Mary Elizabeth Slezak v. Carl W. Matherly ( 2021 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 20-0352
    Filed March 17, 2021
    MARY ELIZABETH SLEZAK,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    CARL W. MATHERLY,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Polk County, Jeanie Vaudt, Judge.
    Carl Matherly appeals, and Mary Slezak cross-appeals, the district court’s
    rulings following a bench trial. AFFIRMED.
    Shaun Thompson of Newman Thompson & Gray PC, Forest City, for
    appellant.
    Joseph G. Gamble and Tara J. Higgins of Duncan Green, P.C., Des Moines,
    for appellee.
    Heard by Bower, C.J., and Doyle and Mullins, JJ. Gamble, S.J., takes no
    part.
    2
    MULLINS, Judge.
    Carl Matherly appeals, and Mary Slezak (MaryBeth) cross-appeals, the
    district court’s rulings following a bench trial. The parties raise several issues on
    appeal.
    I.        Background Facts and Proceedings
    This case arose as a part of a bitter family dispute.     MaryBeth is the
    beneficiary of a trust she established in 1977, naming Carl as her trustee. Carl’s
    wife of sixty years and the mother of MaryBeth and her two older siblings, Maribel
    Matherly, filed for dissolution of marriage in 2016.1 Over the course of dissolution
    proceedings, Maribel discovered an “MEM” trust naming her the trustee and listed
    it among her property for the purposes of distribution. Shortly thereafter, Carl
    informed MaryBeth that it was actually her trust, the same one established in 1977.
    When Maribel was alerted to the status of the MEM trust, she immediately removed
    it from lists of her assets to be distributed in the dissolution proceedings. Carl
    continued to insist the MEM trust was marital property. MaryBeth intervened in
    her parents’ dissolution proceeding, asking the court to find the MEM trust was not
    marital property subject to distribution. The dissolution court concluded that the
    MEM trust was the property of MaryBeth, and that finding was affirmed by this
    court on appeal. See In re Marriage of Matherly, No. 18-0625, 
    2019 WL 3334355
    ,
    at *6–7 (Iowa Ct. App. July 24, 2019).
    Following her intervention in the dissolution proceeding, MaryBeth filed the
    petition underlying this appeal.      Litigation has been complicated.      MaryBeth
    1    Maribel Matherly passed away during the pendency of dissolution proceedings.
    3
    successfully moved for summary judgment, asking the district court to find certain
    issues considered in the Matherly dissolution matter preclusive in the instant case.
    The district court granted the motion in part, recognizing the factual findings of the
    dissolution court.   The claims were tried before the court sitting in equity in
    November 2019. The district court found the claims should be heard pursuant to
    the Iowa Trust Code, Carl was the trustee of the MEM trust, and Carl breached the
    fiduciary duties he owed to the trust. The court dismissed a number of other
    claims. Carl appeals and MaryBeth cross-appeals.
    II.    Discussion
    A.     Nature of the Proceedings and Preclusion
    MaryBeth’s petition raised claims for offensive issue preclusion; breach of
    fiduciary duty; recovery of trust assets and income; accounting; constructive trust;
    wrongful taking, concealing, and disposition of trust property; conversion; unjust
    enrichment; breach of contract; injunctive relief; and attachment. She invoked the
    Iowa Trust Code, Iowa Code chapter 633A (2017), and made a jury demand for all
    issues. Carl raised defenses pursuant to chapter 633A; consent, release, or
    affirmation of Carl’s conduct; statute of limitations; laches; and res judicata. Carl
    argued, as he does on appeal, that the statutes contained in Iowa Code chapter
    633A were not applicable because the trust code does not apply to a resulting
    trust, which was the remedial term used by the dissolution court to find the MEM
    trust belonged to MaryBeth. See Iowa Code § 633A.1102(18)(l).2 Carl’s answer
    2Effective July 1, 2020, the definitional provisions were renumbered to section
    633A.1102(21)(l) (Supp. 2020). See 2020 Iowa Acts ch. 1076, §§ 1–2 (adding
    new subsections).
    4
    also contained a jury demand. A jury trial was initially scheduled for November 4,
    2019.
    Both parties moved for summary judgment, and a hearing was held on
    September 27, 2019. During the hearing, MaryBeth withdrew her jury demand and
    Carl reiterated his. On October 21, MaryBeth filed for dismissal of her claims for
    conversion and breach of contract. Her dismissal also argued that the remaining
    issues were solely equitable and arose due to breach of trust, requiring that her
    claims be tried to the court. The district court ruled on the motions for summary
    judgment later that same day, denying Carl’s motion and granting MaryBeth’s only
    to the extent that it recognized the factual findings of the dissolution court. Both
    parties submitted arguments in writing regarding the jury demand and issue
    preclusion.
    The district court ordered on October 25 that all issues would be tried to the
    bench. It found chapter 633A was applicable to all remaining claims, 3 which
    sounded in equity and were statutorily required to be tried “in a court of equity.”
    Iowa Code § 633A.4501(2). It made no further finding regarding offensive issue
    preclusion at that time. Trial was held in November 2019, and an order followed
    in February 2020. The district court discussed the dissolution court’s factual
    findings, and it agreed with the summary judgment court “that certain relevant
    factual findings by the Dissolution court in the Intervention Judgment as specifically
    3 In its February 2020 order following trial, the district court included in a footnote
    that the claims for injunctive relief and attachment “appear to have been resolved
    by agreement of the parties.”
