Evans v. Pearson Enter Inc , 434 F.3d 839 ( 2006 )


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  •                           RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 06a0024p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
    Plaintiff-Appellant, -
    JANE P. EVANS,
    -
    -
    -
    No. 04-2229
    v.
    ,
    >
    PEARSON ENTERPRISES, INCORPORATED, a Michigan -
    -
    Michigan Corporation; BANK ONE TRUST COMPANY -
    Corporation; ERVIN INDUSTRIES, INCORPORATED, a
    -
    -
    N.A.; BANK ONE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION; JOHN
    -
    PEARSON, an individual; JAMES MERETTA, an
    -
    individual,
    Defendants-Appellees. N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 03-74821—Avern Cohn, District Judge.
    Argued: October 27, 2005
    Decided and Filed: January 19, 2006
    Before: SILER, CLAY, and ROGERS, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Dominic J. Campisi, EVANS, LATHAM & CAMPISI, San Francisco, California, for
    Appellant. I. W. Winsten, HONIGMAN, MILLER, SCHWARTZ & COHN, Detroit, Michigan, for
    Appellees. ON BRIEF: Dominic J. Campisi, EVANS, LATHAM & CAMPISI, San Francisco,
    California, Donald J. Gasiorek, James N. McNally, SOMMERS, SCHWARTZ, SILVER &
    SCHWARTZ, Southfield, Michigan, for Appellant. I. W. Winsten, HONIGMAN, MILLER,
    SCHWARTZ & COHN, Detroit, Michigan, Bruce T. Wallace, Susan T. Cannell, HOOPER,
    HATHAWAY, PRICE, BEUCHE & WALLACE, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellees.
    ROGERS, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which SILER, J., joined. CLAY, J. (pp.
    12-14), delivered a separate concurring opinion.
    1
    No. 04-2229           Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                Page 2
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    ROGERS, Circuit Judge. This diversity action concerns claims for breach of trust,
    shareholder oppression, and common-law fraud and misrepresentation as governed by Michigan law.
    It also presents an interesting federal question as to the breadth of the “probate exception” to federal
    jurisdiction. Plaintiff Jane Evans has an interest in three trusts, whose primary assets are voting and
    nonvoting stock in Ervin Industries, a family-owned corporation. Evans’ family members, who have
    interests in two of the three trusts, are the other beneficiaries of the voting-stock trust. In 2001,
    Evans sued her siblings, the trust company defendant Bank One, and defendant Ervin Industries in
    Michigan probate court. The essence of her claim was that Bank One’s lending relationship with
    Ervin Industries caused Bank One to have a conflict of interest and abdicate its responsibilities as
    trustee in the course of three business transactions, occurring in 1993, 1996, and 1999. The probate
    court dismissed her suit, and the Michigan Court of Appeals recently affirmed.
    Before the probate court dismissed her suit, Evans brought similar claims in federal district
    court. She alleged tortious conduct in connection with the same three business transactions and sued
    Ervin Industries, Pearson Enterprises, Bank One Trust Company, Bank One N.A., her brother John
    Pearson, and Bank One trust officer James Meretta. The district court dismissed all of her claims
    in response to defendants’ motions to dismiss. The district court held that the “probate exception”
    to federal jurisdiction divested it of jurisdiction to entertain Evans’ claim for breach of trust. The
    court dismissed all of Evans’ other claims on grounds of collateral estoppel or inadequate pleading.
    The lower court also refused or declined to consider Evans’ requests to amend her complaint. Evans
    appeals, challenging (1) the dismissal of her claims for breach of trust, shareholder oppression, and
    fraud; and (2) the denial of her request to amend her complaint. For the following reasons, we
    affirm.
    I.
    In reviewing the grant of a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6), we “must accept all
    well-pleaded factual allegations of the complaint as true and construe the complaint in the light most
    favorable to the plaintiff.” E.g., Benzon v. Morgan Stanley Distribs., Inc., 
    420 F.3d 598
    , 605 (6th
    Cir. 2005). Doing so, we conclude that dismissal was proper, in part, on collateral estoppel grounds
    and, in part, for failure to plead with sufficient particularity.
    1.      The Trusts and the Parties
    There are three trusts involved in this litigation. Two of these trusts are testamentary. The
    first testamentary trust was created by John Ervin, who founded defendant Ervin Industries, which
    manufactures steel abrasives. Ervin Industries is a Michigan corporation with its principal place of
    business in Michigan, and Ervin’s grandson, defendant John Pearson, is its current president, CEO,
    and director. The primary asset of Ervin’s testamentary trust was Ervin Industries’ Class A voting
    stock. His daughter and four grandchildren are the income beneficiaries, and two of those
    grandchildren, plaintiff Evans and defendant Pearson, are parties to this suit. This substantial trust
    was divided into five separate trusts in 1987 so that each beneficiary had his or her own trust. The
    second testamentary trust was established by Ervin’s wife, and its primary asset was the remaining
    Class A voting stock in Ervin Industries. Evans and her siblings have beneficial interests in this
    testamentary trust as well.
    The final trust at issue in this case is not testamentary. Evans established her own revocable
    trust in 1995. The res of the revocable trust is Class B nonvoting stock in Ervin Industries. Evans
    named herself the income beneficiary of her revocable trust and another trust company as the
    No. 04-2229            Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                   Page 3
    remainder beneficiary of any trust property in existence at her death. Because Evans’ trust is
    revocable, she concedes that she has control over the trust.
    Defendant Bank One Trust Company N.A. (Bank One Trust) is the sole trustee of the
    testamentary trusts. Therefore, Bank One Trust controls all of the Class A voting stock in Ervin
    Industries by acting as trustee of all shareholder-voting rights. Bank One Trust was also the co-
    trustee, along with Evans, of the revocable trust. Defendant James Meretta is employed as a trust
    officer for Bank One Trust, and he also serves on the board of directors of both defendants Pearson
    Enterprises and Ervin Industries. The district court found that Meretta was the trust officer for the
    revocable trust. It is unclear from the record whether he is also the trust officer for the other trusts.
    Bank One Trust, Bank One, and Meretta have the same counsel and are referred to collectively as
    the “Bank One defendants.”
