimbursement.” 
    Id. at 33-34.
    [23]   On November 30, 2018, Morningstar submitted her Resignation of Trustee letter
    which provided that it would “be effective at 11:59 pm on December 31, 2018.”
    Motion to Dismiss Exhibit A at 1. The chronological case summary contains an
    entry indicating that Fortunka filed a petition for attorney fees and costs on
    November 30, 2018, and the court conducted a hearing at which it considered
    the petition and arguments of counsel and ultimately awarded a judgment
    against Morningstar and in favor of Fortunka in the amount of $94,472.00.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019        Page 23 of 32
    [24]   Fortunka later filed a request for judicial relief to appoint successor trustee, and
    the court held a hearing and appointed STAR Bank, which filed an unopposed
    motion to add it as an appellee with this Court, which we granted.
    Discussion
    [25]   The issue is whether the trial court erred in finding that Morningstar breached
    her duties as trustee. When the trial court enters an order containing findings of
    fact and conclusions, we apply a two-step review. In re Wilson, 
    930 N.E.2d 646
    ,
    650 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010), trans. denied. First, we consider whether the evidence
    supports the findings, and second, whether the conclusions support the
    judgment. See 
    id. We will
    neither reweigh the evidence nor assess witness
    credibility, considering only the evidence most favorable to the judgment. 
    Id. We will
    set aside the trial court’s findings and conclusions only if they are
    clearly erroneous, that is, if the record contains no facts or inferences supporting
    them. 
    Id. We apply
    a de novo standard of review to conclusions of law. 
    Id. [26] A
    trust is “a fiduciary relationship between a person who, as trustee, holds title
    to property and another person for whom, as beneficiary, the title is held.” Ind.
    Code § 30-4-1-1(a). “A ‘breach of trust’ is a violation by the trustee of any duty
    that is owed to the beneficiary, with the duties being established by statute and
    by the terms of the trust.” In re Stuart Cochran Irrevocable Trust, 
    901 N.E.2d 1128
    , 1138 (Ind. Ct. App. 2009), trans. denied. See Ind. Code § 30-4-1-2(4)
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019      Page 24 of 32
    (2014) (defining “breach of trust”). 12 A trustee has duties to administer a trust
    according to the terms of the trust and to preserve the trust property. See Ind.
    Code § 30-4-3-6(a) and (b)(3) (2015). 13
    A. Breach of Duty Relating to Sales of Trust Property
    [27]   Morningstar first argues the trial court erroneously valued the Trust assets and
    asserts that the methodology it used to arrive at the fair market value was
    illogical, incorrect, and unsupported by the evidence. She contends that the court
    erroneously used the sale price for each property shown on its Sales Disclosures
    from the Trust to Kaufmann, LLC – which she characterizes as a “random
    assignment of individual values” – in light of her testimony that she did not have
    input on the values placed on the disclosures. Appellant’s Brief at 20. She asserts
    that the court then erred in comparing those values to either the appraisal value –
    in light of Roemmich’s testimony – or the price on the Sales Disclosure in the
    later fourth party sale by AM Fire, which she asserts failed to account for the
    renovations made by AM Fire. She argues that, instead of considering them
    individually, the properties should be considered in sum, as a whole portfolio;
    that Fortunka placed a total value upon the properties of $225,000, as indicated
    by her offer; and that Fortunka never proved any other overall value than that
    evidenced by the sale for $226,000 between a willing seller and a willing buyer.
    12
    Subsequently amended by Pub. L. No. 163-2018, § 13 (eff. July 1, 2018); Pub. L. No. 33-2019, § 13 (eff.
    July 1, 2019); Pub. L. No. 221-2019, § 1 (eff. July 1, 2019); and Pub. L. No. 231-2019, § 21 (eff. July 1, 2019).
    13
    Subsequently amended by Pub. L. No. 221-2019, § 3 (eff. July 1, 2019); Pub. L. No. 231-2019, § 24 (eff.
