In the Matter of the Estate of Carroll Irving Sampson, Cheryl Ann Murken and Mary Ann Smith, Coexecutors of the Christine Rosilia Sampson Estate , 838 N.W.2d 663 ( 2013 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 12–1340
    Filed October 25, 2013
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF CARROLL IRVING SAMPSON,
    Deceased.
    CHERYL ANN MURKEN and MARY ANN SMITH, Coexecutors of the
    Christine Rosilia Sampson Estate,
    Appellants.
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Story County, James C.
    Ellefson, Judge.
    The coexecutors of a wife’s estate seek further review of a decision
    of the court of appeals, affirming an order of the district court reopening
    her husband’s estate. DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED;
    DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.
    John D. Jordan and Meredith C. Mahoney Nerem of Jordan &
    Mahoney Law Firm, P.C., Boone, for appellants.
    John P. Dollar and Scott S. Riemenschneider of Wilson, Deege,
    Dollar, Despotovich & Riemenschneider, West Des Moines, for appellees.
    2
    MANSFIELD, Justice.
    This case requires us to examine the interplay between two
    sections of the Iowa Probate Code that address deadlines to reopen
    estates. In 1993, a husband died, and his will was probated. His wife
    received almost all of his property pursuant to a residuary clause in the
    will. Nearly eighteen years later, in 2011, the wife died. At that time, a
    number of relatives who had not been formally notified of the probate
    proceedings in 1993 reviewed the husband’s will.           They brought an
    action to reopen the estate, asserting that a different residuary clause in
    the husband’s will entitled them to the husband’s property and that they
    should have received it in the earlier proceedings.
    The relatives’ petition was opposed by the coexecutors of the wife’s
    estate. Among other things, they asserted that the petition was barred
    by section 633.488 of the Iowa Probate Code, which provides a five-year
    time limit from the final report to reopen settlement of an estate when a
    party did not receive formal notice of the final report and accounting.
    The district court and the court of appeals disagreed with this argument.
    They found that section 633.489 of the Code, which allows estates to be
    reopened without time limit under certain circumstances, controlled
    here. On further review, we hold that section 633.488 is the applicable
    statute and therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
    I. Facts and Procedural History.
    Carroll Sampson, a resident of Story City, was married to Christine
    Sampson. They did not have any children. In 1991, Carroll executed a
    will which nominated Christine as executor.         The will contained two
    residuary clauses. In article two of his will, Carroll stated:
    I give any automobiles, household furniture or
    furnishings, silverware, china, crystal, books, wearing
    apparel and other tangible personal effects owned by me at
    3
    my death to Spouse, if she survives me for a period of thirty
    days. I give the residue of my estate to Spouse, if she
    survives me for thirty days.
    In article four, Carroll stated:
    The rest residue and remainder of my estate I divide
    into 15 equal parcels to be divided as follows amongst my
    and my spouses surviving brothers and sisters and their
    children if they are not living.
    The attorney who drafted the will, Robert Huffer, testified that the
    testator’s intent was for the estate to go to Christine if she survived
    Carroll; otherwise, it would go to the siblings or, if they had died, their
    children.
    The main asset of Carroll’s estate was his undivided one-half
    interest in two parcels comprising about 200 acres of farmland in Hardin
    County.     Carroll and Christine owned this real property as tenants in
    common.
    Carroll passed away on July 29, 1993, survived by Christine. His
    will was admitted to probate on August 10, 1993, and Christine became
    the executor. On September 20, 1993, a report and inventory were filed
    which listed Christine as the sole beneficiary. On December 22, 1993,
    Huffer filed the final report on Christine’s behalf, which again listed
    Christine as the sole beneficiary and asked that the estate be settled and
    closed.     The estate was closed on January 3, 1994, and the assets,
    including the farmland, passed to Christine.
    The siblings, nephews, and nieces of Carroll and Christine
    identified in article four did not receive formal notice of the probate
    proceedings for Carroll’s will. Huffer explained that since they were not
    beneficiaries, he did not believe they needed to receive formal notice.
    However, these relatives were aware that Carroll had died and that
    probate proceedings had been opened.         Several of the relatives later
    4
    testified it was their understanding that Christine had received a life
    estate in the real property, and it would be theirs once Christine died.