    Pearson Enterprises was incorporated in Michigan in 1993 and has its principal place of
    business there. Pearson Enterprises was a participant in two of the three transactions at issue in this
    case. John Pearson is also the president, CEO, and director of Pearson Enterprises. John Pearson,
    Pearson Enterprises, and Ervin Industries have the same counsel and are referred to collectively as
    the “Pearson defendants.”
    2.      The Three Business Transactions at Issue
    Evans’ claims arise out of three business transactions. The first transaction was a 1993
    acquisition of Barton Abrasives, a company located in the United Kingdom, for $17.65 million. The
    defendants created a limited partnership to complete this transaction. The general partner was the
    then-newly incorporated Pearson Enterprises, and the limited partner was Ervin Industries. Evans
    purchased more than 25,000 shares of stock in Pearson Enterprises with over $1.5 million that she
    had received in trust distributions. Evans alleges that she ultimately lost all of this investment.
    Evans’ complaint alleged that the defendants had false valuation reports prepared, made false
    descriptions of write-offs, charged her an excessive price in the acquisition, failed to supervise
    agents, failed to perform due diligence, concealed material facts, and negotiated unreasonably.
    Evans alleged that Bank One and Meretta approved this transaction. She also alleged that the
    defendants concealed their misrepresentations until 2001.
    The second transaction was Ervin Industries’ and Pearson Enterprises’ 1996 acquisition of
    a 40% interest in Ervin Leasing Company from Great Lakes Bancorp. Evans alleged that she
    purchased an additional $500,000 worth of Pearson shares to help finance the acquisition.
    According to her complaint, she invested her $500,000 “directly and through” her revocable trust.
    Evans alleges that she also lost this entire investment because of the defendants’ misrepresentations
    and concealment. She also alleged that the defendants failed to disclose that the acquisition was a
    “poor investment” and that Evans would not receive “dividend income for the foreseeable future.”
    Her allegations continue that the defendants failed to engage in due diligence and that Bank One
    failed to inform her of its conflict of interest, which resulted from its and its affiliates’ loans to Ervin
    Leasing Company. Evans again alleged that the defendants concealed the misrepresentations until
    2001.
    The final transaction at issue is Ervin Industries’ 1998 acquisition of the Barnsteel Company
    for $15 million. Evans alleged that Bank One Trust and Meretta failed to perform due diligence,
    disclose that the terms of the transaction were unreasonable and imprudent, and disclose that Bank
    One Trust had a conflicting lending relationship. Barnsteel’s closure in 2001 resulted in a
    substantial loss to Ervin Industries and to the value of Evans’ stock. Evans has not alleged that she
    invested any of her own money in this transaction.
    No. 04-2229           Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                 Page 4
    3.      Procedural History
    Evans first brought suit in Michigan probate court on August 31, 2001, for the removal and
    surcharge of Bank One Trust as the trustee of the testamentary trusts. Ervin Industries and John
    Pearson were also parties to the suit. In connection with the three transactions described above,
    Evans alleged that she suffered substantial lost income because Bank One Trust (1) had a conflict
    of interest due to its lending relationship with Ervin Industries, (2) failed to perform due diligence,
    and (3) administered the trusts in contravention of its fiduciary duties. The parties filed cross-
    motions for summary judgment.
    The probate court, on December 30, 2003, ruled in favor of Bank One Trust. The probate
    court held that Bank One Trust’s loans to Ervin were proper under Michigan law. That court also
    determined that Evans’ claims were barred by the applicable statutes of limitation and by principles
    of res judicata because the probate court had entered orders approving Bank One’s accounts. As for
    Evans’ argument that the statute of limitations should be tolled because of fraudulent concealment,
    the probate court held that she failed to allege fraud or fraudulent concealment in her petition and
    that, in any case, she had notice of the significant transactions years before filing suit. Evans
    appealed, and the Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed on February 24, 2005. See Evans v. Bank
    One Trust Co. N.A., Nos. 249974, 253745, 253824, 
    2005 WL 433573
    (Mich. Ct. App. Feb. 24,
    2005). The Michigan Supreme Court recently denied leave to appeal. See In re John F. Ervin
    Testamentary Trust, 
    706 N.W.2d 14
    (Mich. Nov. 9, 2005) (Table).
    Evans filed the case at bar in the district court below on November 26, 2003. She brought
    seven state-law claims relating to the three business transactions: (1) improper discharge of
    corporate duties in violation of M.C.L. § 450.1541a, (2) shareholder oppression under M.C.L.
    § 450.1489, (3) breach of trust, (4) fraud, (5) silent fraud, (6) innocent misrepresentation, and (7)
    civil conspiracy. On April 30, 2004, the district court, in response to the defendants’ motion to
    dismiss, dismissed most of Evans’ claims.
    First, the court dismissed the claim for improper discharge of corporate duties because the
    statute of limitations had run. Second, the court dismissed the shareholder-oppression claims based
    on the 1993 Barton Abrasives and 1996 Ervin Leasing transactions because the applicable statute
    of limitations had run against Evans. The court held, however, that Evans met the limitations period
    regarding her claim based on the 1998 Barnsteel transaction. Third, the court held that the “probate
    exception” to federal subject-matter jurisdiction deprived the court of jurisdiction to hear Evans’
    claim for breach of trust. Fourth, the district court disposed of the fraud and misrepresentation
    claims together and determined that the statute of limitations barred the claims concerning the 1993
    Barton Abrasives and 1996 Ervin Leasing transactions. The court also determined that Evans had
    not pled sufficient facts of fraudulent concealment to toll the statute, and, even if she had, she failed
    to qualify for Michigan’s two-year grace period in the case of fraudulent concealment because she
    should have discovered the concealment by the time she filed her 2001 probate action. Fifth, the
    district court dismissed her fraud claim concerning the 1998 Barnsteel transaction, but the court did
    not expressly state its rationale. Presumably the court accepted the defendants’ argument, which the
    court described in its order, that Evans failed to plead reliance. Finally, the court allowed her claim
    for civil conspiracy to proceed because “at least one of [her] other claims (Count Two) survives
    . . . .”
