William H. Deal v. Brenda Sue Gittings and Marc Richmond Gittings ( 2020 )


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  •                                                                        FILED
    Mar 06 2020, 9:03 am
    CLERK
    Indiana Supreme Court
    Court of Appeals
    and Tax Court
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT                              ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEES
    David L. Jones                                       James D. Johnson
    David E. Gray                                        Jackson Kelly PLLC
    Craig R. Emig                                        Evansville, Indiana
    Jones • Wallace, LLC
    Evansville, Indiana
    John G. Wetherill
    Wetherill Law Office
    Rockport, Indiana
    Gerald R. Thom
    Jasper, Indiana
    IN THE
    COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
    William H. Deal,                                          March 6, 2020
    Appellant-Petitioner,                                     Court of Appeals Case No.
    19A-TR-2210
    Appeal from the Spencer Circuit
    v.                                                Court
    The Hon. Mark R. McConnell,
    Special Judge
    Brenda Sue Gittings and Marc
    Richmond Gittings,                                        Trial Court Cause No.
    74C01-1305-TR-27
    Appellees-Respondents.
    Bradford, Chief Judge.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                           Page 1 of 18
    Case Summary
    [1]   Nile and Georgia Richmond were married in 1985. Nile’s daughter from a
    previous marriage is Brenda Gittings, and Georgia’s son from a previous
    marriage is William Deal. While alive, Nile and Georgia executed a series of
    trusts that, inter alia, provided that upon their deaths, interests in certain real
    estate acquired by Nile during his life would be divided, with one-third going to
    Brenda, one-third going to William, and the remining one-third divided equally
    between Nile and Georgia’s grandchildren.
    [2]   Nile passed in 1995, and the assets from his inter vivos trust passed into another
    trust, of which Brenda, William, and Georgia were co-trustees. Soon after
    Nile’s passing, Georgia reformed her trust agreements and transferred title to
    the real estate (“the Transfers”) such that Brenda and the grandchildren were no
    longer to receive any interest in it upon her death, which occurred in 1997. The
    Transfers were made without court approval and without disclosing all of the
    material facts to Brenda.
    [3]   In around 2010, after the real estate began producing significant amounts of
    income through coal and gas leases, Brenda began asserting an interest in it. In
    2013, William petitioned the trial court to approve the Transfers. After a bench
    trial, the trial court approved the Transfers, but, in 2018, the Indiana Supreme
    Court held that William was not, in fact, entitled to court approval of them and
    remanded the matter to the trial court for further proceedings. In September of
    2019, the trial court declared the Transfers void ab initio and ordered a
    constructive trust to facilitate the transfer of the real estate and income received
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020             Page 2 of 18
    since the Transfers to Brenda and the other original beneficiaries. William
    appeals, arguing that the trial court clearly erred in declaring the Transfers void
    ab initio and in ordering the creation of a constructive trust. Because we
    disagree, we affirm.
    Facts and Procedural History
    [4]   Nile was originally from West Virginia and, during his lifetime, acquired
    hundreds of acres of real estate and mineral interests in that state. (Appellee’s
    App. Vol. II p. 10). Further underlying facts of this case were related as follows
    by the Indiana Supreme Court:
    Nile and Georgia Richmond married in 1985. They had no
    children together, but each had a child from a previous marriage:
    Brenda Sue Gittings (Nile’s daughter) and William Deal
    (Georgia’s son).
    A. The trust agreements.
    As part of their estate planning, Nile and Georgia executed two
    trust agreements, each identified by the settlor’s name: the Nile
    D. Richmond Primary Trust Agreement (“NDR Trust
    Agreement”), with Nile as settlor; and the Georgia L. Richmond
    Primary Trust Agreement (“GLR Trust Agreement”), with
    Georgia as settlor. Each settlor, while alive, could modify his or
    her respective agreement, but when Nile and Georgia executed
    the agreements, the terms mirrored one another.
    Each agreement set up a Primary Trust, a Trust A, and a Trust B.