    5
    identified within this Order and Judgment Entry are preclusive here.” The district
    court decided the remaining claims pursuant to the Iowa Trust Code.
    1.     Iowa Trust Code
    Carl argues this case is not subject to the Iowa Trust Code because it
    revolves around a resulting trust that is specifically excluded from the statutory
    definition of “trust.” Id. §§ 633A.1102(18)(l), .1107. Carl’s argument focuses on
    his conduct in 1993, transferring an investment account naming him the trustee to
    a Maribel Matherly account naming Maribel the trustee. Carl argues that when the
    dissolution court termed the account a resulting trust created following the trust’s
    failure it left the scope of the Trust Code and that the 1993 failure leaves the
    resulting trust outside the temporal scope of the Trust Code.
    In its order, the district court noted that the investment account that was
    transferred in 1993 was only one part of the trust corpus. The resulting trust
    following the failure “is to operate within the confines of the express trust,” which
    continued to exist.   “Neither the law nor the evidence presented supports a
    determination that the Dissolution court’s declaration in the Intervention Judgment
    of a resulting trust over the wrongfully transferred investment Account
    simultaneously destroyed the trust.” The district court also noted the dissolution
    court’s use of the word failure “was not a finding that the MEM Trust itself had
    disappeared, was terminated, or was otherwise defunct” but “was simply a
    recognition that Carl’s action(s) violating the terms of the MEM Trust cause the
    MEM Trust to lose one of its assets: the (i)nvestment account.” The dissolution
    court’s finding the Trust Account failed was merely remedial, and it indicated that
    the purpose of growth for the benefit of MaryBeth had failed but was necessary to
    6
    allow MaryBeth to reclaim the asset. Furthermore, there was no evidence the trust
    “was terminated, became obsolete or otherwise disappeared” following Carl’s
    account transfer in 1993. Rather than taking affirmative action to terminate the
    trust, Carl’s conduct confirmed its continued existence. Carl continued to buy and
    sell trust assets of stock and real property in the name of the MEM Trust, instigated
    litigation on behalf of the trust, and participated in multiple legal proceedings
    related to the trust’s ownership of the Bonnes Farm. The district court ultimately
    ordered Carl to return the investment account to the MEM Trust.
    Our review of the record reveals that the investment account that gave rise
    to MaryBeth’s intervention in the dissolution was only one asset making up the
    corpus of the MEM Trust. Following the transfer of the investment account in 1993,
    the other trust assets remained in the corpus of the trust. Furthermore, after Carl
    transferred the investment account, the record shows he continued to exercise
    control over trust assets through affirmative action, including buying and selling
    stock and enforcing legal rights to financial and property assets.        Moreover,
    MaryBeth filed her petition in this action to enforce her rights as a beneficiary to
    the larger MEM Trust. Her breach claims related to the assets in the corpus of the
    trust that were not in any way related to the asset recovered during the dissolution.
    On our review of the record, we find MaryBeth’s claims are for enforcement of her
    rights as a beneficiary to an express trust created in 1977. The MEM Trust existed
    at the time of the enactment of the Trust Code and is, therefore, subject to it. See
    Iowa Code § 633A.1106.
    7
    2.     Jury Demand
    “Whether a party is entitled to a jury trial is a legal question. Therefore, our
    review is for correction of errors at law.” Homeland Energy Sols., LLC v. Retterath,
    
    938 N.W.2d 664
    , 683 (Iowa 2020) (citations omitted). “‘Generally, there is no right
    to a jury trial for cases brought in equity.’ In determining whether a case is one in
    equity or at law, we look at the pleadings, relief sought, and essential nature of the
    cause of action.” Id. at 684 (quoting Hedlund v. State, 
    930 N.W.2d 707
    , 718 (Iowa
    2019)). The initial classification of claims in equity or law does not outweigh the
    nature of the claims. 
    Id.
     “The legal or equitable nature of the proceeding is to be
    determined by the pleadings, the relief sought, and the nature of the case.”
    Carstens v. Cent. Nat’l Bank & Tr. Co., 
    461 N.W.2d 331
    , 333 (Iowa 1990).
    On the first day of trial, the district court heard oral arguments related to the
    jury demand. MaryBeth argued that the only claims raised at trial related to breach
    of trust, which were statutorily required to be tried to the bench sitting in equity.
    See Iowa Code § 633A.4501(2) (“The remedies of a beneficiary for breach of trust
    are exclusively equitable and any action shall be brought in a court of equity.”).
    Carl reiterated his argument that the Trust Code does not apply to resulting trusts.
    See id. § 633A.1102(18)(l) (excluding resulting trusts from the definition of “trusts”).
    He insisted that the express trust created in 1977 failed when he transferred it to
    Maribel in 1993 and that the Trust Code applies only to trusts in existence on the
    Trust Code’s effective date of July 1, 2000. The district court found, “There are no
    law claims left, in the Court’s view, once [MaryBeth] dismissed a couple of counts
    that were at-law actions.” The case was tried to the bench sitting in equity.
