Todd R. Rand v. Security National Corporation d/b/a Security National Bank ( 2022 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 21–0227
    Submitted March 24, 2022—Filed May 6, 2022
    TODD R. RAND,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    SECURITY NATIONAL CORPORATION d/b/a SECURITY NATIONAL BANK,
    Appellee.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, Steven J.
    Andreasen, Judge.
    The beneficiary of an estate appeals from an adverse grant of summary
    judgment in favor of the personal representative of the estate on claims related
    to the administration of the estate. AFFIRMED.
    McDonald, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which all participating
    justices joined. McDermott, J., took no part in the consideration or decision of
    the case.
    Stanley E. Munger (argued) of Munger, Reinschmidt & Denne, L.L.P.,
    Sioux City, for appellant.
    2
    Joel D. Vos (argued) and John C. Gray of Heidman Law Firm, L.L.P, Sioux
    City, for appellee.
    Ryan G. Koopmans and Wayne E. Reames of Belin McCormick, P.C.,
    Des Moines, for amicus curiae Iowa Academy of Trust and Estate Counsel.
    3
    McDONALD, Justice.
    The question presented in this appeal is whether the beneficiary of an
    estate can file a separate suit outside probate against the personal representative
    of the estate for claims arising out of and related to the personal representative’s
    fees for administering the estate. For the reasons set forth below, we answer the
    question in the negative.
    I.
    Roger Rand died testate on August 29, 2016, and his will was admitted to
    probate shortly after his death. Roger’s will nominated Security National Bank
    as the personal representative of his estate. The will, as amended by a codicil,
    named five beneficiaries of Roger’s estate: Roger’s girlfriend, Constance
    Anderson, and his four children, including plaintiff Todd Rand. The gross value
    of Roger’s estate was later determined to be $19,733,127.40.
    Roger’s will was drafted by the law firm Crary, Huff, Ringgenberg, Hartnett
    & Storm, P.C. After Roger died, attorney Larry Storm of Crary Huff informed
    Security National it had been nominated as the personal representative of the
    estate. Security National hired Storm and Crary Huff to serve as attorneys for
    the estate.
    In a letter dated September 20, 2016, Security National notified the
    beneficiaries of the estate that the bank had been selected as the personal
    representative of the estate. Included with this letter was a document entitled
    4
    “Estate Administration Overview.” The Estate Administration Overview included
    the following statement regarding fees for the administration of the estate:
    Iowa law under the supervision of the District Court
    authorizes the compensation of the executor and attorney handling
    the estate. The fees are based on the appraised value of the assets
    of the estate reported for inheritance tax purposes whether taxable
    or not. The appraised value is taken as of the date of death. The fees
    are computed as follows:
    6% of the first $1,000.00
    4% of the next $4,000.00
    2% of the remaining value
    One-half of these fees may be paid at the time the inheritance
    tax return is prepared and one-half when the estate is closed.
    Under certain circumstances, the executor is allowed to
    charge a fee for extraordinary services. If extraordinary services are
    provided, the Security National Bank will be charging an hourly fee.
    Below is a summary of the charges that may be applicable:
    Trust Department Head . . . . . . $200/hr.
    Officers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .$175/hr.
    Advisors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $150/hr.
    Administrative Assistants . . . . . . $75/hr.
    It is not disputed by the parties that the schedule of fees in the Estate
    Administration Overview reflected the maximum fees for ordinary services that
    a personal representative could receive. See 
    Iowa Code § 633.197
     (2016) (setting
    maximum compensation for ordinary services by personal representatives).
    At some point after receiving this letter, Todd hired an attorney. On
    February 9, 2017, Todd’s attorney wrote Storm seeking clarification of the fees
    for the administration of the estate. Storm replied that Crary Huff and Security
    National would file an application for fees in the probate court at the appropriate
    time and that the fees would be determined by the probate court in accord with
    5
    the Probate Code. Approximately six months later, Crary Huff Huff and Security
    National filed an application for fees. They each requested $394,782 in fees for
    ordinary services to the estate (for a total of $789,564), which was the maximum
    fee allowed pursuant to Iowa Code section 633.197. Crary Huff also requested
    $137,791.98 for extraordinary fees, representing fees and costs incurred in
    collecting a debt owed to the estate.
    Through counsel, Todd objected to both applications. With respect to
    Security National, Todd claimed the fee schedule in the Estate Administration
    Overview was arbitrary, ambiguous, and misleading. Specifically, the Estate
    Administration Overview failed to disclose the fee schedule was the maximum
    fee allowed for ordinary services. Todd also claimed Security National breached
    its fiduciary duties and engaged in misrepresentation in multiple respects. First,
    Todd alleged Security National breached its fiduciary duties in failing to inform
    Roger of its fees at the time he nominated Security National as personal
    representative of his estate. Second, Todd alleged Security National breached its
    fiduciary duties owed the beneficiaries by failing to disclose its fee schedule to
    them before undertaking its duties as personal representative. Third, Todd
    alleged Security National breached a duty to the beneficiaries by charging an
    unreasonably high fee for its services. Fourth, Todd alleged Security National
    breached a duty in failing to secure the consent of Roger’s estate for the fees it
    would charge before undertaking its services and in failing to disclose its intent
    to seek those fees. The thrust of his claims was that Security National deprived
    6
    the beneficiaries of the opportunity to “replace the Personal Representative early
    on with another that would live up to its fiduciary duties for a reasonable fee.”
    The probate court held three days of hearings on Security National’s fee
    application. In a lengthy and well-reasoned decision, the probate court exercised
    its discretion and reduced the fees to both Crary Huff and Security National
    below the requested amounts. See 
    Iowa Code § 633.197
     (stating a personal
    representative is “allowed such reasonable fees as may be determined by the
    court for services rendered” (emphasis added)); In re Est. of Randeris v. Randeris,
    