    The NDR Trust Agreement thus established the NDR Primary
    Trust, NDR Trust A, and NDR Trust B. And the GLR Trust
    Agreement similarly established the GLR Primary Trust, GLR
    Trust A, and GLR Trust B. After executing the trust agreements,
    Nile and Georgia funded each primary trust with, among other
    assets, undivided one-half interests in land and minerals they
    owned in West Virginia and Indiana.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020          Page 3 of 18
    The primary trusts were inter vivos trusts, holding Nile’s and
    Georgia’s primary trust estates during each of their lives. Once
    the settlor died, the assets of that primary trust estate would be
    distributed to the respective Trust A and/or Trust B.
    The initial trustees were the settlor and the spouse. But if the
    settlor died first, the surviving spouse would not be the sole
    trustee of Trust A and Trust B. The trust agreements made this
    explicit: “In no event shall the surviving spouse serve as sole
    Trustee after the death of [the] Settlor.” Instead, after the
    settlor’s death, the surviving spouse, “along with William H.
    Deal and Brenda Sue Gittings, shall serve as Co-Trustees of Trust
    A and Trust B.”
    Trust A—a marital-deduction trust with provisions removing
    certain discretion from the surviving spouse—was designed to
    provide for the surviving spouse’s support, maintenance, and
    health. It was to receive no less than the smaller of $100,000 or
    the balance of the settlor’s primary trust. Once the surviving
    spouse died, assets remaining in Trust A would go into Trust B.
    Apart from receiving any Trust A leftovers, Trust B was set up to
    receive two other classes of assets: those transferred directly to
    Trust B by the decedent settlor’s last will, and those remaining in
    the settlor’s primary trust estate after its distribution to Trust A.
    Trust B would be distributed after both the settlor’s and the
    spouse’s deaths. Each trust agreement originally instructed that
    the assets collected in its Trust B be distributed in thirds: one
    third to Brenda, one third to William, and one third divided
    equally among Nile’s and Georgia’s grandchildren.
    B. The amended agreement and the property transfers.
    Nile died in January 1995, leaving Georgia as the surviving
    spouse and co-trustee—with Brenda and William—of NDR
    Trust A and NDR Trust B.
    About six months later, Brenda gave birth to her son, Marc.
    Concerned about whether Marc—having been born after Nile’s
    death—was part of the beneficiary class of grandchildren, Brenda
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020             Page 4 of 18
    asked Georgia for a copy of “the trust.” At this point, although
    Brenda’s understanding was that Nile and Georgia had each
    created a separate trust, she didn’t know details about their terms;
    she had neither received a copy of the NDR Trust Agreement
    from Nile nor seen a copy of the GLR Trust Agreement. Based
    on what her father told her, Brenda thought that “[a]fter [Nile’s]
    death whatever was in his trust would go into Georgia’s for
    safekeeping.”
    Soon after Brenda requested “the trust,” Georgia distributed the
    NDR Primary Trust estate to NDR Trust A and NDR Trust B,
    and amended the GLR Trust Agreement, removing Brenda and
    Marc as beneficiaries.
    Georgia next sent Brenda a copy of the NDR Trust Agreement
    along with four deeds, a lease assignment, and a note asking
    Brenda to sign and return the deeds and assignment. The deeds
    and assignment referenced the GLR Trust Agreement and
    purported to convey the one-half interests in West Virginia and
    Indiana property from NDR Trust A to “Georgia L. Richmond,
    as Trustee … under a Trust Agreement … known as the [GLR
    Trust Agreement].” Georgia did not, however, send Brenda a
    copy of the GLR Trust Agreement, original or amended.
    Seeking advice, Brenda turned to legal counsel at the office
    where she worked as a paralegal. Brenda’s counsel sent a letter
    to Georgia’s attorney, explaining that Brenda sought to
    determine “her status under her father’s Will and his Primary
    Trust Agreement,” and acknowledging that Brenda had received
    a copy of “the Trust Agreement” from Georgia. In the letter,
    Brenda’s counsel also asked Georgia’s attorney for documents
    “bearing materially upon Brenda’s interest as trustee or
    beneficiary.”
    Georgia’s attorney responded with documents related to the
    NDR trust assets. He listed the assets in NDR Trust A,
    explained that “[NDR] Trust B contains the rest and remainder
    of the Primary Trust,” and set out the assets in Trust B. But he
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020           Page 5 of 18
    did not include the GLR Trust Agreement, believing that he was
    not authorized to disclose Georgia’s information to a third party.