    8
    When MaryBeth initiated litigation as an intervenor in the dissolution, she
    raised the claim as the beneficiary of the trust and owner of trust assets. The
    dissolution court confirmed that status. In the present case, MaryBeth claims the
    same status and seeks damages from Carl as the trustee. MaryBeth voluntarily
    dismissed the conversion and breach-of-contract claims, and the attachment and
    injunction claims are no longer a part of this litigation. The remaining claims were
    offensive issue preclusion; breach of fiduciary duty; recovery of trust assets and
    income; accounting; constructive trust; wrongful taking, concealing, and
    disposition of trust property; and unjust enrichment. We agree with the district
    court that these claims sound in equity and seek remedies available pursuant to
    chapter 633A. Although the original pleadings contained claims requesting legal
    remedies, the claims presented to the district court were pled in equity and
    requested equitable relief. Accordingly, we concur with the district court’s denial
    of Carl’s jury demand.
    3.      Offensive Issue Preclusion
    The district court granted summary judgment in part in favor of MaryBeth,
    finding factual determinations of the dissolution court were preclusive.
    Accordingly, our review is for correction of errors at law. Linn v. Montgomery, 
    903 N.W.2d 337
    , 342 (Iowa 2017). “Summary judgment is proper only when the entire
    record demonstrates the absence of a genuine issue of material fact and the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” 
    Id.
    “In general, the doctrine of issue preclusion prevents parties to a prior action
    in which judgment has been entered from relitigating in a subsequent action issues
    raised and resolved in the previous action.” Hunter v. City of Des Moines, 300
    
    9 N.W.2d 121
    , 123 (Iowa 1981). In order to utilize the doctrine of issue preclusion,
    four elements must be proved:
    (1) [T]he issue concluded must be identical; (2) the issue must have
    been raised and litigated in the prior action; (3) the issue must have
    been material and relevant to the disposition of the prior action; and
    (4) the determination made of the issue in the prior action must have
    been necessary and essential to the resulting judgment.
    
    Id.
     (footnote omitted). Offensive use of issue preclusion “mean[s] that a stranger
    to the judgment, ordinarily the plaintiff in the second action, relies upon a former
    judgment as conclusively establishing in his [or her] favor an issue which he [or
    she] must prove as an essential element of his [or her] cause of action or claim.”
    
    Id.
     (quoting Goolsby v. Derby, 
    189 N.W.2d 909
    , 913 (Iowa 1971)). In order to use
    issue preclusion offensively, two additional elements must be proved. Courts
    examine “(1) whether the opposing party in the earlier action was afforded a full
    and fair opportunity to litigate the issues [raised for preclusion], and (2) whether
    any other circumstances are present that would justify granting the party resisting
    preclusion occasion to relitigate the issues.” Fischer v. City of Sioux City, 
    654 N.W.2d 544
    , 547 (Iowa 2002).
    MaryBeth’s motion for summary judgment was granted to the extent that
    certain facts found by the dissolution court were preclusive in the present matter.
    MaryBeth specifically listed nearly forty findings and sought to have them enforced
    in this matter via issue preclusion.4 Following the motion for summary judgment,
    the parties made arguments before the court to determine which facts were
    preclusive. The district court stated, “the factual findings made by [the dissolution
    4 MaryBeth’s motion identified each finding alphabetically. We use the same
    system in our discussion.
    10
    court] which have been affirmed by the Court of Appeals should be the facts that
    the Court in this matter is restricted to essentially.” This court’s opinion on the
    dissolution found specifically that the assets once held in the MEM Trust,
    eventually designated in the Maribel Matherly account, were “not marital property
    and [were] not subject to division in the distribution of the marital estate” and
    “affirm[ed] the [dissolution] court’s decision in its entirety.” Matherly, 
    2019 WL 3334355
    , at *7, 10.
    Carl argues MaryBeth failed to prove elements three and four of the general
    issue preclusion test and that he did not have “a full and fair opportunity to litigate
    the issues [raised for preclusion].” Fischer, 
    654 N.W.2d at 547
    ; accord Hunter,
    300 N.W.2d at 123. Carl targets twelve factual findings. We address them in turn.
    Carl argues that finding (c), “the assets of MaryBeth initially funded into the
    trust had an approximate value of $250,000.00,” was not essential and that he did
    not have full and fair opportunity to litigate the claim in the dissolution matter. We
    agree with Carl that the paramount concern regarding the trust during the
    dissolution was ownership of assets, including a Scottrade account, alleged as
    trust assets. However, in order for MaryBeth to fully litigate her claim as an
    intervenor and the rightful owner of the assets through tracing the assets, the
    circumstances of the trust’s creation were relevant and essential to the claim.
    Furthermore, in order for Carl to prove the account was a marital asset, the
    dissolution court noted that “Carl testified he [transferred an investment account to
    Maribel] because he felt he had already given MaryBeth and her children more
    money in the form of other gifts than the value of what was in the trust.” Thus, Carl
    11
    invoked the value of the trust himself to show he had provided the same value
    through other gifts.
    Carl takes issue with several findings related to the Bonnes Farm, farm land
    purchased as an asset for MaryBeth’s trust, which was eventually sold. Carl takes
    issue with findings (m) through (r), contained in the dissolution court’s footnote 10.
