Opinion
No. 68S05–1404–TR–296.
09-03-2014
Mark J. Merkle, Joshua D. Hague, Carmel, IN, Libby Y. Goodknight, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellant. Brian J. Paul, Nathaniel M. Uhl, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellee.
Mark J. Merkle, Joshua D. Hague, Carmel, IN, Libby Y. Goodknight, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellant. Brian J. Paul, Nathaniel M. Uhl, Indianapolis, IN, Attorneys for Appellee.
On Petition to Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 68A05–1303–TR–111
DAVID, Justice.
A trustee appealed a trial court's termination of two of its trusts. The Court of Appeals dismissed the appeal for a lack of jurisdiction. Because we find the trustee lacked standing to appeal in its representative capacity and did not appeal in its individual capacity, we likewise dismiss this action.
Facts and Procedural History
Hanover College was the beneficiary of two trusts: one created in 1949 and one created in 2004. Old National Bancorp, d/b/a Old National Trust Company, was the trustee for both trusts. In June 2012, Hanover filed petitions in the Randolph Circuit Court pursuant to Indiana Code § 30–4–3–24.4 (2005), claiming that maintaining the trusts as entities separate from its own endowment fund was wasteful, provided lower investment returns, and impaired the trusts' administration. Hanover requested the trusts be terminated and their funds held as part of its endowment, in a manner consistent with the purpose of the trusts.
Old National, as trustee, filed responses to Hanover's petitions. The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on September 27, 2012, after which it granted Hanover's petitions. On February 14, 2013, it ordered the two trusts dissolved “effective immediately” and the trust assets distributed to Hanover in order that they might be set into endowment funds controlled by Hanover.
Old National did not seek a stay of the trial court's dissolution orders, but instead appealed. The two matters were consolidated by the Court of Appeals. On appeal, Old National challenged the merits of the trial court's determination that dissolution of the trusts was warranted.
Hanover filed a brief responsive to Old National's claims, but also filed a motion to dismiss the appeal entirely. In its motion to dismiss, Hanover argued that Old National failed to seek a stay of the trial court's orders and had already transferred all of the trusts' assets to Hanover. According to Hanover, Old National therefore lacked standing to pursue an appeal and the issues being appealed were moot.
Old National responded to Hanover's motion, arguing that Indiana's Trust Code permitted it to appeal the trial court's order as an “aggrieved person,” notwithstanding Old National's failure to request a stay and compliance with the trial court's directives. It argued that it was not pursuing the appeal in its representative capacity as the former trustee of the dissolved trusts, but instead was appealing in its individual capacity as a bank.
The Court of Appeals granted Hanover's motion and dismissed Old National's appeal. Old Nat'l Bancorp v. Hanover College, 999 N.E.2d 463, 467 (Ind.Ct.App.2013). It concluded that Old National lacked standing in its representative capacity because it failed to obtain a stay of the trial court's termination orders and therefore was no longer the trustee of the trusts; moreover, the Court of Appeals held that Old National did not intervene in its individual capacity at trial and therefore could not be an aggrieved party on appeal. Id . at 466. We granted transfer, thereby vacating the Court of Appeals opinion. Old Nat'l Bancorp v. Hanover College, 7 N.E.3d 992 (Ind.2014) (table); Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).
Standard of Review
We have defined “standing” as “having ‘sufficient stake in an otherwise justiciable controversy to obtain judicial resolution of that controversy.’ ” Ind. Civil Rights Comm'n v. Indianapolis Newspapers, Inc., 716 N.E.2d 943, 945 (Ind.1999) (quoting Black's Law Dictionary 1405 (6th ed. 1990)). Thus, “ ‘[s]tanding focuses generally upon the question whether the complaining party is the proper person to invoke the Court's power. However, more fundamentally, standing is a restraint upon this Court's exercise of jurisdiction.’ ” Pence v. State, 652 N.E.2d 486, 488 (Ind.1995) (quoting City of Indianapolis v. Bd. of Tax Comm'rs, 261 Ind. 635, 638, 308 N.E.2d 868, 870 (1974) ). And as a question of jurisdiction, issues of standing generally present questions of law, not of fact, St. Mary's Medical Ctr., Inc. v. McCarthy, 829 N.E.2d 1068, 1072 (Ind.Ct.App.2005) (citing Embry v. O'Bannon, 798 N.E.2d 157, 159 (Ind.2003) ), and therefore are reviewed de novo.