    As a practical matter, things would have worked out that way if
    Christine had not changed her will. Originally, Christine’s will mirrored
    Carroll’s, which meant that upon her death her property would have
    been divided among the siblings and their children because Carroll did
    not survive her. However, in 2006, Christine decided to change her will
    because of some family disputes.              Thus, she essentially removed the
    siblings of Carroll and herself and their children as beneficiaries. She
    devised the residue of her estate, including the Hardin County real
    property, to charity.
    Christine died on March 1, 2011.              Her will was subsequently
    admitted to probate. A number of Christine’s and Carroll’s siblings and
    their children were surprised to learn at that time that they would not be
    receiving an interest in the real property. They claimed not to have seen
    Carroll’s will until after Christine’s death.1
    Upon reviewing Carroll’s will, these relatives brought an action on
    July 28, 2011, seeking to reopen Carroll’s estate under Iowa Code
    section 633.489 (2011). They alleged that, under article four of Carroll’s
    will, they should have received his undivided interest in the Hardin
    County real property.
    The coexecutors of Christine’s estate answered, denying that the
    prior 1994 distribution of the residual assets to Christine had been
    improper.        The coexecutors of Christine’s estate also alleged that the
    petition to reopen was untimely because of the time that had elapsed
    1Huffer  disputes this in part. He maintains that after Carroll died in 1993, he
    gave a copy of Carroll’s will to one of Carroll’s nephews who is now seeking to reopen
    Carroll’s probate proceeding.
    5
    since Carroll’s estate was closed. Subsequently, the coexecutors moved
    for summary judgment.       In their motion, the coexecutors maintained
    that the relatives’ petition to reopen was foreclosed by the five-year
    statute of limitations in section 633.488.
    The district court held a hearing, and thereafter on July 5, 2012,
    denied the coexecutors’ motion for summary judgment, reasoning that
    section 633.489 rather than section 633.488 governed the relatives’
    claim. Thus, the court found, “There is no time bar.” The estate sought
    an interlocutory appeal.     We ruled that an appeal as of right was
    available and transferred the case to the court of appeals.
    In an opinion filed April 24, 2013, the court of appeals agreed with
    the district court that section 633.489 rather than section 633.488
    applied. Hence, like the district court, the court of appeals found that
    the petition to reopen was not time-barred.        The coexecutors sought
    further review, which we granted.
    II. Standard of Review.
    As we said recently in In re Estate of Roethler:
    A petition to reopen an estate requires the court to
    engage in a two-step decision process. First, the district
    court must make a preliminary determination whether the
    plaintiff has asserted a permissible reason for reopening the
    estate.    This determination is governed by Iowa Code
    sections 633.487, 633.488, and 633.489. We review the
    district court’s preliminary decision as to whether to reopen
    the estate under section 633.489 for abuse of discretion.
    The district court abuses its discretion when it exercises its
    discretion “on grounds clearly untenable, or to an extent,
    clearly unreasonable.”
    
    801 N.W.2d 833
    , 837 (Iowa 2011) (citations omitted).
    III. Merits.
    This case involves part 9 of the Iowa Probate Code, which our
    general assembly enacted in 1963. See 1963 Iowa Acts ch. 326 §§ 487–
    6
    89. That part is divided into three sections and is entitled “Reopening.”
    Id. The first section of part 9 reads as follows:
    Limitation on rights.
    No person, having been served with notice of the
    hearing upon the final report and accounting of a personal
    representative or having waived such notice, shall, after the
    entry of the final order approving the same and discharging
    the said personal representative, have any right to contest,
    in any proceeding, other than by appeal, the correctness or
    the legality of the inventory, the accounting, distribution, or
    other acts of the personal representative, or the list of heirs
    set forth in the final report of the personal representative,
    provided, however, that nothing contained in this section
    shall prohibit any action against the personal representative
    and the personal representative’s surety under the
    provisions of section 633.186 on account of any fraud
    committed by the personal representative.
    Iowa Code § 633.487.
    Next, section 633.488 provides:
    Reopening settlement.
    Whenever a final report has been approved and a final
    accounting has been settled in the absence of any person
    adversely affected and without notice to the person, the
    hearing on such report and accounting may be reopened at
    any time within five years from the entry of the order
    approving the same, upon the application of such person,
    and, upon a hearing, after such notice as the court may
    prescribe to be served upon the personal representative and
    the distributees, the court may require a new accounting, or
    a redistribution from the distributees. In no event, however,
    shall any distributee be liable to account for more than the
    property distributed to that distributee. If any property of
    the estate shall have passed into the hands of good faith
    purchasers for value, the rights of such purchasers shall
    not, in any way, be affected.