    The monies deposited into the account would have included
    contract payments made on farmland owned by the trust (“the
    Bonnes farm”); these payments were made to both the accounts in
    the name of the trust as well as those accounts with the special
    M.E.M. designation. . . . The property tax payments for the Bonnes
    farm were also paid from either the trust account or the accounts with
    the special M.E.M. designation. The Bonnes farm was ultimately
    transferred out of the trust in 2003 for a declared value of
    $172,000.00; while MaryBeth consented to that transfer, she was
    unaware that the trust received no monetary benefit from the
    transaction. Carl had no explanation of what occurred with the sale
    proceeds from the Bonnes farm.
    Carl argues the only issue before the dissolution court was ownership of the
    account and that the sale of the Bonnes farm had no impact on that ownership.
    He again contends he did not have a full and fair opportunity to litigate these
    issues. Again, ownership of trust assets was the very issue the dissolution court
    considered. Thus, the maintenance and sale of a trust asset, including the Bonnes
    farm, makes accounting of monetary benefits from the sale or lease of that asset
    and payments, including property taxes, relevant facts. It was necessary and
    relevant for the dissolution court to trace ownership of money in the relevant
    accounts through time, including several account transfers and ownership of the
    Bonnes farm, to determine the rightful owner of the trust assets. Furthermore, Carl
    had a full and fair opportunity to litigate these facts when he argued the accounts
    12
    were marital property in the course of his argument that MaryBeth consented to
    the transfer of the Bonnes farm.
    Carl argues finding (t), his “practice of funding MaryBeth’s IRA with checks
    drawn on the various accounts, both before and after the transfer to the accounts
    with designation” were not to MaryBeth personally, was irrelevant. One of Carl’s
    defenses to MaryBeth’s role as intervenor in the dissolution was that he repudiated
    the trust after providing the same value in other gifts to MaryBeth and her children.
    Accordingly, he made the funds transferred to MaryBeth’s IRA a relevant fact that
    was necessary to the court’s determination of alleged trust repudiation.
    Carl argues finding (v), that he “never provided MaryBeth with any financial
    statements, tax returns or trust accountings regarding the account in any of its
    versions” was irrelevant. Carl presented a statute-of-limitations defense, arguing
    that if the Trust Code applied to the relevant account, the trust expired and should
    have been distributed to MaryBeth on her fiftieth birthday in 2007, and that the five-
    year statute of limitations for her ownership claim expired in 2012. Accordingly,
    the fact that MaryBeth was never provided with trust records was a relevant issue
    because it would help a factfinder determine whether she was aware of the trust’s
    expiration and her claim to the funds.
    Carl argues finding (y), that MaryBeth first received a copy of the trust
    declaration from 1977 shortly after she received a letter from Carl in 2016 telling
    her the Scottrade funds were her trust assets, was not essential. Again, Carl
    argued the statute of limitations for MaryBeth to claim the trust assets expired in
    2012. Her knowledge of the expiration of the trust and her time to bring a claim is
    13
    relevant to Carl’s statute-of-limitations defense and was necessary to the court’s
    determination of whether the discovery rule applied to his case.
    Carl argues finding (ee), “Carl’s claims lack credibility,” was an issue for the
    jury and too ambiguous to have any preclusive effect. Carl’s argument does not
    specifically target any of the elements required for offensive issue preclusion, but
    we will address it briefly. See Fischer, 
    654 N.W.2d at 547
    ; Hunter, 300 N.W.2d at
    123. He testified at trial, making his credibility an issue for the court to determine.
    Carl’s credibility was absolutely relevant and a necessary fact for the dissolution
    court to consider when making all determinations regarding the ownership of the
    trust.
    Carl argues finding (ii), “that any claim that MaryBeth might be able to assert
    is barred by the five-year statute of limitations applicable to actions for breach of
    fiduciary duty is not supported by the record,” was irrelevant to the express trust
    that existed from 1977–1993.5           The dissolution court made the following
    statements regarding the statute-of-limitations theories:
    The record is clear that MaryBeth was unaware of the precise
    provisions of the trust agreement, most notably the provision
    requiring distribution when she turned 50. Her understanding, as
    expressed to Carl, was that the trust should continue to grow for her
    benefit; Carl’s actions support this intent through the manner in which
    he treated the successor accounts as well as his own written
    statement in the letter dated July 26, 2016 in which he states that the
    Scottrade account was MaryBeth’s. MaryBeth was not on notice that
    there was an issue regarding the ownership of the assets initially
    placed in trust for her benefit until Carl repudiated the existence of
    any trust by making the claim that the Scottrade account was marital
    5 Carl concedes that the statute-of-limitations findings related to the resulting trust
    that existed in 2016 are correct and preclusive. However, later in his appellate
    brief, Carl raised the exact same statute-of-limitations issue as issue V, insisting
    he was entitled to summary judgment. Because the issues are identical, they will
    not be addressed further.
    14
    property. This is consistent with the general rule regarding the tolling
    of the statute of limitations in an action to enforce a resulting trust:
    “The statute of limitations will run in favor of a trustee of a resulting
    or constructive trust from the time he disavows the obligation of the
    trust and sets up a claim in his own right to the trust property.”
    Gebhard v. Sattler, 
    40 Iowa 152
    , 157 (1874).
    The dissolution court’s findings are related to Carl’s conduct in continuing to act as
    the trustee during all relevant periods, even as he unilaterally chose to transfer
    assets. The court’s findings were relevant to Carl’s identical argument for the
    statute-of-limitations defense he raised in the dissolution.        Accordingly, those
    findings are preclusive.
