IN RE: THE MATTER OF THE WILMA G. JAMES TRUST, DAWN MARKEY JAMES and DEREK AARON JAMES v. DONNA JEAN JAMES, PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE of the ESTATE of DAREL JOE JAMES, DONNA J. JAMES, CHARLES DONN JAMES, and CONNIE L. JAMES, Defendants-Respondents. ( 2016 )


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  • IN RE: THE MATTER OF THE                                )
    WILMA G. JAMES TRUST,                                   )
    )
    DAWN MARKEY JAMES and                                   )
    DEREK AARON JAMES,                                      )
    )
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,                       )
    )
    v.                                                      )        No. SD33657
    )
    DONNA JEAN JAMES, PERSONAL                              )        Filed: Feb. 24, 2016
    REPRESENTATIVE of the ESTATE of                         )
    DAREL JOE JAMES, DECEASED,                              )
    DONNA J. JAMES, CHARLES DONN                            )
    JAMES, and CONNIE L. JAMES,                             )
    )
    Defendants-Respondents.                      )
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PHELPS COUNTY
    Honorable Ronald D. White, Associate Circuit Judge
    AFFIRMED
    This appeal involves the administration of a trust created by Wilma G. James
    (“Grandmother”) in 1983. Grandmother amended her trust in 2001, and she later replaced
    the 2001 amendment with a new amendment in 2007.1 Grandmother had three children, two
    of whom -- Darel Joe James (“Trustee”) and Charles Donn James (“Uncle”2) -- were still
    living at the time of her death. After Grandmother’s death, two of her adult grandchildren,
    1
    We refer to Grandmother’s trust, in its final amended form as “the Trust.”
    2
    Uncle was commonly referred to by his middle name, Donn.
    1
    Dawn Markey James and Derek Aaron James (“Grandchildren”), filed the underlying
    lawsuit. Their petition claimed that Trustee breached his fiduciary duty to properly
    administer the Trust and the breach unjustly enriched Trustee and Uncle (“uncles”), along
    with the wives of uncles, Donna J. James and Connie L. James (the four of whom we refer
    to collectively as “Respondents”).3
    Grandchildren present nine points for review. Points I, III through VII, and IX
    contend that the trial court misapplied or erroneously declared the law in ruling that:
    (1) Trustee “did not have any fiduciary duties to [Grandchildren] when he
    began acting as the successor trustee[,]” because this is contrary to
    sections 456.7-701.1 and 456.8-801 to 813;4
    (2) Grandchildren had the burden to prove damages resulting from Trustee’s
    “conveyance of trust real estate to himself, because” such proof “is not
    required to receive the relief that [Grandchildren] request”;
    (3) Grandchildren had the burden to prove damages resulting from Trustee’s
    failure to report to Grandchildren, because section 456.10-1001 imposes
    no such requirement;
    (4) Grandchildren “were not entitled to any relief by reason of their failure to
    object to the schedule of proposed distribution” (“the schedule”), because
    Trustee did not send a schedule at the first distribution, he concealed
    “information necessary for them to make an informed decision regarding
    the [schedule,]” and he sent a schedule that he “knew did not follow
    the [T]rust directions”;
    (5) Trustee was permitted “to enforce a $10,000 claim against Derek as an
    offset for repayment of a loan” from Derek, because the trial court also
    “found that the loan was from [Grandmother] and not the [T]rust[,]” and
    section 456.8-811 permits “a trustee to enforce claims of the trust”;
    (6) Grandchildren “were not entitled to any relief” given the defenses
    permitted to Respondents under section 456.8-815 or 456.5-505.3
    3
    When it is necessary to refer individually to a spouse or grandchild, we will use their first name for the sake
    of brevity and clarity; no familiarity or disrespect is intended. While this appeal was pending, a suggestion of
    death was filed regarding Trustee, and Donna was substituted for him in her capacity as personal representative
    of his estate.
    4
    Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013, and all rule references are
    to Missouri Court Rules (2015).
    2
    because these defenses were waived under Rule 55.08 when they were
    not properly pleaded, and, even if the defenses had been properly
    pleaded, Trustee is not excused from breaches of fiduciary duty under
    these statutes;
    (7) “[Trustee] did not breach any fiduciary duties by distributing shares of
    the [T]rust assets in a manner other than per capita” because “the trial
    court failed to give the legally unambiguous term per capita its well
    understood meaning.”