    July 1, 2019).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                               Page 25 of 32
    She contends that her previous experience of selling other properties under
    Virgil’s watch made her “very familiar with the marketability of low income
    properties” and formed the basis for her acceptance of AM Fire’s offer of
    $226,000. 
    Id. at 18.
    She further argues that “Fortunka’s bid failed to include the
    requirements of a legitimate offer,” and that, because Fortunka’s bid amount was
    exceeded by that of another buyer, she was thus duty-bound to sell the properties
    for the higher offer. 
    Id. at 13.
    [28]   STAR Bank argues Morningstar’s specific objections on appeal as to valuation
    of the properties amounts to a re-litigation of disputed facts and that the court’s
    findings must be viewed through the lens of its credibility determinations
    which, as evidenced by the judgment and order, weighed heavily in Fortunka’s
    favor and against Morningstar. It argues that the process of selling the
    properties was unusual and highly suspect and that the bid process “appeared to
    be rigged.” Appellee STAR Bank’s Brief at 16. Fortunka contends that the
    whole issue in this case could have been avoided if appraisals of the property
    had been done “as is routine and customary in trust administration before the
    sale of real estate so that the beneficiaries are protected.” Appellee Fortunka’s
    Brief at 22.
    [29]   With regards to the valuation of the Trust property, the record as set out above
    reveals that Objector’s Exhibit 31 contained sales disclosure documents
    displaying sales prices for the Trust properties for conveyances on January 15,
    2016, and on subsequent dates, which were attached to affidavits of the
    custodian of the records for the Allen County Assessor. The court heard
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019     Page 26 of 32
    testimony about the properties, the differences between each, and estimates of
    prices for the separate properties and in the aggregate from several witnesses,
    including that of Mack, who was qualified without objection as an expert in the
    field of appraisals. It also heard and was able to consider and weigh the
    testimony of other witnesses regarding the properties’ values. We do not
    reweigh the evidence nor assess witness credibility. See In re 
    Wilson, 930 N.E.2d at 650
    . Having found that the record contains facts and inferences supporting
    the court’s valuation, we do not disturb its finding that the purchase price in the
    aggregate of $226,000 was less than the fair market value of the Trust real
    estate, which it valued at an amount of $128,100 in excess of $226,000.
    [30]   We further note the extensive findings in the court’s twenty-three page order
    regarding the administration of the Trust, especially the findings that
    Morningstar did not order an appraisal as the Trustee, despite not knowing the
    worth of the Trust’s real estate assets, and that Fortunka was a credible witness,
    whereas Morningstar was not. With that in mind, we observe that the Trust first
    divulged to the beneficiaries the addresses of the properties on October 30, 2015,
    in the same letter that it shared that it had secured a potential willing purchaser.
    In the same letter, the Trust outlined that, alternatively, Morningstar could
    “continue to market each unit seeking a cash buyer” or one or more of the
    beneficiaries could “come up with the money to buy them or agree to take them
    as a distribution.” Exhibits Volume I at 105-106. Fortunka presented evidence
    that she expressed to the Trust a desire as a beneficiary to explore either option.
    When the Trust disclosed the amount of the initial offer, Fortunka expressed her
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019       Page 27 of 32
    disagreement in selling Trust assets at a price she considered “far below fair
    market value.” 
    Id. at 111.
    We cannot say that the trial court’s conclusion that
    Morningstar breached her duty to preserve Trust property was clearly erroneous.
    B. Breach of Duty Relating to Finder’s Fees
    [31]   Morningstar argues that her receipt of a finder’s fee is not prohibited self-dealing
    under Ind. Code § 30-4-3-7. 14 She argues that she presented evidence of a
    practice in which Virgil, prior to his death, paid her compensation for locating
    qualified buyers of his own real estate, and that of the Trust. She further
    contends her efforts saved the Trust from incurring costs that would have been
    incurred “[h]ad the . . . Trust properties been sold using a Realtor” and that, for
    these savings, she was paid the finder’s fee of $6,780. Appellant’s Brief at 34.
