Court Opinion

ID: 8211904
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-05 15:03:44.130246+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:06.576574
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                   No. 22-0102
                              Filed October 5, 2022

IN THE MATTER OF THE RANDALL L. DURSCHMIDT REVOCABLE TRUST,
      Appellee,

vs.

KRISTI LEE DURSCHMIDT,
     Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

      Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Webster County, Jennifer Miller,

Judge.

      A trust beneficiary appeals the dismissal of her contest to her father’s trust

based on claims of a lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence.

AFFIRMED.

      Kristi Lee Durschmidt, Russell, Minnesota, self-represented appellant.

      Brian L. Yung and Nicholas K. Cochrane of Johnson, Mulholland, Cochrane,

Cochrane, Yung & Engler, PLC, Fort Dodge, for appellee.

      Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Greer and Chicchelly, JJ.
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GREER, Judge.

       After her father passed, a will contest, turned trust dispute, brought to focus

a daughter’s claim against her relatives. Without proof of a lack of testamentary

capacity or undue influence over the father, Randall Durschmidt, the case lacked

a basis to change the estate plan. But it all began when Randall created the

Randall L. Durschmidt Revocable Trust (the Trust) in January of 1999. In his will,

signed in 2017, he directed the residue of his estate should go to the trust. The

trust agreement was rewritten three times; the third restatement of the Trust was

signed on November 13, 2019, with Randall as trustee. The document devised

forty percent of the trust estate’s residue to Randall’s sister, Marnell Nordstrom,

and twenty-five percent each to his eldest and youngest daughter, Lynn Niemeyer

and Lisa Corrigan, respectively; the final ten percent was to go into a trust for the

benefit of his middle daughter, Kristi Durschmidt.1 He also had an individual

retirement account (IRA), which Kristi said was distributed between one of her

sisters and Randall’s church.

       In September 2020, Randall named his sister, Nordstrom, to serve as co-

trustee with him. In the same document, Randall appointed his youngest daughter,

Corrigan, as his successor trustee. Randall passed away at ninety years old that

December.

       In May of 2021, after Randall’s will was admitted to probate, Kristi filed a

petition contesting the will. On August 25, 2021, Nordstrom moved to terminate

the estate trust. The district court determined that Kristi’s challenge was actually

1Because they share a last name, we refer to Randall and Kristi by their first
names.
                                           3

to the trust, not the will, and consolidated her will challenge into the case to

terminate the trust. Included in that order was a directive that in the next thirty

days Kristi file “a clear and concise statement relative to all of [Kristi’s] objections

to the termination of the trust in a numbered orderly fashion.” No statement was

filed.2

          A bench trial was held on December 7. Agreeing with the parties that the

core of the case involved a trust, the district court refined Kristi’s claim to four main

assertions: (1) Randall lacked testamentary capacity at the time he changed the

trust distributions in 2019, (2) Nordstrom and Corrigan had exerted undue

influence on Randall, (3) the IRA distribution should be set aside, and (4) her share

should be distributed directly to her rather than through the Kristi Durschmidt Trust.

Assuming the court revoked the 2019 trust document, Kristi contended both that

the original trust document from 1999 should be honored3 and that the trust assets

should be immediately split evenly between Randall’s three daughters. The district

court denied Kristi’s petition on all four grounds.

I. Analysis.

          First, Kristi’s challenge to set aside the trust is an action triable in the

probate court as an action at law, so our review is for errors at law. See Iowa Code

§§ 633.311, 633A.3101 (2021); see also In re Ronald R. Oldham Tr., 889 N.W.2d

2  Kristi addressed the lack of a statement at the trial, contending that three of her
filings—“Petition Contesting Will,” “Addition/Addendum to My Petition Contesting
Distribution of Will” and “Petition Contesting Will & Trust of Randall Durschmidt”—
laid out her objections.
3 Kristi did not submit a copy of the original 1999 trust document into evidence.

Kristi described the terms as requiring an equal distribution between the sisters
with incremental payments over five, ten, and fifteen years.
                                         4

671, 672–73 (Iowa Ct. App. 2016). Kristi raises the same four concerns she had

before. But, she does not provide any legal authority regarding the IRA or the Kristi

Durschmidt Trust; insofar as these arguments diverge from Randall’s testamentary

capacity or allegations of undue influence, we consider them waived. See Iowa R.