    Point II contends the trial court erred in finding that Trustee violated no fiduciary
    duty in selling the real estate in the Trust (“the farm”) because “there was no evidence that
    the [T]rust language relating to the sale of the [T]rust land was ambiguous or had any
    ‘conflict’ with an ‘earlier provision[.]’” Finally, Point VIII asserts the trial court erred in
    “failing to rule on issues that [Grandchildren] requested in their Request for Findings and
    Conclusions” as required by Rule 73.01. Finding no merit in any of Grandchildren’s points,
    we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
    Applicable Principles of Review and Governing Law
    When reviewing a court-tried case, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment “unless
    there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it
    erroneously declares or applies the law.” Ivie v. Smith, 
    439 S.W.3d 189
    , 198-99 (Mo. banc
    2014). “Claims that there is no substantial evidence to support the judgment or that the
    judgment is against the weight of the evidence necessarily involve review of the trial court’s
    factual determinations.” Winston v. Winston, 
    449 S.W.3d 1
    , 6 (Mo. App. W.D. 2014).
    “We defer to the trial court’s determination of witness credibility and recognize that the
    court is free to accept or reject all, part or none of the testimony presented.” In re Estate of
    Blair, 
    317 S.W.3d 84
    , 86 (Mo. App. S.D. 2010). “We accept as true the evidence and
    inferences favorable to the prevailing party and disregard all contrary evidence.”
    3
    Watermann v. Eleanor E. Fitzpatrick Revocable Living Trust, 
    369 S.W.3d 69
    , 75 (Mo.
    App. E.D. 2012).
    By statute, a trustee “shall administer the trust in good faith, in accordance with its
    terms and purposes and the interests of the beneficiaries, and in accordance with sections
    456.1-101 to 456.11-1106.” Section 456.8-801.5 “The construction of a legal document,
    such as a trust, based upon its language is reviewed de novo.” 
    Winston, 449 S.W.3d at 7
    .
    The existence of a fiduciary duty is also a question of law reviewed de novo, but whether
    such a duty was breached is a question of fact. 
    Blair, 317 S.W.3d at 86
    .
    Facts and Procedural Background
    The bench trial occurred in September 2014. In accordance with our standard of
    review, we summarize the facts in the light most favorable to the judgment and interpret the
    Trust de novo. See 
    Watermann, 369 S.W.3d at 75
    and 
    Winston, 449 S.W.3d at 7
    .
    Pertinent Trust Provisions
    The Trust provides for Trustee to become the “successor [t]rustee” to Grandmother,
    the original trustee. Article I of the Trust defines certain terms. “Sons” are defined as
    Trustee, Uncle, and “George James, deceased.” Grandchildren, as “children of George
    (deceased)[,]” are included with others in the definition of “[g]randchildren[.]”6
    “Beneficiaries” for purposes of distributions of the Trust Estate, except as
    provided to the contrary, are [Grandmother’s] three (3) Sons, per capita. To
    5
    Sections 456.1-101 through 456.11-1106 comprise “the ‘Missouri Uniform Trust Code’” (“MUTC”), which
    was passed by the legislature in 2004 and became law on January 1, 2005. Section 456.1-101. No party has
    questioned the applicability of the MUTC to the Trust, and section 456.11-1106.1(1) provides that after
    January 1, 2005, the MUTC applies to trusts created before January 1, 2005. See also In re Stephen M.
    Gunther Revocable Living Trust, 
    350 S.W.3d 44
    , 45 (Mo. App. E.D. 2011) (“[t]he [MUTC] generally applies
    to all trusts created before, on, or after January 1, 2005, and to all judicial proceedings concerning trusts
    commenced on or after that date”).
    6
    Three individuals are specifically named as Trustee’s children, one individual is specifically named as a child
    of Uncle, and all of these individuals are expressly included as grandchildren in the Trust. Grandmother also
    included as grandchildren “[a]ll other children, if any, born to [Trustee] prior to the time they must be
    ascertained in order to give effect to the reference to them.”
    4
    the extent any of [Grandmother’s] Sons fail to survive [her], then
    Beneficiaries shall include such deceased Son(s)’ then living child(ren), per
    capita, to the extent they are also [Grandmother’s g]randchildren as defined
    in this Article.
    Articles II and IV provide that the Trust is irrevocable upon Grandmother’s death,
    and “the Trust Estate is to be allocated and distributed[.]” However, Article II also provides
    that, during her life, Grandmother “retains the power to withdraw Trust property, to amend
    or revoke the Trust at any time and from time to time, and to require the [t]rustee to transfer
    to her, or her representative(s), any or all of the Trust Estate.”
    Article IV.b.1 provides:
    [The farm] shall be sold at its Fair Market Value, which, if sold to any of the
    following individuals, shall be sold in exchange for three (3) equal
    promissory notes secured by a first deed of trust on such realty and payable in
    equal monthly installments over ten (10) years at an interest rate of eight
    percent (8%) per annum. The following individuals only shall have 120
    days, 150 days, and 180 days, respectively, from the date of [Grandmother]’s
    death, the non-assignable right, listed in order of priority, to purchase such
    real estate under such terms and conditions:
    i.      [Trustee];
    ii.     [Uncle]; or
    iii.    [Derek].