    Based on our review of the record, MaryBeth presented sufficient evidence
    supporting her requested use of offensive issue preclusion. Because there were
    no remaining genuine issues of material fact regarding the preclusive effect of
    these findings, the district court properly granted summary judgment. See Linn,
    903 N.W.2d at 342.
    4.     Claim Preclusion
    Carl argues MaryBeth should have joined the claims presented in this action
    with her intervention in the dissolution. Carl raised this issue during an unreported
    hearing on his motion for summary judgment, which is reviewed for correction of
    errors at law. Id. Carl never revisited the claim during trial. MaryBeth contests
    error preservation, arguing the failure to readdress the issue during trial is fatal. “It
    is a fundamental doctrine of appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both
    raised and decided by the district court before we will decide them on appeal.”
    Meier v. Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002). However, “a party receiving
    a preliminary ruling that does not unequivocally decide an issue must do more to
    15
    preserve the issue for appellate review.” UE Local 893/IUP v. State, 
    928 N.W.2d 51
    , 61 (Iowa 2019). In comparison of rulings on motions in limine with a specific
    motion to dismiss, our supreme court has distinguished rulings that are “definitive
    and decide[] the ultimate issue” preserving error from those that direct a court to
    consider an issue later in the course of proceedings. 
    Id.
     In the case at bar, Carl
    raised the issue of claim preclusion during the hearing. The district court ruled on
    the issue and denied the summary judgment. The issue is preserved. 
    Id.
    Iowa uses the test adopted in the Restatement (Second) of Judgments
    when considering claim preclusion. Villarreal v. United Fire & Cas. Co., 
    873 N.W.2d 714
    , 719–20 (Iowa 2016).
    (1) When a valid and final judgment rendered in an action
    extinguishes the plaintiff’s claim pursuant to the rules of merger or
    bar . . . , the claim extinguished includes all rights of the plaintiff to
    remedies against the defendant with respect to all or any part of the
    transaction, or series of connected transactions, out of which the
    action arose.
    (2) What factual grouping constitutes a “transaction,” and
    what groupings constitute a “series,” are to be determined
    pragmatically, giving weight to such considerations as whether the
    facts are related in time, space, origin, or motivation, or whether they
    form a convenient trial unit, and whether their treatment as a unit
    conforms to the parties’ expectations or business understanding or
    usage.
    Id. at 720 (alteration in original) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 24,
    at 196 (Am. Law Inst. 1982)). The final judgment Carl seeks to enforce through
    claim preclusion is the dissolution. But, “An action for dissolution of marriage shall
    be by equitable proceedings, and no cause of action, save for alimony, shall be
    joined therewith.” 
    Iowa Code § 598.3
    . An exception exists where the dissolution
    parties raise the issue of ownership of an asset and a third party intervenes to
    contest ownership of the same asset, provided the rules of procedure permit and
    16
    no statute prohibits such action. Wharff v. Wharff, 
    56 N.W.2d 1
    , 3–4 (Iowa 1952).
    MaryBeth’s intervention was permitted pursuant to this exception.
    MaryBeth’s intervention in the dissolution and her breach of trust claims now
    on appeal rely on some of the same facts.            However, the dissolution was
    concerned primarily with dissolving the marriage between Carl and Maribel and
    equitable distribution of their assets. MaryBeth’s permissive intervention was
    merely an effort to ensure that her assets were not a part of the distribution.
    Furthermore, the dissolution court expressly stated “further resolution of the
    remaining claims between MaryBeth and Carl shall be dealt with in [the claims
    giving rise to this appeal].” While the factual background of the two cases is similar,
    the nature of the intervention claim raised for dissolution was to settle an ownership
    issue while the present case deals with separate claims for breach of trust. The
    dissolution was governed by Iowa Code chapter 598, while the present claims
    were raised pursuant to chapter 633A. The relief sought in this lawsuit could not
    have been granted in the dissolution proceeding. Because Carl failed to provide
    facts showing he was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we concur with the
    district court’s decision to decline Carl’s motion for summary judgment related to
    claim preclusion. See Linn, 903 N.W.2d at 342.
    B.     Carl’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    1.     Identity of Trustee
    Carl argues the district court erred in denying his motion for summary
    judgment arguing that he was not the trustee. Carl insists that the trust at issue is
    a resulting trust and under the control of a new trustee, Maribel. MaryBeth argues
    the district court properly determined Carl was the trustee. MaryBeth argues that
    17
    under the dissolution court’s determination that her interest was in a resulting trust,
    the resulting trust interest followed her express trust created in 1977 and Carl has
    always acted under the authority of a trustee, per the original declaration and in
    practice. Our review is for correction of errors at law. Id.
    Resulting trusts are specifically defined in the Iowa Code. Iowa Code
    § 633A.2106. Generally, “[w]here the owner of property gratuitously transfers the
    property and manifests in the trust instrument an intention that the transferee
    should hold the property in trust but the trust fails, the transferee holds the trust
    estate as a resulting trust for the transferor or the transferor’s estate.”          Id.