App. P. 6.903(2)(g)(3) (“Failure to cite authority in support of an issue may be

deemed waiver of that issue.”); see also Goodwin v. Iowa Dist. Ct., 936 N.W.2d

634, 643 n.2 (Iowa 2019) (“It is not our role to rewrite a pro se pleading, nor can

we act as the advocate for a pro se litigant.”). In her appellate brief, she also

discusses a number of issues that were not raised and ruled upon by the district

court, and we will also not address these extraneous issues that were not

preserved for our review. See Meier v. Senecaut, 641 N.W.2d 532, 537 (Iowa

2002) (“It is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that issues must ordinarily

be both raised and decided by the district court before we will decide them on

appeal.”); see also In re Est. of DeTar, 572 N.W.2d 178, 180 (Iowa Ct. App. 1997)

(“Iowa law dictates that [a pro se party’s] brief is judged by the same standard as

a brief filed by an Iowa lawyer.”).

       A. Randall’s Testamentary Capacity.

       In a will contest, “[t]he burden of proof is on contestants . . . to establish

testator at the exact time of the making of the will lacked one or more of the

essentials of testamentary capacity.”     Est. of Gruis v. Winnebago Cnty., 207

N.W.2d 571, 573 (Iowa 1973). In deciding the contest of a revocable trust, the

same analysis should be applied.4 See In re Guardianship of Driesen, No. 08-

4“Settlor must be competent as required to execute a will to modify the terms of
a revocable trust. Thus, a beneficiary may challenge an amendment based upon
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1311, 2009 WL 1491871, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. May 29, 2009) (confirming the test

for capacity to amend a trust follows the test defining testamentary capacity to

make a will); see also In re Guardianship of Radda, 955 N.W.2d 203, 214 n.9 (Iowa

2021) (stating that like a will contest, challenges to a revocable trust must be

brought after the death of the testator). The test to assess testamentary capacity

requires evaluating whether the person executing the document lacks any of the

following abilities:

              (a) To understand the nature of the instrument then being
       executed.
              (b) To understand and know the nature and extent of his
       property.
              (c) To be able to identify and recall the natural objects of his
       bounty.
              (d) To realize and know the distribution he desires to make of
       his property.

Id.; In re Est. of Henrich, 389 N.W.2d 78, 81 (Iowa Ct. App. 1986).

       Focused on Randall’s mental condition in 2020, Kristi argues the attorneys

who drafted her father’s documents should have tested Randall’s mental capacity,

which they never did. But, as the party holding the burden, Kristi has been unable

to prove her father would have failed any of the aforementioned tests. Even when

she called her father’s physician to testify on her behalf, the doctor said he had no

concerns about Randall’s cognitive abilities; as an example, he testified that at

appointments Randall “could recite his medication list clearly without any mistakes.

He came fully prepared [to each appointment].” Even more compelling, the doctor

testified “I had never at any point thought that [Randall] was having issues with his

settlor’s lack of testamentary capacity.” 13 Julia L. Pulkrabek & Gary J. Schmit,
Iowa Practice Series: Probate § 12:69 (Oct. 2021 update).
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cognition.” And, as the Trust pointed out, the only change to the trust documents

in 2020 related to appointing a co-trustee and updating the successor trustee, not

the distribution plan. Kristi offered no evidence of any mental acuity issues prior

to 2020.

       As for Randall’s condition in 2020, Kristi’s limited evidence involves

speculation over Randall’s wobbly signature on the paperwork appointing his co-

trustee, his medical conditions,5 and the percentage of seniors expected to die

from mental-impairment illnesses this year—neither of which establish Randall

lacked testamentary capacity in 2019 when he changed the distributions of his

trust. See In re Ransom’s Est., 57 N.W.2d 89, 109 (Iowa 1953) (“This court has

many times held that old age and the physical and mental impairment that are its

normal accompaniments, bodily infirmities, the waning of the physical or mental

alertness of earlier years, weakening of the memory, forgetfulness, the failure to

immediately recognize old acquaintances, impairment of the sight or hearing,

repetitious narrative, carelessness in dress, childishness or other eccentricities,

will not invalidate the will of a person, if he has mentality and intelligence sufficient

to bring himself within the requisites of testamentary capacity hereinbefore

stated.”); In re Est. of Boman, No. 16-0110, 2017 WL 512493, at *9 (Iowa Ct. App.

