"...the trust and trustee owed no duty to Kathleen as a creditor of a trust beneficiary (Phillip). “Persons who may incidentally benefit in some manner from the performance of the trust are not beneficiaries of the trust and cannot enforce it.” Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 48 cmt. a (Am. Law. Inst. Oct. 2020 Update). The Iowa Academy of Trust and Estate Counsel raised this concern. And the amicus implores us to find that Scott had no duty to Phillip’s creditors when he, acting in his capacity as trustee in compliance with the terms of the trust, decided what distributions to make and to whom. The undisputed duty of loyalty of a trustee is to the beneficiaries of the trust, not the creditor of any beneficiary. Restatement (Third) of Trusts § 78(1).
First, both Kathleen and Scott confirmed that the trust purpose was twofold. One purpose was to qualify Phillip for Medicaid benefits, which required Phillip to maintain a limited net worth of $2000 and a limited monthly income. The second purpose was to ensure that Phillip’s sons retained the family real estate. To effectuate this purpose, Kathleen admits in her brief that after all real estate was transferred to the trust she “disclaimed and surrendered any and all interest she may have in the Trust.” Also with those goals in mind, Scott maintains he fulfilled his obligations as trustee in the manner he was supposed to; he stopped making income distributions to Phillip so that his father could remain eligible for Medicaid nursing home coverage. Then after the qualification for Medicaid, he transferred the trust assets to the beneficiaries to preserve their interests in the family real estate. Scott notes that he relied on the advice of several attorneys in taking these actions.
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Kathleen acknowledged the trust goals that Scott followed. But at trial and in her brief, she argues in his role as trustee, his failure to pay her interfered with her contract between herself and Phillip. But Kathleen is not a creditor of the trust. Even the jury found the trust owed her nothing. Thus, Scott, operating as trustee, owed Kathleen no fiduciary duty. See Iowa Code §633A.4202(1) (“A trustee shall administer the trust solely in the interests of the beneficiaries, and shall act with due regard to their respective interests.”).
[Second], drilling down to the specific improper conduct of Scott as agent, Kathleen argues Scott “felt entitled to pick and choose which bills ultimately got paid.” It then follows, under Kathleen’s theme, Scott was not acting on behalf of or in Phillip’s best interest. And Kathleen emphasizes that Scott testified he did not like that his father was ordered to pay alimony because he thought it was unfair. So does refusing to pay the principal’s creditor amount to improper conduct by the agent under an interference-of-contract claim? If we step back from this case, we would plow new ground to hold that an agent acting under a power of attorney must pay all bills of the principal or risk a claim of interference with a contract by a creditor. An agent, acting for the principal, might decide to prioritize which bills to pay, and if a creditor finds the action wrongful, the remedy is breach of contract. The motives of Scott in preserving assets for his father’s care and upholding the estate plan, which all parties acknowledged in this case, is not improper under his role as agent. Scott exercised financial discretion to protect his father’s legal rights, and Kathleen failed to prove his sole motivation was to defeat the alimony contract. [citation omitted, emphasis added]. Thus, the record does not support a finding of wrongful conduct against Scott as an agent for Phillip.