    Id. § 633.488.
    Lastly, section 633.489 provides:
    Reopening administration.
    Upon the petition of any interested person, the court
    may, with such notice as it may prescribe, order an estate
    reopened if other property be discovered, if any necessary act
    remains unperformed, or for any other proper cause
    appearing to the court. It may reappoint the personal
    7
    representative, or appoint another personal representative,
    to administer any additional property or to perform other
    such acts as may be deemed necessary. The provisions of
    law as to original administration shall apply, insofar as
    applicable, to accomplish the purpose for which the estate is
    reopened, but a claim which is already barred can, in no
    event, be asserted in the reopened administration.
    Id. § 633.489.
    As the foregoing quotations indicate, section 633.487 essentially
    cuts off the rights of persons who received notice of the final report to
    contest distribution or prior acts of administration, except in the case of
    fraud. See id. § 633.487. Section 633.488 imposes a five-year deadline
    on persons who did not receive notice to seek a “new accounting” or a
    “redistribution” of property that passed through an estate.          See id.
    § 633.488. Section 633.489 allows a party to request reopening of the
    estate at any time, regardless of prior notice or the lack thereof, “if other
    property be discovered, if any necessary act remains unperformed, or for
    any other proper cause.” Id. § 633.489.
    The section titles were part of the 1963 legislation and remain in
    the Code today. See 1963 Iowa Acts ch. 326 §§ 487–89 (codified at Iowa
    Code §§ 633.487–.489). Here, the titles inform us. See State v. Tague,
    
    676 N.W.2d 197
    , 201 (Iowa 2004) (relying on a section heading as an aid
    to interpretation and noting that “[a]lthough the title of a statute cannot
    limit the plain meaning of the text, it can be considered in determining
    legislative intent” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)). They
    indicate that section 633.487 is intended as a “limitation on rights” of
    persons who received notice of the hearing on the final report.
    Meanwhile, section 633.488 is about reopening settlement—e.g., seeking
    to redistribute property from one party to another—whereas section
    633.489 is about reopening administration—e.g., seeking to distribute
    newly discovered property.
    8
    The comment by the bar committee that drafted the Iowa Probate
    Code states that section 633.488 is “[d]esigned to protect persons
    adversely affected by a final report or final accounting who did not
    receive notice, but at the same time protecting rights of good faith
    purchasers for value.” See 1963 Iowa Probate Code § 488 bar committee
    cmt., at 140 (West 1963).     Section 633.489, by contrast, is “[a]dapted
    from section 194 of the Model Probate Code in lieu of 638.9 (1962 Code)
    to permit reopening for administration of newly discovered property or
    performance of required but omitted acts of personal representatives.”
    See id. § 489 bar committee cmt., at 141; see also In re Estate of Foster,
    
    483 N.W.2d 327
    , 329 (Iowa 1992) (citing the bar committee comments in
    a case interpreting the Iowa Probate Code); Patten v. Patrick, 
    276 N.W.2d 390
    , 397 (Iowa 1979) (same); In re Estate of DeVries, 
    203 N.W.2d 308
    ,
    310 (Iowa 1972) (stating that any doubt about a specific question of
    interpretation of the Iowa Probate Code was “settled by this Bar
    Committee comment appended to the statute”).
    The underlying policy of having a time limit for claims regarding
    settlement but not administration makes sense.         At some point, it is
    desirable for the distribution of an estate to be recognized as final, even if
    there was some flaw in the proceeding, such as a failure to give formal
    notice to potential beneficiaries.    Assets need to be marketable, and
    recipients of estate property need to be able to move on with their affairs.
    On the other hand, if all efforts to reopen an estate were subject to
    a five-year time bar, then this could handcuff the ability of heirs to deal
    with unforeseen circumstances or result in assets being unmarketable.
    For example, if additional property of the testator were discovered six
    years after the closing of an estate, absent section 633.489 there would
    be no way of dealing with that property.         Or if an error in a legal
    9
    description surfaced six years after the closing, section 633.489 provides
    a means of addressing it. See Shirley A. Webster, Decedents’ Estates:
    Succession and Administration, 
    49 Iowa L
    . Rev. 638, 676–77 (1964)
    (giving this example).