    The filings leading up to the district court’s order included one styled “Plaintiff’s Response
    to the Ervin Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss . . . and Plaintiff’s Counter-Motion for Leave to
    Amend.” The “counter-motion” stated in its entirety, “In the alternative, Plaintiff respectfully moves
    this Court to grant her Counter-Motion for Leave to Amend her Complaint and Jury Demand
    pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 15.” The district court denied the motion “as futile” because Evans had
    No. 04-2229             Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                      Page 5
    not offered an amended complaint or specifically stated how the amendments would create causes
    of action that could survive the limitation periods or the court’s limited jurisdiction.
    On August 26, 2004, the district court considered the remaining claims for shareholder
    oppression and civil conspiracy concerning the 1998 Barnsteel transaction. The Pearson defendants
    brought a motion to dismiss. The Bank One defendants submitted a motion for summary judgment.
    The district court dismissed both of the remaining claims on August 26, 2004, pursuant to
    the motion to dismiss. The court held that Evans could not satisfy any of the statutory requirements
    for a claim of stockholder oppression under M.C.L. § 450.1489. The court first held that the probate
    court’s earlier order collaterally estopped Evans from arguing that the defendants’ lending
    relationship was illegal. The court then held that Evans’ shareholder claim was defective because,
    without investing in the Barnsteel transaction, she could not plead reliance. Last, the court held that
    Evans could not maintain a claim for “willfully unfair and oppressive acts” because she was
    collaterally estopped from arguing that Bank One acted illegally and because she failed to plead a
    separate and distinct injury regarding the Barnsteel transaction. Because the court had determined
    that all other claims had to be dismissed, it ruled that Evans’ conspiracy claim failed as a matter of
    law.
    In two filings styled “Response,”1 each accompanied by a brief, Evans provided the
    following short request: “In the alternative, Plaintiff respectfully moves this Court to grant her
    Counter-Motion for Leave to Amend her Complaint and Jury Demand pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P.
    15.” An amended complaint was attached as an exhibit to Evans’ response to the Ervin defendants’
    motion to dismiss, but it was only mentioned on page ten and in footnote five of her brief. The
    parties disagree as to whether Evans’ request constituted a “motion.” In the section of its opinion
    denying the remaining motions, the court did not mention Evans’ requests for leave to amend. The
    district court mentioned in a footnote to its order that it would not consider any of Evans’ references
    to her proposed amended complaint because the court determined that Evans was attempting to
    “circumvent the Court’s [earlier] Order” denying her original, general request for leave to amend.
    On appeal, Evans challenges the district court’s rulings as to her claims for breach of trust,
    shareholder oppression, and common-law fraud. She also challenges the district court’s denial of
    her requests for leave to amend.
    The district court properly dismissed all of Evans’ claims. Although the district court had
    federal subject-matter jurisdiction to decide whether Bank One breached its fiduciary duties, Evans’
    claim was properly dismissed because she is collaterally estopped from arguing fraudulent
    concealment and thus that her claim survives the applicable statute of limitations. Evans’
    shareholder claims based on the 1993 and 1996 transactions are barred by the statute of limitations
    because Evans failed to plead fraudulent concealment with particularity and because collateral
    estoppel bars Evans from arguing fraudulent concealment. Her shareholder-oppression claim
    concerning the 1998 transaction also fails because collateral estoppel precludes her from alleging
    the facts that support her claim. Evans’ fraud claims concerning the 1993 and 1996 transactions fail
    because, as she did not plead fraudulent concealment with particularity, she cannot satisfy the statute
    of limitations. Her fraud claim relating to the 1998 transaction fails because she did not plead
    reliance with particularity. Finally, the district court did not improperly deny Evans’ requests for
    leave to amend.
    1
    The response to the Ervin defendants’ motion to dismiss was styled “Plaintiff’s Response to the Ervin
    Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss and for Summary Judgment on Counts II and VII.” The other response was styled
    “Plaintiff’s Response to the Bank One Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.”
    No. 04-2229               Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                          Page 6
    II.
    We review de novo the district court’s order to dismiss pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
    See Columbia Nat’l Res., Inc. v. Tatum, 
    58 F.3d 1101
    , 1109 (6th Cir. 1995). We must accept Evans’
    factual allegations as true and construe all reasonable inferences in her favor. See 
    id. On the2other
    hand, this liberal standard of review requires more than recitation of bare legal conclusions. 
    Id. III. The
    district court had jurisdiction to decide Evans’ claim against the Bank One defendants
    for breach of trust because the “probate exception” is not applicable to Evans’ claim. Evans’ claim
    involves only an action in personam regarding her revocable trust, an inter vivos trust that is
    unrelated to any probate proceedings. The probate exception to federal jurisdiction is defined by
    federal law. The Supreme Court, appropriately, has shaded its contours. In Markham v. Allen, the
    key Supreme Court case on the subject, the Supreme Court explained that the equity jurisdiction of
    the courts does not extend to claims requiring (1) interference with probate proceedings,
    (2) assumption of general jurisdiction over probate, or (3) assumption of control over property in
    the custody of a state court. 
    326 U.S. 490
    , 494 (1946). Because Evans’ claim does not require the
    federal court to interfere with probate proceedings, assume general jurisdiction over probate, or
    assume control over property in the custody of a state court, the district court has jurisdiction to
    consider her claim.
    Evans’ claim for breach of inter vivos trust does not concern probate issues and therefore
    does not interfere with any probate matters. First, Evans’ claim does not interfere with any probate
    proceedings because it concerns business transactions and stock that are not tied to any probate
    proceedings. She did not place her nonvoting stock into trust until 1995, and the administration of
    the revocable trust has no relation to any decedent or decedent’s estate. Unlike other cases in which
    courts have found interference, Evans’ claim is not a disguised probate claim. See Marshall v.
    Marshall, 
    392 F.3d 1118
    , 1135 (9th Cir. 2004), cert. granted, 
    74 U.S.L.W. 3199
    (U.S. Sept. 27,
    2005) (No. 04-1544) (declaring the plaintiff’s claim a “thinly veiled will contest”); Storm v. Storm,
    
    328 F.3d 941
    , 945 (7th Cir. 2003) (same). That the claim Evans brought in federal court shares
    similar facts and allegations with her earlier claims regarding her interest in the testamentary trusts
    is insufficient to demonstrate that her claim in federal court interferes with probate proceedings.