    Although neither Brenda nor her counsel had seen the GLR
    Trust Agreement that the deeds and assignment referenced,
    Brenda signed the deeds and assignment, and her attorney sent
    them to Georgia’s counsel. Georgia and William signed similar
    deeds—not the same documents that Brenda signed, but ones
    that likewise purported to transfer the West Virginia and Indiana
    property from NDR Trust A to Georgia as trustee under the
    GLR Trust Agreement.
    Georgia died in March 1997. Her death triggered distribution of
    the NDR trust estate through NDR Trust B—in thirds to Brenda,
    William, and the grandchildren, including Marc. In June 1997,
    Brenda signed the final account and petition to settle and close
    NDR Trust B. This document showed that the trust estate would
    be completely depleted upon the “final distribution” of the
    “balance in trust” to Brenda, William, Marc, and the other
    grandchildren. Under that distribution—outlined in the
    accounting—Brenda and William each received almost $91,000
    and each grandchild received approximately $22,710 placed in
    individual trusts.
    Not long after Brenda signed the final account, an attorney who
    helped administer NDR Trust B and who handled the
    administration of Georgia’s estate sent Brenda a copy of the
    amended GLR Trust Agreement. When Brenda received it
    around July 14, 1997, she learned that she and Marc had been
    eliminated as beneficiaries and that everything in the GLR trust
    would go to William. As the GLR trust’s sole beneficiary,
    William received the property that the deeds—both the ones that
    Brenda signed and the ones that William and Georgia signed—
    purported to transfer in 1995 from NDR Trust A to Georgia as
    trustee of the GLR Primary Trust.
    After receiving the GLR Trust Agreement and learning that she
    and Marc were not beneficiaries, Brenda was “pretty
    downtrodden for quite a while.” But she did not turn to her legal
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020         Page 6 of 18
    counsel for advice about the GLR Trust Agreement and its
    amendments. Nor did she bring any claims at that time or object
    to the executor’s final account and petition to settle Georgia’s
    estate.
    Sometime around that fall at a family gathering, Brenda’s
    husband—with Brenda there—asked William about any more
    inheritance. William responded that there wasn’t anything left
    after Georgia’s medical, nursing home, and funeral bills had been
    paid.
    About thirteen years later, in 2010, the property in West Virginia
    that William received from the GLR trust began producing
    significant income—hundreds of thousands of dollars annually—
    from oil and gas leases. Over the next couple of years, Brenda
    consulted with an attorney and sent William a letter, making
    claims on the property.
    William found among his mother’s things the deeds that Brenda
    signed in 1995 and, after consulting with his own attorney,
    recorded them in June 2012.
    C. Court proceedings.
    In 2013, William petitioned the trial court to docket the NDR
    Trust Agreement and to grant him declaratory relief by
    approving the transfers of the land and mineral interests from
    NDR Trust A to Georgia as trustee under the GLR Trust
    Agreement. He also asked the court to find that Brenda knew
    about and consented to the transfers, and—based on that consent
    and the statutes of limitations—to preclude Brenda from bringing
    claims for breach of trust and for recovery of real estate.
    The court allowed Marc Gittings (Brenda’s son) to intervene, and
    the Gittingses responded to William’s petition with defenses and
    counterclaims. They alleged in part that the property transfers
    violated the terms of the NDR Trust Agreement, making the
    transfers void or voidable, and that Brenda’s actions did not
    validate the transfers because Georgia and William transferred
    the property without giving Brenda all material information.
    They also asked the court to—among other things—deny
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020         Page 7 of 18
    William court approval of the transfers, void the transfers, and
    award the Gittingses compensation for acts that led to William’s
    sole receipt of the property.
    After a bench trial,[1] the court issued findings of fact and
    conclusions of law and entered judgment in William’s favor. It
    determined that the property transfers were proper under the
    terms of the NDR Trust Agreement and under Indiana law. It
    also concluded that the Gittingses’ counterclaims were time
    barred. The Gittingses appealed.