    Our prior cases interpreting the two statutory provisions have
    recognized this basic distinction between reopening settlement and
    reopening administration. In Ritz v. Selma United Methodist Church, we
    held section 633.489 allowed an estate to be reopened when buried
    money that had never been administered as part of the estate was
    discovered more than five years after the estate’s closing.      See 
    467 N.W.2d 266
    , 270 (Iowa 1991). We explained:
    The five-year limitation on reopening a final settlement
    contained in section 633.488 is, by its express terms, aimed
    at an attempt to reopen an estate by an adversely affected
    person who was not given notice and opportunity to be heard
    on the final report.
    Section 633.488 contemplates a reopening of matters
    which have been previously considered in the final
    accounting, distribution, and settlement order.     Section
    633.489, on the other hand, is aimed at reopening a closed
    estate for the purpose of administering property omitted
    from the inventory or performing other necessary acts which
    were not performed during the original administration.
    Section 633.489 does not place any time limitation on
    reopening for such purposes.
    Id. (footnote omitted).
    Then, in In re Estate of Lynch, we held that an estate could be
    reopened under section 633.489 to correct an overpayment of statutory
    executor and attorney fees that had only been established through
    subsequent events. 
    491 N.W.2d 157
    , 159–61 (Iowa 1992). In Lynch, the
    state tax authorities had determined—after the closing of an estate—that
    certain assets were not part of the estate and that there had been an
    overpayment of inheritance tax. Id. at 158–59. This meant that executor
    10
    and attorney fees had been overpaid based on the erroneously overstated
    probate inventory. Id. at 160–61. We held that such a “mistake in the
    court’s allowance of fees may constitute proper cause for reopening an
    estate.”   Id. at 161.   As we noted later in Roethler, Lynch should be
    viewed as a case involving estate administration as well. See Roethler,
    801 N.W.2d at 840. The issue was a “mistake in the court’s allowance of
    fees,” a matter of administration, not a challenge to the underlying
    distribution of property under the will. See Lynch, 491 N.W.2d at 161.
    In In re Estate of Warrington, we held that a widow who had
    received a life estate in property under a will could utilize section
    633.489 to seek authority to invade the principal of that property
    notwithstanding the passage of more than five years since the closing of
    the underlying estate. 
    686 N.W.2d 198
    , 200, 204–05 (Iowa 2004). Again,
    this did not affect the previously approved plan of distribution. See id. at
    205 (noting that “Leona’s right of invasion will not deprive the
    remainderpersons of any testamentary devise to which they were
    unconditionally entitled under the provisions of Leonard’s will”).
    Finally, and most recently, in Roethler, we held that parties who
    had been given an option to buy real estate in a will but had never been
    formally notified of the probate proceedings—and never knew they had
    that option—could reopen an estate nine years after the final report to
    exercise that option. 801 N.W.2d at 835–37, 839–41. We reasoned that
    under our precedents, section 633.489 could be invoked when an action
    “required more than simply redistributing property amongst distributees,
    as contemplated in section 633.488.” Id. at 840. As we put it:
    Section 633.489 applies where future events require
    administration of matters not considered in the final report,
    and a time-bar is inconsistent with this purpose.
    11
    . . . In cases applying section 633.489, the estates
    were reopened to reinventory property, to perform acts not
    considered in the original administration, or to perform acts
    more     substantial   than   just   distribution    amongst
    distributees.
    Id.
    With the language of sections 633.488 and 633.489 and these
    precedents in mind, we now turn to the present case. This case does not
    involve some unperformed act of administration. The petitioners do not
    ask to be given the opportunity to exercise an option; they do not seek
    permission to invade principal based on the widow’s postclosing financial
    circumstances; they do not request an adjustment of executor or
    attorney fees based on a postclosing decision of the state authorities; and
    they have not found some newly discovered property that needs to be
    handled. This case, purely and simply, involves “redistributing property
    amongst distributees.” Id. The petitioners contend that Carroll’s interest
    in the real estate should have been distributed to them rather than
    Christine. The “matter”—i.e., to whom did the will devise Carroll’s real
    property interest?—“[was] previously considered in the final accounting,
    distribution, and settlement order.” Ritz, 467 N.W.2d at 270. Thus, we
    conclude that this is an effort to reopen settlement, covered by section
    633.488, rather than administration, covered by section 633.489.