    § 633A.2106(1). Following the hearing on Carl’s motion for summary judgment,
    the district court noted that even though Carl in fact transferred the trust assets, he
    was not the “transferor” described in the statute. Maribel was never notified that
    she was made a trustee, nor was MaryBeth. Even after execution of the transfer,
    Carl acted as the trustee in several ways. Carl continued to exercise actual control
    over the trust assets through trading, purchasing, and selling assets; engaging in
    litigation related to trust assets; and conveying to MaryBeth that he was the trustee
    by telling her the assets were performing well. Carl testified in the dissolution and
    in the present case that he always considered himself the trustee. We agree with
    the district court Carl did not produce sufficient facts to show he was entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law. See Linn, 903 N.W.2d at 342.
    2.     Uniform Prudent Investor Act
    Carl argues he was entitled to summary judgment on any claim related to
    duties owed to the trust as a prudent investor including diversification and
    productivity. In the alternative, he argues the district court erred in interpreting the
    18
    terms of the trust and the findings should be reversed. Our review is for correction
    of errors at law. Id.
    The 1977 trust declaration lists the duties owed by a trustee in article seven.
    ARTICLE SEVEN
    In administering the trust hereby created, the Trustee, acting
    as a fiduciary and primarily in the best interests of the beneficiaries,
    shall have all the powers, rights and discretions possessed by
    trustees generally; shall have those powers, rights and discretions
    that are presently set forth in Sections 699 and 123(1) of the Iowa
    Probate Code, and in addition specific authority:
    A.     To retain any property or undivided interests in
    property received from any source, regardless of any lack of
    diversification, risk or non-productivity.
    ....
    The Trustee may freely act under any or all of the powers
    granted it by this agreement in all matters concerning this trust, after
    forming his judgment based upon all the circumstances of any
    particular situation as to the wisest and best course to pursue in the
    interest of the beneficiaries, without the necessity of obtaining the
    consent or permission of any person interested therein, or the
    consent or approval of any court; provided only that he shall exercise
    such powers at all times in a fiduciary capacity and primarily in the
    interest of the beneficiaries.
    But, trusts are governed by the Trust Code contained in Chapter 633A, which also
    includes the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. See Iowa Code §§ 633A.4301–.4309.
    The duty to act as a prudent investor may be invoked by language not specifically
    including the word “prudent.” Id. § 633A.4309. Accordingly, we agree with the
    district court that a fact question exists as to whether the duties to diversify and act
    due to non-productivity were required, and we agree with the district court’s
    decision denying the motion for summary judgment. See Linn, 903 N.W.2d at 342.
    C.     Invocation and Applicability of the Uniform Prudent Investor Act
    Carl argues the Uniform Prudent Investor Act does not apply to this trust
    because article seven—partially quoted above—exempts him from those duties.
    19
    MaryBeth argues the Uniform Prudent Investor Act is not waived by the language
    of article seven and, even if it is, Carl breached the fiduciary duties owed by a
    trustee. This case was tried in equity, and our review on appeal is de novo. Iowa
    R. App. P. 6.907.
    The court examined the language of article seven and received expert
    testimony from a trust manager to determine whether it was sufficient to exempt
    Carl from the Uniform Prudent Investor Act. MaryBeth’s expert testified that the
    language was commonly present in trusts and that if there was a real intention to
    promote the retention of certain assets over consideration of prudence, the
    declaration “would (1) specifically name the stock to be retained, (2) specifically
    mandate retention rather than merely authorizing it, and (3) specifically release the
    trustee from any liability related to retention.” Carl’s expert opined that the powers
    provided in paragraph A must necessarily be read within the context of the opening
    paragraph.
    The Uniform Prudent Investor Act may be invoked with specific phrases
    listed in the statute, but it may also be invoked by “comparable language in the
    provisions of a trust.” Iowa Code § 633A.4309. None of the listed language
    appears in article seven. The Uniform Prudent Investor Act was enacted following
    the repeal of the Model Prudent Person Investment Act (Model Act). See 1999
    Iowa Acts ch. 125, §§ 61–70 (enacting Uniform Prudent Investor Act); id. § 108
    (repealing section 633.123, entitled the Model Prudent Person Investment Act).
    The Model Act was in effect when the trust declaration was executed in 1977 and
    20
    is specifically invoked by the language of article seven.6 The Model Act instructs
    fiduciaries on the standard of conduct expected regarding investments. 
    Iowa Code § 633.123
     (1977).
    1. Investments by fiduciaries.       In acquiring, investing,
    reinvesting, exchanging, retaining, selling and managing property for
    the benefit of another, a fiduciary shall exercise the judgment and
    care under the circumstances then prevailing, which persons of
    prudence, discretion and intelligence exercise in the management of
    their own affairs, not for the purpose of speculation, but with regard
    to the permanent disposition of their funds, considering the probable
    income, as well as the probable safety, of their capital. Within the
    limitations of the foregoing standards, a fiduciary is authorized to
    acquire and retain every kind of property and every kind of
    investment including . . . stocks and shares, preferred or common,
    which persons of prudence, discretion and intelligence acquire or
    retain for their own account.
    
    Id.
     Article seven also invokes section 633.699, entitled Powers of Trustees. 
    Id.