    523 N.W.2d 600
    , 607 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994) (reviewing probate court’s fee award
    for an abuse of discretion). The probate court found “there was a significant and
    unusual amount of work to be performed” by Security National in administering
    Roger’s estate but held the claimed amount of time expended was nonetheless
    “inflated or include[d] a large amount of unnecessary work.” The probate court
    approved fees for ordinary services in the amount of $160,000.00 to Security
    National (compared to its $394,782 request). The probate court approved fees for
    ordinary services in the amount of $205,000 to Crary Huff (compared to its
    $394,782 request). For extraordinary services, the probate court awarded Crary
    Huff $110,568.23 in fees and costs (compared to its request for $137,791.98). In
    total, the probate court reduced the fees to Security National and Crary Huff
    nearly in half, from $927,355.98 to approximately $427,000. No party appealed
    the order approving fees. The probate court later issued an award of additional
    extraordinary fees to both Security National and Crary Huff, to which Todd did
    not object.
    7
    Todd filed this suit against Security National in September 2018, the
    month after the probate court resolved the fee applications. In his petition, Todd
    asserted claims for breach of fiduciary duty, negligent misrepresentation, and
    fraudulent misrepresentation, all arising out of Security National’s service as the
    personal representative of the estate. Rand also asserted “claims” for emotional
    distress damages, punitive damages, and attorney fees incurred in the course of
    challenging Security National’s fee application in probate court. On Security
    National’s motion for summary judgment, the district court held Todd’s claims
    should have been asserted in the probate court or otherwise failed as a matter
    of law. We retained Todd’s timely appeal.
    II.
    “The standards for granting summary judgment are well established and
    need not be repeated in full herein.” Kostoglanis v. Yates, 
    956 N.W.2d 157
    , 158
    (Iowa 2021). Review of summary judgment rulings is for correction of errors at
    law. 
    Id.
     “Summary judgment is properly granted when there is no genuine issue
    of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
    McQuistion v. City of Clinton, 
    872 N.W.2d 817
    , 822 (Iowa 2015). The evidence is
    viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party, including all legitimate
    inferences. Banwart v. 50th St. Sports, L.L.C., 
    910 N.W.2d 540
    , 545 (Iowa 2018).
    III.
    “In Iowa, probate courts have special jurisdiction exercised by a separate
    division of a court of general jurisdiction.” Est. of Randeris, 
    523 N.W.2d at 604
    .
    That special jurisdiction includes “the appointment of personal representatives
    8
    . . . [and] the administration, settlement and distribution of estates of
    decedents.” Iowa Code 633.10(1) (2018). “[A]lthough the probate court is not
    open to ordinary actions at law or suits in equity, it has plenary jurisdiction to
    determine matters essential to probate business before it.” In re Guardianship of
    Matejski, 
    419 N.W.2d 576
    , 578 (Iowa 1988) (en banc). “The district court’s
    probate jurisdiction, however, does not include dispute over matters unrelated
    or nonessential to the administration of a decedent’s estate.” In re Est. of Lamb,
    