Discussion
The general rule has always been that the powers of a trustee—like that of many fiduciaries—cease when the trust is dissolved or otherwise terminated; including the power to litigate as a representative of the trust. See, e.g., Taylor v. Savage, 42 U.S. 282, 286, 1 How. 282, 11 L.Ed. 132 (1843) (“By his removal from the office of executor, he was as completely separated from the business of the estate as if he had been dead, and had no right to appear in or be a party in this or any other court, to a suit which the law confided to the representative of the deceased.”); Simon v. Simon, 957 N.E.2d 980, 987–88 (Ind.Ct.App.2011) (“The removal order took effect immediately, terminated Bren's representative capacity, and severed her fiduciary relationship with the Estate and the Trust.”); Weiland v. Scheuch, 123 Ind.App. 421, 422–23, 111 N.E.2d 664, 664 (1953) (appellant removed as executrix of will and appealed removal, but “should have appealed as an individual and not in a capacity she no longer occupies”); Union Savings & Trust Co. v. Eddingfield, 78 Ind.App. 286, 286, 134 N.E. 497, 498 (1922) (“The order completely stripped the trust company of its authority, and took away its representative capacity. Thereby its prior connection with the estate was completely severed. Thereafter it had no more standing as an administrator than a dead man.”). To prevent this from happening, a fiduciary would have to seek and receive a stay of the dissolution or termination order. See Simon, 957 N.E.2d at 988. “An appeal does not operate to suspend the effect of such an order.” Eddingfield, 78 Ind.App. at 286, 134 N.E. at 498.
Hanover says that “[h]ere the terminations of the Trusts became effective when Old National failed to seek a stay of the Judgments in a timely manner” or, at the latest, the terminations “were finalized after Old National transferred all of the Trusts' assets to Hanover's endowment.” (Mot. to Dismiss at 6.) With the trusts terminated, Old National's status as trustee terminated in accordance with the rule laid out above, Hanover says, and therefore “Old National's legal interest in this matter has ended, eliminating its standing to pursue this appeal.” (Id. )
Old National says that by “[t]aking Hanover's argument to its logical conclusion, a former trustee could never seek redress for its removal because the removal would deprive the trustee of standing to do so. The law does not support such a circular result.” (Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 6.) As we have just explained, this is not an accurate view of the law. All the trustee has to do to maintain its standing in a representative capacity is obtain a stay of the termination order while the trustee pursues its appeal. We do not foresee many circumstances in which such a request for a stay would be denied by a trial court.
Regardless, and even though Indiana courts have on occasion reviewed trustee appeals on the merits notwithstanding this general rule, here Old National does not contest that the trial court's termination orders effectuated the same result with respect to its status as trustee. Nor does it claim that its appeal should have functioned as a stay or claim that it was precluded from seeking a stay for any reason.
In fact, now it disclaims any interest in appealing as a fiduciary representative of the trusts whatsoever. “Old National had all rights, titles, powers, privileges, duties, limitations, and discretions as trustee of the Trusts, and the trial court took away those representative interests on behalf of the Trusts when it entered the Orders.” (Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 5.) “Old National is not challenging any decisions unrelated to the termination of the Trusts itself, nor is the bank arguing that it should be allowed to engage in any representative activities or litigation on behalf of the Trusts post-termination.” (Resp. to Mot to Dismiss at 6.) In short, Old National does not claim that it has standing in its representative capacity to pursue this appeal, nor do we find any legal or factual grounds for such a conclusion.
Instead, Old National now claims that it has “a personal stake in the outcome of this controversy: in vacating the trial court's Orders, reinstating the Trusts, and restoring its position as trustee of the Trusts.” (Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 5 (emphasis added).) And it says it has been “personally aggrieved” and “injured by the trial court's Orders,” and is therefore “appealing, in its own right, the very Orders that resulted in the termination of the Trusts and its status as trustee.” (Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 5–6.) Because the Trust Code expressly provides that “[a]ny person considering himself aggrieved” by a trial court's decision in a trust action “may prosecute an appeal” from that decision, Ind.Code § 30–4–6–11(a) (2004), Old National claims that it may pursue its appeal in its individual capacity.
“Person” is defined for purposes of the Trust Code as including individuals, corporations, business trusts, estates, trusts, partnerships, limited liability companies, associations, joint ventures, governments (or subdivisions, agencies, or instrumentalities), public corporations, or any other legal or commercial entities. Ind.Code § 30–4–1–2(11) (2004) ; Ind.Code § 30–2–14–9 (2004). Old National meets this definition.