    [32]   Fortunka responds that Morningstar presented no independent evidence of
    Virgil’s alleged approval of past finder’s fees and contends that she did not
    object when the court struck the self-serving testimony in accordance with the
    Dead Man’s Statute per Ind. Code §§ 35-45-2. 15 STAR Bank contends it is
    14
    Titled “Self dealing; transactions between trusts,” Ind. Code § 30-4-3-7 provided in part at the time of the
    Trust Administration that, unless the terms of the trust provide otherwise, the trustee has a duty “not to loan
    funds to the trustee or an affiliate,” “not to purchase or participate in the purchase of trust property from the
    trust for the trustee’s own or an affiliate’s account,” and “not to sell or participate in the sale of the trustee’s
    own or an affiliate’s property to the trust.” (Subsequently amended by Pub. L. No. 194-2017, § 9 (eff. July 1,
    2017)). To the extent that the trial court referenced “self-dealing” in its conclusions of law section, we cannot
    say reversal is warranted on this basis in light of its citation to and discussion of the statutory elements of Ind.
    Code § 30-4-3-5 and application to the facts of this case. See Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 30-32.
    15
    In Childress Cattle, LLC v. Estate of Cain, this Court stated that the Dead Man’s Statute
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                                 Page 28 of 32
    undisputed that she engaged in “little to no effort in ‘finding’ the buyer; in fact,
    the buyer may well have found her” and that she was paying herself a
    substantial salary out of the Trust during the relevant time frame. Appellee
    STAR Bank’s Brief at 13.
    [33]   As noted, a trust is a fiduciary relationship, see Ind. Code § 30-4-1-1(a), and a
    trustee has duties to administer a trust according to the terms of the trust and to
    preserve trust property. See Ind. Code § 30-4-3-6(a) and (b)(3) (2015). See also
    N.L.R.B. v. Amax Coal Co., a Div. of Amax, Inc., 
    453 U.S. 322
    , 329-330, 
    101 S. Ct. 2789
    , 2794 (U.S. 1981) (“Under principles of equity, a trustee bears an
    unwavering duty of complete loyalty to the beneficiary of the trust, to the
    exclusion of the interests of all other parties. To deter the trustee from all
    temptation and to prevent any possible injury to the beneficiary, the rule against
    a trustee dividing his loyalties must be enforced with ‘uncompromising rigidity.’
    establishes as a matter of legislative policy that claimants to the estate of a deceased person
    should not be permitted to present a court with their version of their dealings with the decedent.
    In re Estate of Rickert, 
    934 N.E.2d 726
    , 731 (Ind. 2010). Our Court has explained that
    Generally, when an executor or administrator of an estate is one party, the adverse parties are
    not competent to testify about transactions that took place during the lifetime of the decedent.
    Furthermore, the general purpose of the statutes is to protect decedents’ estates from spurious
    claims. The Dead Man’s Statutes guard against false testimony by a survivor by establishing a
    rule of mutuality, wherein the lips of the surviving party are closed by law when the lips of the
    other party are closed by death.
    We have held that the Dead Man’s Statutes apply to all cases in which a judgment may result
    for or against the estate, notwithstanding the parties’ positions as plaintiff or defendant. In
    addition, neither the express language of the statutes nor accepted concepts of fairness should
    preclude application of the statutes so long as no statements made by the decedent are
    admitted through depositions or public records made during his life.
    J.M. Corp. v. Roberson, 
    749 N.E.2d 567
    , 571 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001) (internal citations omitted).