    § 633.699. Section 633.699 lists the general powers of trustees. Id. This section
    still exists, but it has been transferred to section 633.750. 2010 Acts ch. 1086,
    § 25. Following these comparisons between the 1977 and 2017 iterations of the
    Iowa Code, it is clear that our legislature created separate statutes regarding
    general trustee powers and investment powers. The fact that the trust declaration
    specifically mentioned both section 633.123 and .699 is instructive. In our role to
    give effect to the express words of this contract, we must apply the laws governing
    both the powers of trustees and those specific to investments. See Fashion
    Fabrics of Iowa, Inc. v. Retail Investors Corp., 
    266 N.W.2d 22
    , 25 (Iowa 1978).
    6 The trust declaration instructs that the “trust is created in Iowa and shall be
    construed and regulated according to the laws of the State of Iowa.” It does not
    provide a particular code year to govern the trust.
    21
    Once invoked, the Uniform Prudent Investor Act requires that “A trustee
    shall invest and manage trust property as a prudent investor would, by considering
    the purposes, terms, distribution requirements, and other circumstances of the
    trust. In satisfying this standard, the trustee shall exercise reasonable care, skill,
    and caution.” 
    Id.
     § 633A.4302(1) (2017). A trustee is required to consider “the
    context of the trust portfolio as a whole and as a part of an overall investment
    strategy.”   Id. § 633A.4302(2).     A trustee is also required to “diversify the
    investments of the trust unless the trustee reasonably determines that the
    purposes of the trust are better served without diversifying.” Id. § 633A.4303.
    The specific asset Carl argues he was permitted to retain was stock in a
    family-owned business, Park Investment. However, the business closed in 1989,
    and the shares were written off as having no value shortly thereafter. Thus, any
    argument for retention of that asset was moot after the shares were written off.
    Not only were the closely-held assets no longer held in the trust, they no longer
    existed. The record before us shows that Carl took a number of liberties with trust
    assets. He engaged in risky day trading, at times buying and selling the entire
    value of accounts multiple times in a single month. Carl failed to diversify the
    investments and provided no explanation, other than insisting he was experienced
    and had special knowledge of the market. On our de novo review of the record,
    we agree with the district court that the trust invoked the Uniform Prudent Investor
    Act and Carl breached the Act.
    22
    D.     Damages
    Carl argues the district court erred in calculating damages.7 This case was
    tried in equity and our review on appeal is de novo. Iowa R. App. P. 6.907. Carl
    argues any claim for damages prior to 1991 is speculative due to the lack of
    records. MaryBeth argues error is not preserved regarding the argument for
    speculative damages.
    MaryBeth’s trust management expert testified that he was unable to review
    any statements regarding the assets of the trust prior to 1991 because the records
    do not exist. Carl retained an expert witness to testify in rebuttal to MaryBeth’s
    trust management expert.        Carl’s expert attacked the reports of MaryBeth’s
    witnesses because they used historical mutual fund performance and market data
    to discuss prudent investment strategies and predict the asset growth that would
    have occurred.8 When the parties reviewed Carl’s expert report with the court to
    determine which parts would be contested for entry into the record, Carl’s counsel
    agreed to strike most of a paragraph entitled “Speculation on the Value of
    Resulting Trust.” The only sentence retained related to an unstated growth rate of
    37% that, following the removal of the rest of the paragraph, modified the disputed
    value of the initial trust assets. Carl’s counsel then raised the argument regarding
    speculation in his post-trial proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law.
    7 Carl also argues he is entitled to relief due to the doctrine of laches. “It definitely
    follows that if the action is not barred by the statute of limitations no condition of
    laches can be reasonably claimed.” Pap v. Pap, 
    73 N.W.2d 742
    , 749 (Iowa 1955).
    Following our statute-of-limitations findings above, this argument fails.
    8 Carl’s expert also attacked other aspects of the reports. However, his testimony
    revealed that his copies of the reports were incomplete, omitting columns related
    to the very criticisms he made. The district court chose to give that testimony little
    weight because of the omissions.
    23
    We reiterate the requirement that issues be both raised and ruled on to
    preserve an issue for appellate review. Meier, 
    641 N.W.2d at 537
    . However,
    because Carl’s counsel agreed to omit his expert’s discussion of speculation, it
    would seem that the testimony that was somewhat similarly targeted was waived.
    The issue was then not fully raised until after trial was completed, in Carl’s
    proposed findings. The district court found MaryBeth’s expert reports showed “the
    most reasonable depictions of lost growth for the Investment Account and the
    Bonne’s land sale proceeds” because no records were produced from 1977
    through 1990. Issues raised after trial are generally not preserved for review. Field
    v. Palmer, 
    592 N.W.2d 347
    , 531 (Iowa 1999). Because Carl’s counsel approached
    the issue when examining witnesses and the district court appeared to consider
    speculation, we will address the issue, assuming without deciding that error has
    been preserved.
    Carl argues, in addition to speculation prior to 1991, that the damage award
    was miscalculated because of the lack of records showing mismanagement prior
    to 1991 and the post-1991 account records are incomplete. The lack of complete
    records from years prior to 1991 does not prevent a court from considering the
    relevant and admissible evidence actually presented. The district court considered
    the testimony and reports of both experts to the extent they were credible. Those
    records proved that damage occurred and created a reasonable basis for an
    award. Pavone v. Kirke, 
    801 N.W.2d 477
    , 495 (Iowa 2011). Furthermore, the
    records that do exist for the years prior to 1991 show Carl made distributions to
    people other than MaryBeth, including himself.       In an effort to minimize any
    speculation, the reports provided by MaryBeth’s expert did not make any loss
    24
    projections for years prior to 1991. That distinction is important because by that
    time, all closely-held assets were gone. The only assets left were publicly traded.