In response, Hanover argues that to gain standing in its individual capacity, Old National must have first intervened at the trial court and its failure to do so “is fatal to its claim of standing as an individual.” (Reply in Support of Mot. to Dismiss at 3.) In support of this proposition, Hanover directs us to the Court of Appeals decision in Simon, 957 N.E.2d at 988–89 (interpreting Appellate Rule 17(A) to limit class of parties on appeal to parties of record at trial, irrespective of Indiana Code § 30–4–6–11 ). Whether Hanover states the correct view of the law is not a question we need to address today.
Again, Old National did not intervene or appear at the trial court level in its individual capacity. Moreover, it is equally apparent that it did not appeal in its individual capacity, either. Old National filed its notices of appeal from the trial court orders dissolving the trusts as “Old National Bancorp d/b/a Old National Trust Company, as Trustee of the Percy E. Goodrich Trust,” and “as Trustee of the Elizabeth Goodrich Terry Trust.” (Reply in Support of Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. D.) It paid its attorney fees, accrued during the course of the appeal, from the assets of the trusts—an act that could only be done as a trustee and one completely inconsistent with Old National's current position that it was acting in its individual, non-fiduciary, capacity. (Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. C–1, C–2; Reply in Support of Mot. to Dismiss, Exs. G, H.) And finally, Old National's substantive briefs on appeal are replete with references to its (now-prior) status as trustee, and wholly devoid of references to its claimed status as an individual aggrieved person.
Only when this was pointed out by Hanover in the course of seeking to dismiss this appeal did Old National offer to reimburse the appellate attorney fees, calling the matter “an oversight.” (Reply in Support of Mot. to Dismiss, Ex. H.)
Nowhere is this more obvious than on the very first page of Old National's brief, where it introduces its statement of the issues by saying “Appellant–Respondent Old National Bancorp d/b/a Old National Trust Company (‘Old National’), as trustee of the Percy E. Goodrich Trust and of the Elizabeth Goodrich Terry Intervivos Charitable Remainder Unitrust created June 2, 1992 (collectively, the ‘Trusts'), presents the following issues on appeal.” (Appellant's Br. at 1.)
In response, Old National claims these are simply challenges to the “styling or caption of this appeal,” and that “[l]ooking beyond the style and caption to its substance, Old National's appeal is clearly an appeal being prosecuted in the bank's individual capacity.” (Resp. to Mot. to Dismiss at 7.) We disagree with that assessment.
The conduct presented here by Old National goes beyond mere styling and caption, and we do not elevate form over substance by refusing to ignore what that conduct tells us. It is apparent here that from the start of the appeal, Old National acted in the same capacity as it had at trial—as a trustee—and not as a bank seeking to claim it had been aggrieved somehow by the dissolution of trusts maintained within its four walls. In fact, nowhere in its briefing before the Court of Appeals did Old National even cite Indiana Code § 30–4–6–11(a), much less explain how it is an “aggrieved person” entitled to pursue the appeal in its individual capacity without having first intervened at trial. Instead, it challenged whether the trial court's conclusions satisfied the Trust Code's statutory provisions governing the termination of trusts, using the same arguments it made as trustee at trial. And Old National paid for these legal endeavors out of the trust assets—an action we are less-inclined to see as an “oversight” when made by a sophisticated financial institution such as Old National, and more inclined to view as reflecting Old National's belief that it was appealing in its representative capacity. Simply put, Old National arguing that it appealed here in anything other than its representative capacity fails the Duck Test.
See Walczak v. Labor Works–Ft. Wayne, LLC, 983 N.E.2d 1146, 1148–49 (Ind.2013).
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Thus, regardless of whether Indiana Code § 30–4–6–11(a) 's broader-sounding terms permit persons to appeal the termination of a trust when those persons were not parties to the trust proceedings, or whether Indiana Appellate Rule 17(A) implies that all such aggrieved persons must first intervene at the trial level before seeking an appeal, the outcome in this case does not change. Old National was a party to the trust proceedings in its representative capacity as trustee and never sought to intervene in its individual capacity. It then appealed in its representative capacity—which it now concedes it lacked the power to do after the trusts were terminated —and claimed to be appealing in its individual capacity only once it faced dismissal.
Conclusion
Because Old National lacks standing to pursue this appeal, we lack jurisdiction to hear it. It is therefore dismissed.
RUSH, C.J., DICKSON, RUCKER, and MASSA, JJ., concur.