In The Matter Of The Estate Of Edward A. Sieh, Rodger A. Sieh And Carene E. Larsen, Trustees Of The Edward A. Sieh Trust Vs. Mary Jane Sieh ( 2008 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 12 / 06–1485
    Filed February 22, 2008
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF EDWARD A. SIEH, Deceased,
    RODGER A. SIEH and CARENE E. LARSEN, Trustees of the Edward A.
    Sieh Trust,
    Appellants,
    vs.
    MARY JANE SIEH,
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Grundy County, Todd A.
    Geer, Judge.
    Trustees of inter vivos trust appeal from district court order
    subjecting trust assets to a spousal allowance under Iowa Code section
    633.374 (2003). AFFIRMED.
    Max E. Kirk and Jennifer L. Chase of Ball, Kirk & Holm, P.C.,
    Waterloo, for appellants.
    Paul C. Peglow and Bethany J. Currie of Johnson, Sudenga,
    Latham, Peglow & O’Hare, P.L.C., Marshalltown, for appellee.
    2
    LARSON, Justice.
    The trustees of a revocable inter vivos trust have appealed from a
    district court order subjecting assets of the trust to payment of a spousal
    allowance ordered in the estate of the settlor pursuant to Iowa Code
    section 633.374 (2003). We affirm.
    I. Facts and Prior Proceedings.
    Edward Sieh established a revocable inter vivos trust in 1992 and
    transferred most of his property to the trust by a deed and a bill of sale.
    Also in 1992, he executed a will leaving the residue of his estate to the
    trust. He married Mary Jane in 1998, but did not change his trust or
    will to reflect the change in his marital status. Edward died in 2003,
    survived by Mary Jane, his widow, and four adult children. Mary Jane
    elected to take against the will under Iowa Code section 633.238.
    However, the assets of the estate were not sufficient to satisfy
    Mary Jane’s elective share, so the question arose whether the assets of
    the revocable trust could be distributed to her as payment of her elective
    share. We answered that question in the affirmative in Sieh v. Sieh, 
    713 N.W.2d 194
    , 198 (Iowa 2006) (Sieh I). Our holding was informed by an
    analogous Iowa case, In re Estate of Nagel, 
    580 N.W.2d 810
    (Iowa 1998),
    as well as cases from other jurisdictions and the Restatement (Third) of
    Property. Sieh 
    I, 713 N.W.2d at 198
    .
    After our reversal and remand in Sieh I, Mary Jane applied for a
    spousal allowance under Iowa Code section 633.374, and the trustees
    resisted on the ground the estate had no assets from which to pay such
    an award. They contended that Sieh I held only that the assets of the
    trust were subject to payment of Mary Jane’s distributive share, but
    “does not direct the [district] court to augment the Sieh Estate in order to
    provide assets from which a spousal allowance may be paid.”             The
    3
    district court rejected that argument and ruled that the assets of the
    revocable trust were subject to payment of the spousal allowance.       It
    awarded Mary Jane $3000 per month for twelve months, payable in a
    lump sum.
    II. The Issues.
    The trustees raise two issues: (1) did the district court abuse its
    discretion in awarding a spousal allowance as part of the costs of
    administration “when there are no assets in the estate from which the
    allowance can be satisfied,” and (2) did the court abuse its discretion in
    awarding the allowance “when defendants did not have an opportunity to
    review and respond to plaintiff’s affidavit regarding her finances” in
    advance of the hearing.
    III. The Controlling Statute.
    Iowa Code section 633.374 provides this with respect to spousal
    allowances:
    The court shall, upon application, set off and order
    paid to the surviving spouse, as part of the costs of
    administration, sufficient of the decedent’s property as it
    deems reasonable for the proper support of the surviving
    spouse for the period of twelve months following the death of
    the decedent. . . . The court shall take into consideration the
    station in life of the surviving spouse and the assets and
    condition of the estate. . . . Such allowance to the surviving
    spouse shall not abate upon the death or remarriage of such
    spouse.
    IV. Application of Iowa Code Section 633.374.
    Under section 633.374, a district court shall order a spousal
    allowance. Despite the “shall” language of the statute, we have held that
    a court’s ruling on an application for spousal support is reviewed for
    abuse of discretion. In re Estate of Spurgeon, 
    572 N.W.2d 595
    , 599 (Iowa
    1998); In re Estate of Tollefsrud, 
    275 N.W.2d 412
    , 415 (Iowa 1979). In
    this case, we review the support order for an abuse of discretion, keeping
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    in mind the requirement of the statute that the court “take into
    consideration the station in life of the surviving spouse and the assets
    and condition of the estate.” Iowa Code § 633.374.