    Indeed, if this case were not covered by section 633.488, it is
    difficult to see what case would be.           True, the relatives of Carroll and
    Christine did not receive formal notice in 1993. And, the probate court
    never heard them argue that article four of the will required the
    distribution of the real property interest to them rather than Christine.2
    2Notably,  the relatives’ present argument that article four trumps article two
    means they should have received Carroll’s half-interest in the real property outright in
    1994. It is not consistent with their alleged understanding that they would receive the
    12
    But the very point of section 633.488 is to provide an outside five-year
    limit on claims challenging the settlement of property even when a party
    does not receive notice.         If the relatives had received formal notice,
    section 633.487 would have barred their claims immediately.
    We realize that section 633.489 allows an estate to be reopened “if
    other property be discovered, if any necessary act remains unperformed,
    or for any other proper cause appearing to the court.”                      Iowa Code
    § 633.489 (emphasis added).            We have previously explained that this
    language “should be read as permitting the district court to exercise
    discretion in considering a petition that alleges a cause for reopening
    other than the two causes specifically enumerated in section 633.489
    (discovery of property, performance of necessary act).”                In re Estate of
    Witzke, 
    359 N.W.2d 183
    , 185 (Iowa 1984).                 We have also said that a
    district court’s decision to find or not to find proper cause should be
    reviewed for abuse of discretion. Id.; see also Roethler, 801 N.W.2d at
    837, Warrington; 686 N.W.2d at 205; Lynch, 491 N.W.2d at 161.
    But “[u]nder the doctrine of ejusdem generis, general words which
    follow specific words are tied to the meaning and purpose of the specific
    words.” Iowa Comprehensive Petroleum Underground Storage Tank Fund
    Bd. v. Shell Oil Co., 
    606 N.W.2d 376
    , 380 (Iowa 2000); see also Sallee v.
    Stewart, 
    827 N.W.2d 128
    , 153 (Iowa 2013).                   So “other proper cause”
    should be interpreted with reference to the other items in the list—i.e.,
    other    property     being     discovered      or    any    necessary      act    being
    unperformed—which concern unperformed acts of administration. See
    ______________________________________
    property only after Christine’s life estate terminated. As we note above, the executors’
    interpretation of the will giving priority to article two is actually more consistent with
    the relatives’ alleged understanding of how things worked. The relatives’ problem is
    that Christine changed her plan of distribution by executing a new will in 2006.
    13
    Iowa Code § 633.489. And if “other proper cause” were interpreted too
    expansively, it would subsume section 633.488’s five-year time limit on
    reopening settlement.
    Notably, the 1963 bar committee comment attributes only two
    purposes to section 633.489—“administration of newly discovered
    property” and “performance of required but omitted acts of personal
    representatives.” 1963 Iowa Probate Code § 489 bar committee cmt., at
    141.    The comment does not suggest that “other proper cause” is
    intended to dramatically enlarge the scope of section 633.489 so it can
    be used to reopen settlement.
    Additionally, “[t]o the extent there is conflict or ambiguity between
    specific and general statutes, the provisions of specific statutes control.”
    Freedom Fin. Bank v. Estate of Boesen, 
    805 N.W.2d 802
    , 815 (Iowa 2011)
    (citation and internal quotation marks omitted); see Iowa Code § 4.7 (“If
    the conflict between the provisions is irreconcilable, the special . . .
    provision prevails as an exception to the general provision.”). We would
    violate this principle if we were to read the general terminology “other
    proper cause” to encompass an effort to redistribute property based on
    lack of prior notice, a topic specifically covered by section 633.488.
    Indiana’s courts have concluded that Indiana’s counterpart to Iowa
    Code section 633.4893 cannot be used simply to alter the distribution of
    3Indiana   law provides:
    If, after an estate has been settled and the personal representative
    discharged, other property of the estate shall be discovered, or if it shall
    appear that any necessary act remains unperformed on the part of the
    personal representative, or for any other proper cause, the court, upon
    the petition of the discharged personal representative or any person
    interested in the estate and, without notice or upon such notice as it may
    direct, may order that said estate be reopened. It may reappoint the
    personal representative or appoint another personal representative to
    administer such property or perform such act as may be deemed
    14
    property when there is no unperformed act of administration. See In re
    Estate of Kalwitz, 
    923 N.E.2d 982
    , 988 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010) (holding that
    Indiana Code section 29-1-17-14 cannot be used to modify a distribution
    of real property because it would be “an untimely attack on the decree of
    distribution” and the provision is not available to “seek[] a different
    distribution of the item of property” (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted)); In re Estate of McNabb, 
    744 N.E.2d 569
    , 572–73 (Ind.