    A panel of the Court of Appeals affirmed judgment for William,
    concluding that the statutes of limitations bar the Gittingses’
    claims. Gittings v. Deal, 
    84 N.E.3d 749
    , 761 (Ind. Ct. App. 2017).
    Although the panel found the statutes-of-limitations issue
    dispositive, it nonetheless addressed the validity of the property
    transfers, out of concern about the trustees’ conduct. 
    Id. at 758.
                  In doing so, it concluded that the transfers were improper under
    the NDR Trust Agreement and the Trust Code. 
    Id. at 759–61.
                  The Gittingses petitioned to transfer. After hearing oral
    argument, we granted transfer—vacating the Court of Appeals
    decision, Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A)—and referred the case to
    mediation, App. R. 20. The parties participated in mediation but
    did not reach an agreement.
    Gittings v. Deal, 
    109 N.E.3d 963
    , 967–70 (Ind. 2018) (footnote omitted).
    [5]   The Indiana Supreme Court ultimately concluded that (1) the Gittingses’ claims
    were barred by the relevant statute of limitations to the extent that they sought
    affirmative relief but not to the extent that they sought to defeat or diminish
    William’s claim to declaratory judgment, (2) fraudulent concealment did not
    1
    During the trial, which was held between August 31 and September 2, 2015, William testified that he had
    received more than $3,000,000.00 in royalties, bonuses, and rents related to the West Virginia holdings.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                               Page 8 of 18
    render the Gittingses’ claims for affirmative relief timely, and (3) William was
    not entitled to court approval of the transfers of the land and mineral interests
    from NDR Trust A to Georgia as trustee under the GLR Trust Agreement (“the
    Transfers”). 
    Id. at 971.
    The Court determined that William was not entitled to
    court approval of the Transfers because Georgia did not seek court approval
    despite a clear conflict of interest, Georgia failed to provide all material facts
    regarding the Transfers to Brenda, and Brenda’s consent (even if it occurred)
    was no defense to liability for breach of trust in this case. 
    Id. at 976–77.
    The
    Indiana Supreme Court affirmed the trial court in part, reversed in part, and
    remanded for further proceedings consistent with its opinion. 
    Id. at 978.
    [6]   On September 13, 2019, the trial court issued its order on remand, which
    provides, in full, as follows:
    This matter was remanded to the trial court for proceedings
    consistent with the opinion rendered by the Indiana Supreme
    Court in Cause No. 18S-TR-231.
    This Court therefore declares that any transfer of real estate or
    any interests therein made by any trustee or co-trustee of the
    [NDR] Trust A to Georgia L. Richmond as trustee of the [GLR]
    Primary Trust is void ab initio.
    It is further ordered that William H. Deal shall cause a copy of
    this order to be recorded in the Office of the Recorder in any
    county in Indiana and West Virginia in which any record of the
    transfer of real estate or rights therein by any trustee or co-trustee
    of the [NDR] Trust A to Georgia L. Richmond as trustee of the
    [GLR] Primary Trust exists.
    The Court further declares that the portion of such real estate that
    should have been conveyed to Brenda Sue Gittings and Marc
    Richmond Gittings and any income generated from said real
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020             Page 9 of 18
    estate is deemed to have been held in constructive trust on behalf
    of said beneficiaries by Georgia L. Richmond or William H.
    Deal.
    It is further ordered that William H. Deal is enjoined from
    directly or indirectly, disposing, encumbering or otherwise
    engaging in any transaction concerning the assets of the [NDR]
    Trust A or Trust B except as expressly provided under the terms
    of said Trusts.
    It is further ordered that William H. Deal provide an accounting,
    within ninety (90) days of the date of this order, of all property
    held in trust on behalf of the [NDR] Trust A and the [NDR]
    Trust B including the real estate referenced above and any rights
    to future payment related thereto, as well as any income
    generated from the assets from the time of the transfer until the
    present.
    It is further ordered that the property held in the [NDR] Trust A
    and the [NDR] Trust B be distributed per the terms of the Trusts
    as called for in the event of Georgia L. Richmond’s death, so as
    to restore Brenda Sue Gittings and Marc Richmond Gittings to
    the status quo, had no transfer occurred.
    Appellant’s App. Vol. II pp. 24–25.