    584 N.W.2d 719
    , 723 (Iowa Ct. App. 1998).
    One of the matters essential to the administration of a decedent’s estate is
    the supervision of fiduciaries and the concomitant ability to provide relief for
    fiduciary misconduct. Iowa Code section 633.160, for instance, states that
    fiduciaries are liable for breaches of duty, including unreasonable delay in
    collecting from creditors, neglect in paying money or delivering property of the
    estate, embezzlement, self-dealing, and “any other negligent or willful act or
    nonfeasance in the fiduciary’s administration of the estate by which loss to the
    estate arises.” Meanwhile, section 633.162 of the Code allows the probate court
    to “take into consideration any violation of [the] probate code by [a] fiduciary”
    and “diminish the fee of such fiduciary to the extent the court may determine to
    be proper.”
    Our precedents in this area demonstrate that matters arising out of or
    related to probate should be resolved in the first instance in probate court.
    Youngblut v. Youngblut, 
    945 N.W.2d 25
     (Iowa 2020), involved a disappointed heir
    who did not contest a will in probate court. Instead, the disappointed heir filed
    9
    a separate suit for tortious interference with an inheritance. 
    Id.
     at 28–29. We
    held the disappointed heir’s tort claim should have been “joined with a timely
    will contest” rather than being pursued as a separate action outside the probate
    court. 
    Id.
     at 37–38. We explained that “probate is meant to provide a prompt,
    efficient, centralized way of resolving issues relating to a decedent’s estate and
    getting the estate distributed.” 
    Id. at 35
    . There was “no reason” that the claim
    could not be joined with the ongoing probate proceeding, and “[e]fficiency
    favor[ed] this outcome.” 
    Id.
     at 35–36. Furthermore, the legislature’s scheme for
    resolving will contests provided a remedy for disappointed heirs to make claims
    for tortious interference within the estate proceeding. See 
    id. at 37
    . Allowing a
    separate action outside the probate court ran counter to this scheme. See 
    id.
    In Lewis v. Lewis we held that a claim against the administrator of an
    estate alleging neglect in the discharge of the administrator’s duties should have
    been brought in the probate proceeding rather than in as a separate action.
    
    166 N.W. 107
    , 111 (Iowa 1918). The plaintiffs in Lewis, heirs of an intestate,
    contended that one of the other heirs was indebted to the estate and argued the
    administrator had not sufficiently attempted to account for or collect on the debt.
    
    Id.
     at 107–08. The plaintiffs filed suit to compel an accounting and recovery of
    the debt by the administrator while the probate proceeding was still ongoing. 
    Id. at 108
    . The plaintiffs had also lodged an objection to the administrator’s final
    report in the probate proceeding. 
    Id. at 111
    . We stated:
    If [the plaintiffs] are not satisfied with the administrator’s
    accounting, or if they claim that by mistake or neglect or fraud he
    had failed to collect or administer upon any part of the estate, they
    10
    may, as we have already suggested, find prompt, if not summary,
    relief, by addressing the court in the probate proceedings and
    making proof of the facts upon which they ground their objections
    and complaints. In this case they did in fact appear and file their
    objections to the administrator’s report, and no valid reason is
    shown, or can be suggested, why the court could not or ought not
    have proceeded thereon to hear and determine the same; this being
    the matter of the estate a final settlement in which the rights of every
    heir and party in interest could have been fully adjudged and
    protected.
    
    Id.
     Given the availability of a remedy in the probate proceeding and the
    preference in the Probate Code for resolution of such claims in probate court,
    there was no basis to allow the separate action against the administrator. See
    