    The question is not of similarity but of interference; Bank One proffers no explanation of how the
    exercise of federal jurisdiction will obstruct the state probate court.
    Second, the district court would not assume general jurisdiction over probate by hearing
    Evans’ claim. Evans’ claim does not require the court to administer an estate, evaluate the validity
    of a document, or determine the rights of interested parties to property. Because no general probate
    is occurring or envisioned regarding this claim, this is not a case of the district court’s usurping the
    general jurisdiction of the probate court.
    Last, Evans’ action is in personam and does not require the federal court to take custody of
    any property already in state custody. Because the revocable trust has never, as far as the record
    demonstrates, been the subject of any litigation or other legal proceedings, the state courts have no
    custody of any property in the revocable trust. But even if the state courts had property in custody,
    there is no conflict over the custody of trust property because Evans has not brought an action in rem
    or quasi-in-rem, asking the federal court to take custody of property away from state court to
    2
    Although a motion for summary judgment was before the district court regarding the shareholder-oppression
    claim concerning the 1998 transaction, the court based its dismissal of all claims on the motion to dismiss. Thus, this
    court is not reviewing a decision of summary judgment, and Evans’ arguments concerning whether she created a genuine
    issue of material fact and whether she is entitled to discovery are misplaced.
    No. 04-2229               Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                            Page 7
    determine the rights of interested parties in that property. In Rogers v. Girard Trust Co., 
    159 F.2d 239
    , 242 (6th Cir. 1947), we held that the probate exception did not extend to an in personam action
    for breach of a testamentary trust where the action did not affect the possession of property already
    in the control of the probate court. Evans’ claim, accordingly, implicates none of Markham’s three
    forbidden infringements on exclusively state probate jurisdiction.
    To argue, as Bank One does obliquely, that state legislation always defines the boundaries
    of the probate exception, and thus federal jurisdiction, would contravene Markham and misinterpret
    precedent from this circuit that is wholly consistent with Markham. Bank One contends that federal
    courts have no jurisdiction to hear Evans’ claim for breach of trust because this circuit has examined
    a probate court’s exclusive jurisdiction when mapping the contours of the probate exception and
    because Michigan law places issues regarding all trusts (not simply testamentary trusts) within the
    exclusive jurisdiction of the probate court, see M.C.L. § 700.1302(b). Although this court has held
    that “[t]he standard for determining whether federal jurisdiction may be exercised is whether under
    state law the dispute would be cognizable only by the probate court,” Lepard v. NBD Bank, 3843F.3d
    232, 237 (6th Cir. 2004) (citing McKibben v. Chubb, 
    840 F.2d 1525
    , 1529 (10th Cir. 1988)), this
    court has examined the exclusive jurisdiction of probate courts only when a claim concerned a
    decedent’s estate. See, e.g., Bedo v. McGuire, 
    767 F.2d 305
    (6th Cir. 1985); Starr v. Rupp, 
    421 F.2d 999
    , 1005 (6th Cir. 1970). These examinations of probate jurisdiction are consistent with Markham
    because we were ensuring that federal jurisdiction did not interfere with probate administration.
    Because the Supreme Court, in determining that a suit could proceed despite its relationship with
    estate administration, held that federal equity jurisdiction cannot be “curtailed by state legislation
    as to its [the state’s] own courts,” Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank & Trust Co., 
    215 U.S. 33
    , 45-
    46 (1909), it follows that state legislatures cannot circumscribe federal jurisdiction over trusts. See
    Golden v. Golden, 
    382 F.3d 348
    , 360 (3d Cir. 2004).
    Trusts as a general matter have historically been subject to federal jurisdiction, and “[m]any,
    if not most, courts have held that the probate exception does not apply to actions involving trusts.”
    Sianis v. Jensen, 
    294 F.3d 994
    , 999 (8th Cir. 2002); see also Peter Nicolas, Fighting the Probate
    Mafia: A Dissection of the Probate Exception to Federal Court Jurisdiction, 74 S. Cal. L. Rev.
    1479, 1493 & n.70 (2001). Congress granted federal courts jurisdiction over suits that could have
    been brought in that English chancery court, see Nicolas at 1500, and, in colonial times, the English
    High Court of Chancery had exclusive jurisdiction over trusts, see 
    id. at 1513-14.
    In contrast, the
    probate exception exists, in part, because probate matters, as opposed to trusts, were not heard in the
    English High Court of Chancery or common-law courts. See 
    Markham, 326 U.S. at 494
    .
    Although it is true that federal courts have properly applied the probate exception to claims
    concerning trusts that act as will substitutes, the revocable trust in this case is not a will substitute.
    Refusing to hear cases regarding will substitutes is consistent with Markham because adjudication
    concerning will substitutes would frequently interfere with probate administration. The cases to
    which Bank One refers for the proposition that federal courts do not have jurisdiction to hear any
    claim regarding inter vivos trusts involve deaths and trusts that were will substitutes. See Storm v.
    Storm, 
    328 F.3d 941
    ; Marshall, 
    392 F.3d 1118
    ; Golden, 
    382 F.3d 348
    ; Georges v. Glick, 
    856 F.2d 971
    (7th Cir. 1988). Evans’ claim does not involve any death or estate management. Instead, Evans
    is the settlor, who controls the res of her revocable trust and brings an in personam action against
    the trustee for damages. The circumstances surrounding the revocable trust do not impinge the
    concerns of a trust acting as a will substitute, and there is no justification, therefore, for the federal
    courts to invoke the probate exception to avoid hearing her claim for breach of revocable trust.
    3
    The facts in Lepard are not clear, and Lepard thus does not define the breadth of the probate exception. This
    court noted that the plaintiff proceeded pro se and drafted an unclear complaint. 
    Lepard, 384 F.3d at 234
    , 235. Although
    it appears that the conflict concerned distributions from two testamentary trusts of the plaintiff’s deceased father, the
    court did not discuss the nature of the trusts or whether the father was living.