    Carl engaged in risky trading practices and at times completely withdrew from the
    market. He also transferred money between investment accounts and was unable
    to account for losses that occurred. Our de novo review of the record reveals that
    MaryBeth met her burden to prove “a reasonable basis from which the amount” of
    damages was approximated by the district court.          St. Malachy Roman Cath.
    Congregation of Geneso v. Ingram, 
    841 N.W.2d 338
    , 352 (Iowa 2013).
    E.     Attorney Fees
    Carl argues the district court erred in awarding attorney fees to MaryBeth.
    Our review is for abuse of discretion. In re Tr. No. T-1 of Trimble, 
    826 N.W.2d 474
    ,
    482 (Iowa 2013). We ask if a trial court “ruling is based on grounds that are
    unreasonable or untenable.” 
    Id.
     The Iowa Trust Code provides a statutory right
    to request attorney fees. Iowa Code § 633A.4507. “In a judicial proceeding
    involving the administration of a trust, the court, as justice and equity may require,
    may award costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney fees, to any party,
    to be paid by another party or from the trust that is the subject of the controversy.”
    Id.
    Carl raised only two arguments. First, that a majority of MaryBeth’s claims
    were dismissed and those that were tried should be reversed on appeal, and
    second, that the trust code does not apply and the fees are not awardable. Both
    arguments fail based on our discussion of the claims above. The district court
    considered all of the factors listed in Trimble and discussed the particular reasons
    25
    for awarding fees to MaryBeth. 826 N.W.2d at 492–94. Finding nothing clearly
    unreasonable or untenable, we affirm the award. See id. at 482.
    F.     Cross-Appeal
    MaryBeth cross-appeals, arguing she should have been awarded attorney
    fees incurred for intervening in the dissolution proceedings and that she was
    entitled to double and punitive damages from the instant case. We review attorney
    fees for abuse of discretion. Id. We review punitive damage awards for correction
    of errors at law. Papillon v. Jones, 
    892 N.W.2d 763
    , 769–70 (Iowa 2017).
    It does not appear that MaryBeth requested attorney fees resulting from the
    intervention from the dissolution court.     MaryBeth requested but was denied
    attorney fees on appeal from the dissolution. The district court denied recovery of
    the fees because no authority was presented to support the award but noted Carl’s
    awareness for the entirety of the proceeding that the MEM Trust was not then or
    ever considered marital property. The Trust Code contains a statutory right to
    request an award of attorney fees. Iowa Code § 633A.4507. MaryBeth claimed
    her rights pursuant to the Trust Code to intervene in the dissolution proceedings.
    We have already discussed it would have been inappropriate for MaryBeth to bring
    these claims within her intervention in the dissolution proceedings, but we
    acknowledge that her intervention in the dissolution was necessary to bring these
    claims because the property would have otherwise been considered marital
    property and distributed. Carl relies on a prior opinion of this court regarding a
    similar fact pattern, in which a parent attempted to invalidate a trust created for
    beneficiary children. Skye v. Mathew Tr., No. 19-0546, 
    2019 WL 6358196
    , at *1
    (Iowa Ct. App. Nov. 27, 2019). In Skye, the trust action was instigated by the
    26
    parent and there is no discussion whether the beneficiaries sought attorney fees
    related to the parents’ dissolution. 
    Id.
     Finding no authority to support an award of
    attorney fees following this procedural path, we must decline MaryBeth’s request.
    MaryBeth requested double and punitive damages based on her claims for
    breach of trust. The Trust Code provides, “A person who, in bad faith, wrongfully
    takes, conceals, or disposes of trust property is liable for twice the value of the
    property, attorney fees, court costs, and where consistent with exiting law, punitive
    damages, recoverable in an action by a trustee for the benefit of the trust.” Iowa
    Code § 633A.4605. The district court declined to award double and punitive
    damages because the statute would award them only where “recoverable in an
    action by a trustee for the benefit of the trust.” Id. (emphasis added). We find no
    authority allowing the statutory award of double and punitive damages in an action
    brought by a beneficiary of a trust. Accordingly, we must decline MaryBeth’s
    request for such damages.
    III.   Conclusion
    Our review of the record reveals that MaryBeth’s claims flowing from her
    right as a beneficiary to the MEM Trust, an express trust created in 1977, are
    governed by the Iowa Trust Code and were properly tried to the bench. MaryBeth
    presented sufficient evidence supporting her requested use of offensive issue
    preclusion, leaving no remaining genuine issues of material fact. We concur with
    the district court’s partial summary judgment. Carl raised several issues related to
    his motions for summary judgment but failed to prove he was entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law. The trust declaration executed in 1977 specifically invoked the
    statutory precursors to both the prudent person standard and the Uniform Prudent
    27
    Investor Act. Our de novo review confirms that Carl breached his duties in failing
    to diversify the investments. MaryBeth met her burden to prove a reasonable basis
    for her damages. We find nothing clearly untenable or unreasonable in the district
    court’s attorney-fee award to MaryBeth. Finding no supporting authority for the
    award of dissolution attorney fees or double and punitive damages, MaryBeth’s
    requests fail.
    AFFIRMED.