    id.
    The facts of this case are analogous to Manning v. Amerman, 
    582 N.W.2d 539
     (Mich. Ct. App. 1998) (per curiam). The plaintiffs in that case were
    beneficiaries of a trust who sued the trustee and the trustee’s attorney. 
    Id. at 540
    . The plaintiffs alleged the trustee, aided by his attorney, “breached his
    fiduciary duty as trustee, used the trust assets for his own purposes, and
    eviscerated the trust of its value.” 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs alleged negligent and
    intentional infliction of emotional distress, tortious interference with a trust
    relationship, and legal malpractice. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs brought their suit under
    the trial court’s general jurisdiction. 
    Id.
     at 540 & n.1. The court held the claims
    were within the exclusive jurisdiction of the probate court. 
    Id. at 541
    . According
    to the court, the plaintiffs’ emotional distress damages were allegedly caused by
    the “defendants’ [willful] breaches of duty in the administration of the trust” and
    their “negligent acts and omissions with respect to the same conduct.” 
    Id.
    “Accordingly, it is clear from the face of the complaint that plaintiffs’ emotional
    11
    distress . . . claims arose in the administration of a trust.” 
    Id.
     The claims were
    therefore properly confined to the jurisdiction of the probate court and could not
    be pursued in a separate law action. 
    Id.
    The rationales of Youngblut, Lewis, and Manning apply with the same force
    to Todd’s claims. Todd’s claims against Security National arise out of and relate
    to Security National’s service as a fiduciary in the probate estate. The Probate
    Code sets forth the duties of fiduciaries and provides a scheme for relief. A
    fiduciary is liable for self-dealing and “for any other negligent or willful act or
    nonfeasance in the fiduciary’s administration of the estate by which loss to the
    estate arises.” 
    Iowa Code §§ 633.155
    , .160. The probate court may consider any
    such breach and diminish the fee of the personal representative “to the extent
    the court may determine to be proper.” 
    Id.
     § 633.162. As in Youngblut and Lewis,
    this legislative scheme shows that claims related to the conduct of fiduciaries
    should be litigated within the probate proceeding. The contrary conclusion would
    materially interfere with the “prompt, efficient, centralized way of resolving
    issues relating to a decedent’s estate.” Youngblut, 945 N.W.2d at 35. Todd was
    required to resolve his claims in the probate proceeding.
    Todd’s suit against Security National demonstrates the practical problems
    with bifurcating claims involving the personal representative. Roger’s will
    nominated Security National as the personal representative of his estate. A
    testator “has the right to appointment of the executor of his or her preference if
    the nominated executor is qualified to serve.” In re Est. of Petersen, 
    570 N.W.2d 463
    , 467 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997). When appointing a personal representative, the
    12
    probate court must give first preference to “[t]he person designated in the will.”
    
    Iowa Code § 633.294
    (1). A personal representative may only be removed after a
    showing that the personal representative does not qualify for the role or there is
    some basis for removing the personal representative. See Est. of Peterson, 
    570 N.W.2d at 467
    ; Est. of Randeris, 
    523 N.W.2d at
    605–06; see also In re Schneider’s
    Est., 
    277 N.W. 567
    , 570 (Iowa 1938) (“There is, or at least ought to be, no
    question that the executor appointed by the testator, in the absence of
    disqualification, should be commissioned by the court.” (quoting In re Miller’s
    Est., 
    61 N.W. 229
    , 230 (Iowa 1894))). Todd contends that if he had been properly
    notified of the law regarding fees, then he could have searched for a personal
    representative with a more competitive fee structure, then he could have moved
    to replace the personal representative, then the probate court may have approved
    a different personal representative, and then Todd might not have had to expend
    money litigating Security National’s fee application. Todd’s claims in this case
    would require a jury to speculate about what may have happened in the probate
    proceeding if Todd would have raised these issues in that proceeding. We reject
    that approach and conclude claims arising out of and related to the personal
    representative’s fees for administering an estate should be asserted in the
    probate proceeding and not in a separate suit after the fact.
    An additional consideration supports the conclusion that Todd cannot
    maintain this separate suit against Security National. In Youngblut, the
    disappointed heir forewent any will contest in probate and filed a separate suit.
    945 N.W.2d at 28–29. Here, Todd actually raised these issues in the probate
    13
    proceeding and obtained relief in the form of reduced fees charged to the estate.
    Todd’s claims in this case are simply reassertions of the claims he already
    asserted in the probate court. To the extent that Todd contends he is entitled to
    additional relief, he should have sought additional relief in the probate
    proceeding. See 
    Iowa Code § 633.162
    ; cf. Villarreal v. United Fire & Cas. Co., 
    873 N.W.2d 714
    , 729 (Iowa 2016) (stating claim preclusion bars litigation in a later
    proceeding of a claim that could have been raised in an earlier action).
    IV.
    We hold that Todd’s claims against the personal representative of his
    father’s estate arising out of and in the course of the administration of the estate
    should have been brought before the probate court in the estate proceeding and
    cannot now be pursued. The district court properly granted Security National’s
    motion for summary judgment on all claims.
    AFFIRMED.
    All justices concur except McDermott, J., who takes no part.