    No. 04-2229               Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                              Page 8
    If, in contrast, exclusive probate jurisdiction under state law were to determine federal
    jurisdiction, nothing would prevent a state from purposefully moving whole bodies of law into its
    probate courts to constrict federal diversity jurisdiction. Moreover, such a holding would create a
    perverse incentive for parties to structure transactions with trusts to avoid federal jurisdiction. For
    these reasons, the district court had jurisdiction to hear Evans’ claim for breach of the revocable
    trust.
    Although we conclude that the district court had jurisdiction, we need not remand Evans’
    claim because Evans is collaterally estopped from arguing that her claim satisfies the applicable
    statute of limitations. Federal courts sitting in diversity “must give to a state-court judgment the
    same preclusive effect as would be given that judgment under the law of the State in which the
    judgment was rendered.” Migra v. Warren City Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ., 
    465 U.S. 75
    , 81 (1984).
    Under Michigan law, “[c]ollateral estoppel precludes relitigation of an issue in a subsequent,
    different cause of action between the same parties where the prior proceeding culminated    in a valid,
    final judgment and the issue was (1) actually litigated, and (2) necessarily determined.”4 See People
    v. Gates, 
    452 N.W.2d 627
    , 630 (Mich. 1990). All of the requirements for issue preclusion under
    Michigan law are satisfied in this case.
    Despite Evans’ argument to the contrary, the facts underlying Evans’ claims for breach of
    trust are the same for all three trusts. In both suits, she alleged that the Bank violated its fiduciary
    duty by having a conflict of interest, failing to invest prudently, failing to be loyal, and failing to
    disclose information to her. Evans’ federal suit concerns Bank One’s actions in the same three
    business transactions that were at issue in the state proceeding. That Evans now sues for breach of
    her revocable trust that contained nonvoting stock and over which the probate court determined that
    it lacked jurisdiction (as opposed to her grandfather’s trust that contained voting stock and was
    testamentary) is a distinction without a difference for purposes of collateral estoppel. Because the
    factual issues and the applicable statutes of limitation are the same in both suits, collateral estoppel
    is relevant.
    All of the requirements for collateral estoppel are satisfied in this case, and Michigan law
    therefore precludes Evans from asserting her claim for breach of trust. Bank One5 and Evans,
    parties to this suit, were parties to the 2001 probate proceeding, which resulted in a valid, final
    judgment in the probate court against Evans. The Michigan Court of Appeals affirmed the judgment
    in February 2005, see Evans v. Bank One Trust Co. N.A., Nos. 249974, 253745, 253824, 
    2005 WL 433573
    (Mich. Ct. App. Feb. 24, 2005), and the Michigan Supreme Court has since denied leave to
    appeal, see In re John F. Ervin Testamentary Trust, 
    706 N.W.2d 14
    (Mich. Nov. 29, 2005) (Table).
    The issue of whether Bank One breached its fiduciary duties in the course of the three acquisitions
    was decided in the probate court and on appeal and thus actually litigated. See 
    Monat, 677 N.W.2d at 847
    n.2. As for the final requirement that the issue be necessarily determined, Evans alleged in
    her complaint to the probate court that Bank One breached its fiduciary duties regarding the
    testamentary trusts because of its lending activities concerning the three major acquisitions. The
    state appellate court held that all of Evans’ claims were barred by the applicable three-year statute
    of limitation used for “breaches of fiduciary duty.” Evans, 
    2005 WL 433573
    , at *6. The appellate
    court also held that, because Evans “was presented with sufficient evidence to place her on notice
    4
    Although “mutuality” is generally also a requirement for collateral estoppel under Michigan law, the Michigan
    Supreme Court recently held that mutuality is not required when collateral estoppel is used defensively. Monat v. State
    Farm Ins. Co., 
    677 N.W.2d 843
    , 852 (Mich. 2004).
    5
    Although Meretta was not a party to the state proceeding, he is in privity with Bank One as an employee. All
    claims against Meretta concern his role as trust officer for Bank One and involve the same transactions as the claims
    against the corporate entities. Therefore, Meretta’s presence in the current suit does not prevent the application of issue
    preclusion. See 
    Gates, 452 N.W.2d at 630
    (holding that privity fulfills the “same party” requirement).
    No. 04-2229            Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                 Page 9
    of the now-challenged events[,]” she was not entitled to plead fraudulent concealment. 
    Id. at *7.
    Deciding this limitations issue was necessary to the suit because it concerned the timeliness of her
    claim and thus whether Evans could state a cause of action. Accordingly, all four criteria for issue
    preclusion have been met in this case, and the district court therefore properly dismissed Evans’
    claim for breach of trust.
    IV.
    Evans’ claims for shareholder oppression against the Bank One defendants and John Pearson
    concerning the 1993 and 1996 transactions are barred by Michigan’s six-year statute of limitations,
    and she is not entitled to an extended limitations period by alleging fraudulent concealment. None
    of the parties challenge the district court’s ruling that M.C.L. § 600.5813, providing a six-year
    limitations period, applies to Evans’ claims. Evans argues, however, that her claims are not barred
    because she alleged fraudulent concealment pursuant to M.C.L. § 600.5855, which gives her two
    years after discovery of the concealment to bring her claim. Evans cannot rely on fraudulent
    concealment because she failed to plead fraudulent concealment with particularity, as required by
    Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). The decision of the Michigan Court of Appeals in the probate litigation also
    collaterally estops Evans from arguing that she did not have the information to uncover the
    oppression relating to the 1993 and 1996 transactions.
    Evans did not sufficiently plead all of the required elements of fraudulent concealment. The
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which control pleading in diversity cases, see 5A Charles Alan
    Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1297 (3d ed. 2005), require that the
    acts constituting fraudulent concealment of a claim be pled in the complaint. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
    9(b). The acts constituting concealment are “(1) wrongful concealment of their actions by the
    defendants; (2) failure of the plaintiff to discover the operative facts that are the basis of his cause
    of action within the limitations period; and (3) plaintiff’s due diligence until discovery of the facts.”
    Dayco Corp. v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 
    523 F.2d 389
    , 394 (6th Cir. 1975). Whatever the
    status of the first two requirements, Evans failed to plead that she exercised any due diligence in
    discovering the facts that she alleged regarding the 1993 and 1996 transactions. Because Evans
    failed to plead fraudulent concealment with particularity, the district court properly dismissed her
    shareholder-oppression claims relating to the 1993 and 1996 transactions.