    Discussion and Decision
    [7]   Pursuant to the Indiana Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act (the “Act”),
    declaratory judgments have the “force and effect of a final judgment,” Ind.
    Code § 34-14-1-1, and are therefore reviewed in the same manner as other
    judgments. Because the proceedings before the trial court on remand in this
    case consisted of briefings, a de novo standard of review applies. See Title Servs.,
    LLC v. Womacks, 
    848 N.E.2d 1151
    , 1154 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006) (applying de novo
    standard of review where trial court ruled based on a paper record). In applying
    the standard, the trial court’s order should be affirmed on any legal theory the
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020           Page 10 of 18
    evidence of record supports. See GKN Co. v. Magness, 
    744 N.E.2d 397
    , 401 (Ind.
    2001).
    [8]   The Act is remedial, and its purpose is to “settle and afford relief from
    uncertainty and insecurity with respect to rights, status, and other legal
    relations; and is to be liberally construed and administered.” Ind. Code § 34-14-
    1-12. Pursuant to Indiana Code section 34-14-1-14, a trial court may make
    declarations of rights or legal relations
    (1) to ascertain any class of creditors, devisee, legatees, heirs,
    next of kin, or others;
    (2) to direct the executors, administrators, or trustees to do or abstain
    from doing any particular act in their fiduciary capacity; or
    (3) to determine any question arising in the administration of the
    estate or trust, including questions of construction of wills and
    other writings.
    (Emphasis added). Declaratory relief should furnish an adequate and complete
    remedy, effectively solve the problem involved, and provide a resolution that
    will cause a just and more expeditious and economical determination of the
    entire controversy. Ferrell v. Dunescape Beach Club Condos. Phase I, Inc., 
    751 N.E.2d 702
    , 708 (Ind. Ct. App. 2001) (internal citations omitted). William
    appeals, arguing, as restated, that the trial court erred in granting the Gittingses
    affirmative relief and in declaring the Transfers to be void ab initio.
    I. Whether the Trial Court Improperly
    Granted the Gittingses Affirmative Relief
    [9]   William contends that the trial court improperly granted the Gittingses
    affirmative relief to which they were not entitled because claims for affirmative
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                     Page 11 of 18
    relief were time-barred. Although we acknowledge that the Indiana Supreme
    Court’s decision prevented the Gittingses from obtaining affirmative relief on
    remand, this is not what occurred. “A claim is a ‘pure defense’—to which
    statutes of limitations do not apply—when it contests the opposing party’s
    claim; but if a claim is a basis for affirmative relief, then it ‘form[s] a foundation
    for a counterclaim or cross complaint,’ and is thus subject to statutes of
    limitations.” 
    Gittings, 109 N.E.3d at 971
    (quoting Robinson v. Glass, 
    94 Ind. 211
    ,
    216 (1884)).
    [10]   In William’s petition to docket the NDR Primary Trust, he sought to have the
    Transfers approved by the court. The Gittingses countered William’s petition
    with their claim that the Transfers were contrary to law and therefore void.
    This is not a new claim for affirmative relief but a response in opposition to
    William’s, denying its merits. The fact that the trial court adopted the
    Gittingses’ counter-argument does not mean that it granted the Gittingses
    affirmative relief.2
    II. Whether the Trial Court Properly Ordered
    Equitable Relief to the Gittingses
    [11]   William also argues that the trial court was without authority to declare the
    Transfers void ab initio or create a constructive trust. Given the Indiana
    Supreme Court’s holding that William was not entitled to court approval of the
    2
    The Gittingses did seek some affirmative relief in the trial court, making such counter-claims as tortious
    interference with expectancy interest and conversion. The Gittingses no longer pursue these claims,
    however, conceding that they are time-barred.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                                  Page 12 of 18
    transfers, and in light of a probate court’s equitable powers, we must again
    disagree.