    Ct. App. 2001) (holding a petition which in form seeks to reopen an
    estate on the ground that some acts remain unperformed but in
    substance seeks a redistribution of assets is not covered by Indiana Code
    section 29-1-17-14 notwithstanding deficiencies in the closing statement
    or lack of notice).4
    Another consideration is that “[n]otice, or the lack thereof, plays no
    part in [section 633.489].” Roethler, 801 N.W.2d at 840. “[T]he bar of
    section 633.487 does not prevent a person otherwise meeting the
    ______________________________________
    necessary. Unless the court shall otherwise order, the provisions of this
    article as to an original administration shall apply to the proceedings had
    in the reopened administration so far as may be, but no claim which is
    already barred can be asserted in the reopened administration.
    Ind. Code § 29-1-17-14(a) (West, Westlaw through 2013 legislation).
    4Louisiana  law on reopening estates also employs the “other proper
    cause” terminology:
    After a succession representative has been discharged, if other property
    of the succession is discovered or for any other proper cause, upon the
    petition of any interested person, the court, without notice or upon such
    notice as it may direct, may order that the succession be reopened. The
    court may reappoint the succession representative or appoint another
    succession representative. The procedure provided by this Code for an
    original administration shall apply to the administration of a reopened
    succession in so far as applicable.
    La. Code Civ. Proc. Ann. art. 3393(A) (West, Westlaw through 2013 Sess.) (emphasis
    added). According to the Louisiana Supreme Court, “Courts have found ‘other proper
    cause’ under [article 3393] to exist under extremely limited circumstances . . . .” In re
    Succession of Villarrubia, 
    680 So. 2d 1147
    , 1150 (La. 1996).
    15
    requirements of section 633.489 from reopening an estate.” Warrington,
    686 N.W.2d at 204; see also Lynch, 491 N.W.2d at 160.                   Assume,
    therefore,   that   the    siblings   of   Carroll   and   Christine   and   their
    descendants had been served with the final report and accounting in
    1993.    According to section 633.487, they would be barred thereafter
    from challenging the final decree of distribution (other than by direct
    appeal). However, if we accept their reading of section 633.489, and if
    notice plays no part, they could still petition for reopening of the estate
    nearly two decades later.       That is illogical and would undermine the
    principle that we should read a statute as a whole and attempt to
    harmonize all of its provisions. See Thoms v. Iowa Pub. Employees’ Ret.
    Sys., 
    715 N.W.2d 7
    , 13 (Iowa 2006) (“We interpret statutes by
    considering them as a whole, not by looking at isolated parts of the
    statute.”); Bruce v. Wookey, 
    261 Iowa 231
    , 233, 
    154 N.W.2d 93
    , 94 (Iowa
    1967) (“Each section [of the Iowa Probate Code] must be construed with
    the act as a whole and all parts of the act considered, compared and
    construed together.”).
    The relatives’ position, summarized on the final page of their brief,
    is that “[t]his case is a request to reopen the estate due to a massive
    mistake in the original probate proceeding. This is what Section 633.489
    is designed to do.”        But of course every petition to reopen a legal
    proceeding involves some kind of alleged error, often claimed to be of
    great magnitude.          Section 633.489, however, does not allow the
    distribution of property among heirs to be reopened, in the absence of
    some unperformed act of administration, simply because the petitioner
    asserts error in the prior distribution. In using section 633.489 for this
    purpose, the district court abused its discretion. See In re Trust No. T-1
    of Trimble, 
    826 N.W.2d 474
    , 482 (Iowa 2013) (indicating that an abuse of
    16
    discretion occurs when the district court’s ruling is “based on an
    erroneous application of the law” (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted)).
    IV. Conclusion.
    For the foregoing reasons, we hold the petitioners’ claims are
    barred by section 633.488’s five-year time limit. We vacate the decision
    of the court of appeals, reverse the order of the district court, and
    remand for further proceedings consistent herewith.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT
    COURT JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE REMANDED.
    All justices concur except Zager, J., who takes no part.