    Moreover, even if Evans adequately pled fraudulent concealment, she was collaterally
    estopped from relying on it. The state appellate court’s decision squarely determined that Evans
    cannot rely on fraudulent concealment because she possessed “sufficient evidence to place her on
    notice of the now-challenged events.” See Evans, 
    2005 WL 433573
    , at *7. Both suits involved
    Evans, Bank One, and John Pearson, and the probate suit progressed to a final, valid judgment that
    was affirmed on appeal. The limitations issue was actually litigated and necessarily determined.
    Thus, all four collateral estoppel criteria are once again satisfied.
    Evans’ shareholder-oppression claims concern the same events as her claims brought in the
    probate court. Evans’ argument that the appellate court was considering only whether she had notice
    of actions that were “illegal,” but not actions that were “fraudulent, or willfully unfair,” fails because
    the nature of the claims and the underlying facts are identical. The relevant distinction between her
    shareholder and trust claims is not the description of malfeasance but rather the identity of the
    plaintiff: she sues as a shareholder in federal court, while she sued as a beneficiary in state court.
    Ultimately, Evans alleged the same facts to support both claims and argues that, contrary to the
    appellate court’s conclusion, these facts were concealed. Her claims for shareholder oppression,
    therefore, are barred by the six-year statute of limitations, and the exception for fraudulent
    concealment is inapplicable.
    No. 04-2229           Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                              Page 10
    V.
    Evans’ shareholder-oppression action against the Bank One defendants and John Pearson
    concerning the 1998 transaction cannot succeed because she is collaterally estopped with respect
    to the facts in her complaint relating to the 1998 transaction. The only allegations Evans makes
    regarding the 1998 transaction, which she incorporates into the section of her complaint concerning
    the shareholder action, were that (1) the defendants failed to disclose that the trustee failed to
    perform due diligence, (2) a conflicting lending relationship existed, and (3) the acquisition was not
    reasonable. Because the Michigan Court of Appeals determined that Evans’ three allegations were
    meritless, Evans is collaterally estopped from asserting the only facts that she alleged to support her
    shareholder claim of illegality, fraud, or oppressive acts regarding the 1998 transaction.
    The Michigan Court of Appeals’ decision that (1) the Bank disclosed information, (2) the
    lending relationship was proper, and (3) the transactions were reasonable collaterally estops Evans
    from alleging the facts upon which she grounds her shareholder-oppression claim. The state
    appellate court determined that Evans admitted in her depositions during the probate proceedings
    that she did not read the information sent to her, that she attended biannual shareholder meetings in
    which few questions were asked, and that Bank One had always attempted to answer her questions
    and complied with her requests for information. From these findings, the appellate court determined
    that she could not argue that full disclosure in the trust accounts had not been made. See Evans,
    
    2005 WL 433573
    , at *4. The state court then held that the lending relationship in this case was
    proper. See 
    id. at *7-*8.
    Finally, that court determined that the loans were proper on two statutorily
    approved grounds (they were both fair and approved by the directors after the disclosure of material
    facts), see 
    id. at *8,
    and that the investment was prudent because it was an attempt to protect or
    increase Ervin’s market share, see 
    id. at *10.
    The resolution of these issues, as discussed earlier in
    this opinion, is binding on Evans: the same factual issues (disclosure, conflict of interest, and
    reasonableness) are relevant here, the same parties are involved, and the issues, as central to Evans’
    claims in probate court, were necessarily resolved after having been actually litigated. Because
    Evans is collaterally estopped from arguing the only facts that she alleged regarding the 1998
    transaction, she has no factual basis on which to state her claim, and the district court properly
    dismissed Evans’ shareholder-oppression claim relating to the 1998 transaction.
    VI.
    Evans’ fraud claims against all defendants regarding the 1993 and 1996 transactions are
    barred by the six-year statute of limitations, and her fraud claim based on the 1998 transaction is
    barred because she insufficiently pled the element of reliance. All parties agree that a six-year
    limitations period applies to fraud claims pursuant to M.C.L. § 600.5813. Evans’ claims based on
    the 1993 and 1996 transactions are barred by this statute, although Evans argues that, as with her
    shareholder-oppression claims, the defendants’ fraudulent concealment allows her claims to proceed
    under M.C.L. § 600.5855 for two years after learning facts that put her on notice. But, as with her
    claims for shareholder oppression, Evans cannot invoke the “fraudulent concealment” exception as
    to her claims concerning the 1993 and 1996 transactions because she insufficiently pled that she
    exercised due diligence, as required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b).
    As for Evans’ claim regarding the 1998 transaction, Evans failed to plead reliance
    sufficiently and therefore is unable to state a claim for fraud. Evans did not allege that she invested
    money in the 1998 transaction, as she had done in the prior transactions. Evans unavailingly argues
    instead that she alleged in paragraph 49 of her complaint that she “relied implicitly on the
    representations” and that she was injured because she did not file suit to prevent the Barnsteel
    transaction. As mentioned earlier in this opinion, Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b) applies to her complaint, and
    that rule requires that she plead the circumstances of her fraud and misrepresentations with
    particularity. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(b). Conclusory statements of reliance are not sufficient to
    No. 04-2229           Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                Page 11
    explain with particularity how she detrimentally relied on the alleged fraud, see, e.g., Smith v. Mitlof,
    
    198 F. Supp. 2d 492
    , 504-05 (S.D.N.Y. 2002) (holding that the complaint’s allegation that the
    plaintiffs reasonably relied on the fraudulent representations was insufficient to meet the heightened
    pleading requirements of Rule 9(b)), and Evans in no way pled in her complaint the forbearance that
    she now invokes. Because Evans did not plead detrimental reliance in her complaint, the district
    court properly dismissed her fraud claim relating to the 1998 Barnsteel transaction.
    VII.