Feb. 8, 2017) (declining to deem a testator lacked capacity even with “mounting

forgetfulness and [a] dementia diagnosis”). Finally, Nordstrom testified her brother

5Randall’s physician testified that none of Randall’s health conditions would impair
his cognitive abilities and that nothing related to his heart condition would have
affected his ability to understand legal documents. One medical report from
September 2020 was admitted as an exhibit, and the only note concerning mental
status was “he was alert.”
                                         7

fully knew “to the penny” what he owned and had all of his affairs organized in

“books underneath his coffee table.” Unable to overcome this hurdle of proof,

Kristi’s challenge must fail.

       B. Undue Influence.

       Kristi next alleges that Nordstrom and Corrigan exerted undue influence

against Randall. Again, using a will contest as a guide, there are four elements

necessary to prove undue influence, namely:

       (1) the testator was susceptible to undue influence; (2) defendants
       had an opportunity to exercise undue influence and effect the
       wrongful purpose; (3) defendants had a disposition to influence
       unduly to procure an improper favor; and (4) the result, reflected in
       the will, was clearly the effect of undue influence.

In re Est. of Bayer, 574 N.W.2d 667, 671 (Iowa 1998). Kristi must prove the first

three elements of undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence. See

Burkhalter v. Burkhalter, 841 N.W.2d 93, 104–05 (Iowa 2013) (applying this

standard in a dispute over testamentary capacity and undue influence involving a

distribution plan under a trust).     The fourth element, causation, requires a

heightened clear-proof standard which “ensures the other factors really mattered

to the end result.” Id.; see also In re Est. of Davenport, 346 N.W.2d 530, 532 (Iowa

1984) (“It is not sufficient that persuasion alone was asserted against the testator.

The courts have rightly recognized that most persons assert some influence over

others, through friendship or familial duties, which may have some tangential effect

on their receiving a testamentary benefit. This influence is not tainted. Rather,

undue influence must dominate the motives of the testator in executing his will. It

must be equivalent to ‘moral coercion.’” (citation omitted)). To summarize:
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       The injection of the word “clearly” into the fourth element of undue
       influence is designed to add a measure of protection to the free will
       of a testator, filter out claims that are unduly speculative, and to
       prevent the doctrine from expanding beyond its limited scope. All of
       the other elements of undue influence might be present—
       susceptibility, opportunity, and disposition—and, still, the will
       provisions might be the result of the testator’s free will.

Burkhalter, 841 N.W.2d at 105–06.

       Again, Kristi points to Randall’s health conditions to establish his

diminishing capacity and susceptibility to undue influence, as well as stating that

Nordstrom and Corrigan “assumed a position of dominance over [Randall].” As

the district court put it, Kristi can provide only “suspicion and surmise” to back her

claim. See In re Will of Pritchard, 443 N.W.2d 95, 98 (Iowa Ct. App. 1989) (“Mere

suspicion, surmise, conjecture, or speculation is not enough to warrant a finding of

undue influence, but there must be a solid foundation of established facts upon

which to rest an inference of its existence.”). As we have already established, the

evidence in the record refutes any meaningful decline in Randall’s competence

that would make him susceptible to undue influence. See Est. of Arnold v. Arnold,

No. 18-1460, 2019 WL 3317381, at *3 (Iowa Ct. App. July 24, 2019) (“[The plaintiff]

lists [the decedent’s] various health issues and the help [the decedent] received

from family members in his later years. But those natural circumstances of aging

do not show [the decedent] was so ‘infirm or mentally weak’ that he would be

susceptible to undue influence.”).

       Likewise, we note that Nordstrom testified she never attended any estate

planning meetings involving the changes to the trust terms.          Even assuming

Nordstrom and Corrigan had the opportunity to influence Randall at the time of the

trust’s third restatement, Kristi can only accuse the two of having a disposition to
                                         9

do so. No facts of their actions to influence appear in this record. And, given the

higher standard necessary to prove the fourth element, Kristi has not shown there

was a “continuing and persistent effort to unduly influence the testator which

destroys the testator’s free will.” See Davenport, 346 N.W.2d at 532; see also

Burkhalter, 841 N.W,2d at 107 (applying this component of proof to a trust dispute).

So, without more than a scintilla of evidence of undue influence, we will not disturb

the distribution on such grounds.

II. Conclusion.

       Because Kristi has not proved Randall lacked testamentary capacity or was

unduly influenced, and has either waived or failed to preserve error on her other

issues, we affirm the district court.

       AFFIRMED.