    In Indiana, probate courts possess general equity powers. Powell
    v. North (1859), 
    3 Ind. 392
    . Those powers include the authority
    to supervise and control the administration of trusts. See State ex
    rel. Anderson-Madison County Hospital Development Corp. v. Superior
    Court of Madison County (1964), 
    245 Ind. 371
    , 
    199 N.E.2d 88
    ;
    Messner v. DeMotte (1948), 
    119 Ind. App. 273
    , 
    82 N.E.2d 900
    ,
    trans. denied; Hulet v. Crawfordsville Trust Co. (1946), 
    117 Ind. App. 125
    , 
    69 N.E.2d 823
    ; Newlin v. Newlin (1944), 
    114 Ind. App. 574
    ,
    
    52 N.E.2d 503
    , trans. denied. The Indiana Trust Code does not
    pretend to limit the equity power of probate courts except as it
    specifically provides. See IND. CODE 30-4-3-30.[3]
    Matter of Trust of Loeb, 
    492 N.E.2d 40
    , 43 (Ind. Ct. App. 1986), trans. denied.
    [12]   William points to no provision in the Indiana Trust Code—either as it existed
    in 1995 when the Transfers occurred or in its current form—that would prevent
    the trial court from using its equitable powers to declare unauthorized property
    transfers void, and we are aware of none. Consequently, we review the trial
    court’s disposition for clear error:
    When reviewing cases of equity, the trial court’s findings and
    judgment will be reversed only if clearly erroneous, that is, only if
    we are left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has
    been made. Burnett v. Heckelman, 
    456 N.E.2d 1094
    , 1097 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 1983). We look only to the evidence and inferences
    therefrom supporting the judgment, neither reweighing the
    evidence nor judging the credibility of witnesses, and will reverse
    3
    Indiana Code section 30-4-3-30 provides that “[e]xcept as otherwise provided in this article, the article shall
    not be construed to limit the general equity powers of the court over the administration of trusts.”
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                                   Page 13 of 18
    only where the evidence leads to a conclusion directly opposite to
    that reached by the trial court. Indiana High School Athletic Ass’n,
    Inc. v. Schafer, 
    598 N.E.2d 540
    , 557 ([Ind. Ct. App.] 1992), trans.
    denied.
    Ind. Lawrence Bank v. PSB Credit Servs., Inc., 
    706 N.E.2d 570
    , 572 (Ind. Ct. App.
    1999), trans. denied. “[T]he very first maxim with which we meet in equity is
    that it will regard that as done which in good conscience ought to be done.”
    Sourwine v. Supreme Lodge Knights of Pythias of the World, 
    12 Ind. App. 447
    , 452,
    
    40 N.E. 646
    , 647 (1895) (citation omitted).
    [13]   The equities of his case, briefly stated, are that the Transfers occurred without
    the required court approval despite a clear conflict of interest and without
    disclosure to Brenda of all the material facts. As a result of the illegal Transfers,
    the Gittingses, along with any other beneficiaries, have been denied hundreds of
    thousands of dollars to which they were entitled, while William has received
    hundreds of thousands of dollars to which he was not. Against this backdrop,
    we address separately whether the trial court committed clear error in declaring
    the Transfers void ab initio and in ordering the real estate and payments that
    should have gone to the Gittingses to be held in a constructive trust.
    A. Voiding the Transfers
    [14]   William argues that the Transfers were, at most, voidable and that the trial
    court’s determination that they were void ab initio was clearly erroneous. If
    anything, however, the Supreme Court’s disposition and relevant statutory
    language would seem to allow for no other result. In 1995, Indiana Code
    section 35-4-3-5(a) provided that “[i]f the duty of the trustee in the exercise of
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020          Page 14 of 18
    any power conflicts with his individual interest or his interest as trustee of
    another trust, the power may be exercised only with court authorization.” (Emphasis
    added). While the statute most likely contemplates situations in which
    permission is sought before the exercise of power, its language is not limited to
    those circumstances. Indiana Code section 35-4-3-5’s plain language indicates
    that the Transfers could only have taken place with court authorization, which
    did not occur then and will not occur now. While we are not entirely certain
    that the trial court could have reached any other result, we can say, at the very
    least, that its declaration that the Transfers were void ab initio was not clearly
    erroneous.
    [15]   It is worth noting that this result is consistent with how self-dealing is treated in
    the similar context of property transfers by an estate’s personal representative.
    In that context, there is long-standing authority indicating that self-dealing
    transfers by a personal representative are void ab initio, as opposed to merely
    voidable. See, e.g., Williamson v. Williamson, 
    714 N.E.2d 1270
    , 1273 (Ind. Ct.