    We review for abuse of discretion the district court’s denial of Evans’ requests for leave to
    amend, even though the district court stated mistakenly that it denied Evans’ motion on the grounds
    of futility. When the district court refuses the plaintiff’s request for leave to amend her complaint
    on grounds of futility, this court reviews de novo because the decision is based on a legal
    conclusion. See Yuhasz v. Brush Wellman, Inc., 
    341 F.3d 559
    , 569 (6th Cir. 2003). Otherwise, this
    court reviews denials of motions to amend under an abuse-of-discretion standard. See Fisher v.
    Roberts, 
    125 F.3d 974
    , 977 (6th Cir. 1997). In this case, although the district court denied “as futile”
    the first request for leave, the abuse-of-discretion standard is appropriate because the court did not
    deem proffered allegations useless. The district court, instead, denied the motion for failure to state
    the grounds for leave with particularity.
    The district court did not abuse its discretion by denying Evans’ first request for leave to
    amend her complaint because she failed to state the grounds for relief with particularity, and the
    district court did not abuse its discretion by denying her second request for leave because Evans’
    motion was not clearly presented as a distinct motion. Requesting leave to amend under Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 15(a) is governed by Fed. R. Civ. P. 7(b), which requires that a motion “shall state with
    particularity the grounds therefor . . . .” See Moore v. Indiana, 
    999 F.2d 1125
    , 1131 (7th Cir. 1993).
    In her responses to the defendants’ motions to dismiss and for summary judgment, Evans requested
    leave to amend in a single sentence without providing grounds or a proposed amended complaint
    to support her request. She, therefore, did not state the grounds with particularity. See Confederate
    Mem. Ass’n, Inc. v. Hines, 
    995 F.2d 295
    , 299 (D.C. Cir. 1993) (“We agree with several of our sister
    circuits that a bare request in an opposition to a motion to dismiss—without any indication of the
    particular grounds on which amendment is sought . . .—does not constitute a motion within the
    contemplation of Rule 15(a).”); see also PR Diamonds, Inc. v. Chandler, 
    364 F.3d 671
    , 699 (6th Cir.
    2004); Begala v. PNC Bank, 
    214 F.3d 776
    , 783-84 (6th Cir. 2000); accord United States ex. rel.
    Willard v. Humana Health Plan of Tex., 
    336 F.3d 375
    , 387 (5th Cir. 2003); Credit Chequers Info.
    Servs., Inc. v. CBA, Inc., No. 99-7600, 
    2000 WL 232046
    , at *1 (2d Cir. Jan. 26, 2000). Because
    Evans failed to state her grounds for amending with particularity in her first motion for leave, the
    district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Evans’ request for leave to amend.
    The district court also did not abuse its discretion in denying Evans’ later requests for leave.
    After the district court had denied a clearly presented motion for leave to amend, Evans buried her
    subsequent requests for leave in her responses to the defendants’ motions. Nothing in the Federal
    Rules of Civil Procedure requires the district court to entertain repeated motions that have already
    been denied or review Evans’ requests until one is sufficient to qualify as a proper motion.
    VIII.
    For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the orders of the district court dismissing all of
    Evans’ claims and denying her leave to amend her complaint.
    No. 04-2229                 Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                          Page 12
    ____________________
    CONCURRENCE
    ____________________
    CLAY, Circuit Judge, concurring. I concur in the majority’s opinion, but I write separately
    to express my concern over the friction between this Court’s inquiry under the probate exception
    and Supreme Court precedent. In my view, the “exclusive jurisdiction” test, to determine whether
    this Court’s jurisdiction is barred under the probate exception, conflicts with both Waterman v.
    Canal-Louisiana Bank & Trust Co., 
    215 U.S. 33
    (1909), and Markham v. Allen, 
    326 U.S. 490
    (1946).
    As the majority recognizes, this Court employs an “exclusive jurisdiction” test to analyze
    whether the probate exception is applicable. In Lepard v. NBD Bank, this Court stated:
    The standard for determining whether federal jurisdiction may be exercised is
    whether under state law the dispute would be cognizable only by the probate court.
    This court applied the “probate exception” in Bedo v. McGuire, 
    767 F.2d 305
    (6th
    Cir.1985), holding that the district court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over a
    claim for breach of fiduciary duty brought by the beneficiaries of the estate against
    the executrix because, under Ohio law, “exclusive jurisdiction of probate matters,
    including breach of fiduciary duty, is vested in the Probate Court.” 
    Id. at 306.
    384 F.3d 232
    , 237 (6th Cir. 2004) (some internal quotations and citation omitted).       The majority
    narrows the language of Lepard to apply only when a probate matter is involved;1 in other words,
    if a state probate court has exclusive jurisdiction over a non-probate matter, then the probate
    exception would not apply. I agree that it would be absurd to preclude federal jurisdiction, under
    the probate exception, over, say, all tort matters, simply because the state legislature placed all tort
    matters within the exclusive jurisdiction of the state probate courts. I believe, however, that it is also
    inconsonant to preclude federal jurisdiction over probate matters simply because of the state
    legislature’s bestowment of exclusive jurisdiction to the state probate courts. Two Supreme Court
    cases illustrate this point.
    In Waterman v. Canal-Louisiana Bank & Trust Co., the plaintiff was the niece of the
    
    testatrix. 215 U.S. at 39
    . The heart of the plaintiff’s claim was that the testatrix had bequeathed
    $3,000 and a pro rata share of the residue of her estate to the Home for the Insane, a charity that the
    plaintiff claimed did not exist when the testatrix made her will. 
    Id. at 40.
    The plaintiff claimed that
    she was the sole heir at law to the testatrix, so that she should receive the portion of the estate set
    aside for the Home for the Insane. 
    Id. at 41.
            The Supreme Court held that the federal courts had jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s case.2
    As to suits against estates, the Court found that “the [federal] jurisdiction may be exercised, and is
    not subject to limitations or restraint by state legislation establishing courts of probate, and giving
    them jurisdiction over similar matters.” 
    Id. at 43.
    The Court further explained that, “[t]he rule stated
    in many cases in this court affirms the jurisdiction of the Federal courts to give relief of the nature
    stated, notwithstanding the statutes of the state undertake [sic] to give to state probate courts
    exclusive jurisdiction over all matters concerning the settlement of accounts of executros [sic] and
    1
    Yet, as the majority points out, it is unclear in Lepard whether the trusts in that case were testamentary.