    We reject the trustees’ argument that the estate may not look to
    assets of the trust to fund a spousal allowance. We do so, first, based on
    section 633.3104(2), which, at the time of this case, subjected the assets
    of a revocable trust to payment of the costs of administration of the
    settlor’s estate when “the settlor’s estate is inadequate to satisfy those
    claims and costs.”     By definition, a spousal allowance is a cost of
    administration and is, therefore, statutorily entitled to be satisfied out of
    the assets of the revocable trust. 
    Id. §§ 633.3(8),
    633.3104(2).
    Our holdings in Sieh I and Nagel (which subjected trust assets to
    the payment of general claims) are consistent with this conclusion. In
    Sieh I, we built on Nagel’s holding and concluded “the rights of a
    surviving spouse should not be less favored than the interests of general
    creditors.” Sieh 
    I, 713 N.W.2d at 198
    . Similarly, we believe in this case
    the right of a surviving spouse to an allowance under section 633.374
    should not be less favored than the claims of general creditors or the
    payment of a distributive share.
    In addition to our case law supporting that result, the Restatement
    provides:
    An inter vivos donative transfer to others than the
    donor’s spouse . . . that is revocable by the donor at the time
    of the donor’s death, is subject to spousal rights of the
    donor’s spouse in the transferred property that would accrue
    to the donor’s spouse on the donor’s death if the transfer
    had been made by the donor’s will.
    Restatement (Second) of Property § 34.1(3) (1992). Comment k to this
    section further explains that the assets of a revocable inter vivos trust
    are subject to spousal rights, specifically “family allowances.”
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    We hold that the assets of the trust were properly subjected to
    payment of the spousal allowance. The court of appeals decision in In re
    Estate of Epstein, 
    561 N.W.2d 82
    (Iowa Ct. App. 1996), decided before
    Sieh I, reached a contrary result. In Epstein, the court of appeals held
    that the assets of a revocable trust could not be used to pay a spousal
    allowance because the trust and estate were separate entities and to
    “commingle the assets of the estate and the trust run[s] contrary to the
    purpose of establishing two separate entities.” 
    Id. at 87.
    We reject that
    reasoning, based on the authorities discussed above, and overrule
    Epstein to the extent it does not allow revocable trust assets to be used to
    satisfy a spousal allowance.
    V. The Procedural Argument.
    The trustees complain that the district court abused its discretion
    by failing to allow them an “opportunity to review and respond” to
    Mary Jane’s financial affidavit furnished in support of her application for
    a spousal allowance. Her application was filed on August 14, 2006. The
    trustees filed a resistance on August 16, complaining that they lacked
    sufficient information regarding Mary Jane’s needs and “request[ing] that
    an appropriate financial application be submitted to the court and the
    parties for review prior to the court’s further consideration of this
    matter.”   Mary Jane responded and furnished an affidavit of financial
    status on August 28, 2006. The court’s order for support was entered
    the same day, without allowing the trustees any additional time to
    analyze the financial affidavit.
    We find no merit in the trustees’ procedural complaint.       Section
    633.374 does not require that a financial affidavit be filed prior to the
    court’s award of spousal allowance, and none of our cases suggest it. In
    fact, a showing of necessity is not a prerequisite for receiving a spousal
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    allowance. 
    Spurgeon, 572 N.W.2d at 599
    ; In re Estate of DeVries, 
    203 N.W.2d 308
    , 311 (Iowa 1972).
    A separate statute, Iowa Code section 633.375, provides for review
    of an award made under section 633.374:
    The court may, upon the petition of the spouse, or
    other person interested, and after hearing pursuant to notice
    to all interested parties, review such allowance and increase
    or decrease the same.
    This   section   requires   notice   and   hearing,   and   presumably   the
    presentation of financial information, because it allows for increasing or
    decreasing the award. However, it is clear from a reading of this section
    that it applies only after the fact, i.e., only after the award has been
    made. Moreover, the trustees have not attempted to use section 633.375
    to challenge the amount of the allowance.
    The trustees understandably do not claim the spousal allowance of
    $36,000 (in an estate of approximately $1.7 million) is excessive, and we
    do not address that question.
    The district court correctly subjected the trust assets to payment of
    the spousal allowance award, and we therefore affirm.
    AFFIRMED.