    App. 1999) (“In some jurisdictions purchases of estate assets by personal
    representatives at their own sales are merely voidable. However in this
    jurisdiction, in the absence of a family settlement or agreement, such purchases
    are void.”), trans. denied. The justification for this rule was stated by the Indiana
    Supreme Court in Matter of Garwood’s Estate, 
    272 Ind. 519
    , 
    400 N.E.2d 758
    ,
    (1980):
    “It matters not that there was no fraud contemplated and no
    injury done. The rule is not intended to be remedial of actual
    wrong, but preventive of the possibility of it. It is one of those
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020             Page 15 of 18
    processes derived from the system of trusts by which a court of
    chancery turns parties away from wrong, and from the power of
    doing wrong, by making their act instantly inure in equity to
    rightful purposes. The cases are uniform in declaring that it
    matters not how innocent and bona fide and free from suggestion
    of fault the transaction may be, nor how harmless or even
    beneficial the interference of the trustee may have been, the
    trustee can never, by his own act, shake off the equity of the cestui
    que trust[4] to have the benefit of all that he does in the scope of
    the trust; and the cestui que trust may come into equity as of
    course; and, without the imputation of either fraud or injury, ask
    for a re-sale of the property; and whether the property was or was
    not worth more than the amount of the trustee’s bid, is never
    inquired into.”
    
    Id. at 528,
    400 N.E.2d at 764 (quoting Potter v. Smith, 
    36 Ind. 239
    –40 (1871)).
    [16]   In this case, just as in cases like Williamson and Garwood’s Estate, a trustee has
    control over property that is to be used for the benefit of another, creating
    obvious opportunities for mischief. Consequently, we find that the goal of
    preventing the possibility of fraud to be equally compelling in either case. We
    conclude that the trial court did not clearly err in declaring the Transfers to be
    void ab initio.
    B. Constructive Trust
    [17]   William also challenges the trial court’s order that a constructive trust be
    established. A constructive trust is more in the nature of a an equitable remedy
    than an independent cause of action, Zoeller v. E. Chicago 2d Century, Inc., 904
    4
    The “cestui que trust” is an alternate name for the beneficiary of a trust, literally meaning “the one for
    whom [is] the trust[.]” BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 277 (10th ed. 2014) (second set of brackets supplied).
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020                                   Page 16 of 
    18 N.E.2d 213
    , 221 (Ind. 2009), and “may be imposed where a person holding title
    to property is subject to an equitable duty to convey it to another on the ground
    that he or she would be unjustly enriched if permitted to retain it.” Demming v.
    Underwood, 
    943 N.E.2d 878
    , 895 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. As the
    Indiana Supreme Court has stated,
    [a] constructive trust is imposed where a person holding title to
    property is subject to an equitable duty to convey it to another on
    the ground that he would be unjustly enriched if he were
    permitted to retain it. The duty to convey the property may rise
    because it was acquired through fraud, duress, undue influence
    or mistake, or through a breach of a fiduciary duty, or through
    the wrongful disposition of another’s property. The basis of the
    constructive trust is the unjust enrichment which would result if
    the person having the property were permitted to retain it.
    Melloh v. Gladis, 
    261 Ind. 647
    , 656, 
    309 N.E.2d 433
    , 438–39 (1974) (citation
    omitted).
    [18]   We have little trouble concluding that constructive trust is appropriate in this
    case, given that the Transfers out of the NDR Trust A were illegal and the
    Gittingses have been denied hundreds of thousands of dollars in income
    thereby. William has legal title in trust property that he must now convey to
    beneficiaries, and if William retained possession of the trust property, he might
    be further unjustly enriched, the beneficiaries further damaged, or both.
    Contrary to William’s argument, a constructive trust is not affirmative relief
    granted to the Gittingses; it is a remedy to ensure that trust property is
    appropriately conveyed pursuant to the terms of the trust agreement. See
    
    Zoeller, 904 N.E.2d at 221
    .
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020             Page 17 of 18
    [19]   The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    Robb, J., and Altice, J., concur.
    Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 19A-TR-2210| March 6, 2020   Page 18 of 18