    2
    The Court, however, found that to the extent the plaintiff asked the federal courts to exercise general
    jurisdiction over the estate, the federal courts did not have jurisdiction. 
    Id. at 45.
    No. 04-2229            Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                Page 13
    administrators in the distribution of estates.” 
    Id. at 43-44.
    The Court qualified the exercise of
    federal jurisdiction by stating that a federal court could not “seize and control the property which
    is in the possession of the state court,” although a federal court could adjudicate a party’s rights to
    that property. 
    Id. at 44.
    The Court also instructed that a federal court could not exercise general
    jurisdiction over an estate, as it “could not exercise original jurisdiction to draw to itself the entire
    settlement of the estate of the decedent and the account of administration, or the power to determine
    all claims against the estate. 
    Id. at 45.
            Applied to the facts in that case, the Supreme Court held:
    The complainant, it is to be noted, does not seek to set aside the probate of the will,
    which the bill alleges was duly established and admitted to probate in the proper
    court of the state.
    ...
    The United States circuit court, by granting this relief, need not interfere with the
    ordinary settlement of the estate, the payment of the debts and special legacies, and
    the determination of the accounts of funds in the hands of the executor, but it may,
    and we think has the right to, determine, as between the parties before the court, the
    interest of the complainant in the alleged lapse legacy and residuary estate.
    
    Id. at 46.
            The preceding case negates this Court’s exclusive jurisdiction test in two respects. First, the
    statement of law given by the Supreme Court directs against such an inquiry. The Supreme Court
    twice noted that a state legislature could not define the boundaries of federal jurisdiction, specifically
    in the context of probate matters; the Supreme Court went further and found that notwithstanding
    the state legislature’s demarcation of probate matters as within the exclusive jurisdiction of state
    probate courts, the qualified rule was that a federal court could still exercise jurisdiction over such
    matters. This would seem to be in direct opposition to the exclusive jurisdiction test. Second, while
    under the facts of Waterman the Supreme Court found that federal courts did have jurisdiction over
    the plaintiff’s claim, under the exclusive jurisdiction test, the result would be the opposite. The
    majority finds that “this court has examined the exclusive jurisdiction of probate courts only when
    a claim concerned a decedent’s estate.” Waterman certainly involved a decedent’s estate, so the
    exclusive jurisdiction test would apply under the majority’s logic. Thus, if Louisiana, the relevant
    state in Waterman, placed exclusive jurisdiction over suits against an estate in the state probate
    courts, then federal jurisdiction would be inappropriate under the exclusive jurisdiction test;
    however, this was not the conclusion reached by the Supreme Court. Waterman is Supreme Court
    precedent directly on point as to why the exclusive jurisdiction test is inappropriate, even when
    confined solely to probate matters.
    Markham v. Allen also demonstrates that the exclusive jurisdiction of a state probate court
    cannot define the reach of federal jurisdiction. In that case, the testatrix was a California resident
    whose will named legatees who were German 
    nationals. 326 U.S. at 492
    . The controversy took
    place during World War II. 
    Id. The defendants
    were heirs-at-law of the testatrix who claimed in
    California state court that under California law, the German legatees were ineligible as beneficiaries,
    so that the estate should be divided amongst those American heirs-at-law. 
    Id. Shortly after
    the state
    law suit commenced, the plaintiff Alien Property Custodian, acting under federal statute, filed suit
    in federal district court, claiming that the plaintiff had acquired the interest of the German legatees,
    and that the American heirs-at-law had no interest in the estate. 
    Id. at 493.
           The Supreme Court held that the federal courts properly had jurisdiction over the plaintiff’s
    suit. The Court found that while a federal court did not have jurisdiction to probate a will or
    No. 04-2229            Evans v. Pearson Enterprises, Inc., et al.                                 Page 14
    administer an estate, “federal courts of equity have jurisdiction to entertain suits in favor of
    creditors, legatees and heirs and other claimants against a decedent’s estate to establish their claims
    so long as” (1) the federal court did not interfere with the state probate proceeding; (2) the federal
    court did not assume general jurisdiction over the probate proceeding; and (3) the federal court did
    not assume control over property within the custody of the state court. 
    Id. at 494
    (internal quotations
    and citation omitted).
    As applied to the facts of that case, the Court found that
    [a]lthough in this case [the plaintiff] sought a judgment in district court ordering
    defendant executor to pay over the entire net estate to the [plaintiff] . . ., the
    judgment declared only that [the plaintiff] is entitled to receive the net estate of the
    [testatrix] . . . . The effect of the judgment was to leave undisturbed the orderly
    administration of [the testatrix’s] estate in the state probate court and to decree [the
    plaintiff’s] right in the property to be distributed after its administration. This, as our
    authorities demonstrate, is not an exercise of probate jurisdiction or an interference
    with property in the possession or custody of the state court.
    
    Id. at 495.
            As to the statement of law, there is no mention of the exclusive jurisdiction of a state probate
    court as being the key inquiry under the probate exception. Instead, a federal court must look to
    whether federal jurisdiction would interfere with a state proceeding, whether the parties ask the
    federal court to assert general jurisdiction, and whether the federal court would interfere with
    property in the possession of the state court. One can easily imagine where the requirements of
    Markham have been met, but where the exclusive jurisdiction test would preclude federal
    jurisdiction. Under the facts of Markham, for example, if California law vested state probate courts
    with exclusive jurisdiction over suits against the executor of an estate, then the exclusive jurisdiction
    test would lead to the conclusion that federal jurisdiction was inappropriate, despite the Supreme
    Court’s holding to the contrary.
    In sum, I disagree with the majority’s position that the exclusive jurisdiction test, cabined
    to apply only in probate matters, is consistent with Waterman and Markham. That said, I believe
    that the principles outlined by the Supreme Court in Waterman and Markham lead to the conclusion
    that this Court has jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s non-probate matter, i.e., her claim involving her
    revocable trust. This Court having proper jurisdiction of that claim, I concur in the analysis that the
    claim is barred by collateral estoppel.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 04-2229

Citation Numbers: 434 F.3d 839

Filed Date: 1/19/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

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