    
    88 N.E.3d 1121
    , 1123 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                             Page 29 of 32
    A fiduciary cannot contend ‘that, although he had conflicting interests, he
    served his masters equally well or that his primary loyalty was not weakened by
    the pull of his secondary one.’” (internal citations omitted)), reh’g denied; Scanlan
    v. Eisenberg, 
    669 F.3d 838
    , 844 (7th Cir. 2012) (“A trustee owes a fiduciary duty
    to a trust’s beneficiaries and is obligated to carry out the trust according to its
    terms and to act with the highest degree of fidelity and utmost good faith. The
    fiduciary obligation of loyalty flows from the relationship of the trustee and
    beneficiary . . . .” (internal citations omitted)). 16
    [34]   Ind. Code § 30-4-3-5 provides:
    If the duty of the trustee in the exercise of any power conflicts with
    the trustee’s individual interest or the trustee’s interest as trustee of
    another trust, the power may be exercised only under one (1) of
    the following circumstances:
    (1) The trustee receives court authorization to exercise the
    power with notice to interested persons as the court may
    direct.
    (2) The trustee gives notice of the proposed action in
    accordance with IC 30-2-14-16 and:
    16
    We also note that the Indiana Law Encyclopedia provides that, “[b]ecause a trustee’s fundamental duty of
    complete loyalty to the interests of a beneficiary requires him or her to forego all selfish interests in the
    administration of the trust, a trustee may not profit therefrom.” 28 Ind. Law Encyc. Trusts § 109. We
    further note that comment c(2) of § 86 of the Third Restatement of Trusts notes that although a trustee
    ordinarily “has broad authority with regard to the sale of real property held in the trust, and even if confirmed
    by powers expressly granted in a statute or trust provision, the exercise of the trustee’s power of sale requires
    the exercise of prudence . . . , as well as compliance with other relevant fiduciary duties . . . . In this context,
    the demands of fiduciary care and skill . . . are likely to be particularly rigorous – requiring the exercise of due
    diligence and competence, via advisors or agents if and as needed by the trustee – because of the pricing,
    information, and other challenges presented by the particular market.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                                 Page 30 of 32
    (A) the trustee receives the written authorization of
    all interested persons to the proposed action within
    the period specified in the notice of the proposed
    action; or
    (B) a beneficiary objects to the proposed action
    within the period specified in the notice of the
    proposed action, but the trustee receives court
    authorization to exercise the power.
    (3) The exercise of the power is specifically authorized by
    the terms of the trust.
    [35]   Article X of the Trust is titled “Compensation of Trustee” and provides in part
    that the trustee shall receive reasonable compensation “for unusual and
    extraordinary services” rendered in settling the trustors’ financial affairs and in
    making distribution of the assets. Appellant’s Appendix Volume II at 41.
    Article X further provides that “[s]uch compensation shall be adequate to cover
    the work involved, as well as responsibilities assumed, in effecting financial
    disposition of the trust.” 
    Id. [36] The
    record reveals Morningstar paid herself $6,780 in connection with the sale
    of the Trust properties, and that she received monthly or bimonthly payroll
    disbursements at the time of $845.50. At the hearing, she answered “I found
    him, yes,” when asked if the only thing she did to charge the finder’s fee was
    have a meeting with Webb at some point in time, and she indicated she did not
    conduct any negotiation. Transcript Volume II at 167. Under the
    circumstances, we find that the court’s determination that $6,780 was not
    reasonable compensation paid for “unusual and extraordinary services” was not
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019             Page 31 of 32
    clearly erroneous. Based upon the evidence and testimony presented, we
    conclude that Morningstar committed a breach of trust under Ind. Code § 30-4-
    3-5 and affirm the judgment ordering her to disgorge the $6,780 payment.
    [37]   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the trial court’s order. 17
    [38]   Affirmed.
    May, J., and Mathis, J., concur.
    17
    While both vigorous representation of a client and thorough and responsive communication are desirable,
    we caution Attorney Myers to review the expectations set forth in the Ind. Rules of Professional Conduct, in
    light of the correspondence he shared with the beneficiaries as the representative of a fiduciary, as detailed
    above and which did not disclose AM Fire’s second offer to purchase.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 18A-TR-3044 |November 15, 2019                             Page 32 of 32