    Article IV.b provided that if Trustee, Uncle, or Derek do not buy the farm, a third party
    would be given priority to purchase a specifically described portion of the farm.
    Article IV.c provides:
    All Trust Estate not distributed or sold in accordance with the preceding two
    subsections of this Article shall be distributed equally to the Beneficiaries,
    with one exception. [Dawn] has already received a significant portion of her
    inheritance and therefore, her share shall be reduced by twenty-five thousand
    dollars ($25,000. [sic]) [(“the advance”)], which amount shall be distributed
    proportionately to the other Beneficiaries.
    5
    Article VIII.b empowers the trustee to sell “any and all property at any time forming
    a part or all of the Trust Estate in such manner . . . and upon such terms and conditions as
    the trustee deems advisable.”
    Relevant Factual History
    On January 23, 2007, the same date on which the final amendment to the Trust was
    executed, Grandmother signed and delivered a letter to Trustee that asked him to take over
    as the successor trustee.
    Trustee recalled that in March 2007, Grandmother was willing to loan money to
    Derek after Uncle had refused to do so. Defendant’s Exhibit E, a copy of a check dated
    March 10, 2007 to Derek in the amount of $10,000, was admitted at trial. The exhibit
    indicated that the check was drawn on the account for “WILMA G. OR DAREL J. JAMES”
    and bore Grandmother’s signature. During examination by Grandchildren’s counsel,
    Trustee was asked, “So are you saying that [Grandmother] said she was going to loan her
    money or loan the trust money? Or do you know?” Trustee replied, “I think in that
    particular case it was her money.” Trustee thought there were no terms for repayment
    except “that if [Derek] didn’t pay it back before [Grandmother] died, it would be taken out
    of his portion of the distribution” from the Trust.
    Trustee spent $7,500 from the Trust on two charitable donations in 2011, one to the
    Snodgrass Cemetery and one to the Vichy Community “organization or park or something.”
    Trustee recalled that Grandmother had “donated money every year to the Snodgrass
    cemetery, and we had not done it for quite some time.” Trustee stated, “[Grandmother] had
    a C.D. coming due, so I just thought it was time to catch up on her donations.” Trustee
    thought he “probably” discussed this with Grandmother, “[b]ut she always donated money.”
    6
    Grandmother and Trustee’s father had previously donated money and “time to the Vichy
    park” “up until a few years ago[.]” Trustee knew that his parents “were very proud of the
    Vichy area[,]” and he gave $2,500 from the Trust to improve the park.
    Trustee testified that when he became trustee, he had an accountant prepare an
    accounting for the Trust every year, but he did not communicate this to Uncle and
    Grandchildren while Grandmother was alive. Grandmother passed away in June 2012.
    Trustee paid $14,000 from the Trust for Grandmother’s funeral expenses at the mortuary
    owned by Uncle. Derek did not object to the payment of the funeral expenses from the
    assets of the Trust. Dawn testified that half of the funeral expenses should be paid by a
    source other than the Trust because she did not believe the funeral cost that much. After
    Grandmother’s death, Trustee obtained “death certificates and cashed in the C.D.s” to
    distribute some of the Trust money. “A couple of weeks after the funeral[,]” Trustee met
    with Uncle and Grandchildren. Three days before this meeting, Dawn received a copy of
    the Trust, and she retained counsel two days before the meeting.
    At the meeting, Trustee distributed money from the “C.D.s” in “the way [he] thought
    the [T]rust wanted it distributed.” A handwritten schedule admitted as Defendant’s Exhibit
    O showed $200,000 divided by 3, then one share of that divided again to make distributions
    of $66,666.67 each to Uncle and Trustee, $33,333.34 to Derek, and $8,333.34 to Dawn
    ($33,333.34 minus the $25,000 advance).7 Trustee eventually distributed the $25,000
    among uncles and Derek, with 2/5 going to each uncle and 1/5 to Derek.
    Trustee told Derek at the meeting that there had been “two $10,000 loans” to Derek -
    - one in 2007 and another in 2006 -- that Trustee wanted Derek to repay from his share of
    the Trust, but this “didn’t go very well.” Trustee thought that Derek recalled only one check
    7
    We will refer to these distributions as “the June distribution.”
    7
    in 2007, and Derek did not want to “pay it back[.]” So, Trustee deducted nothing from
    Derek’s share that day.
    Also at the meeting, Trustee informed the others that “as soon as the deal was made
    [to sell the farm, he] would distribute the money.” No one objected to a distribution of cash
    proceeds from the sale of the farm. Trustee recalled that the discussion at the meeting “was
    that “[Uncle] was going to buy [the farm,]” but price was not discussed. A June 2012
    appraisal of the farm was admitted into evidence as “Defendant’s Exhibit I,” and it valued
    the farm at $253,000.
    In July 2012, Dawn’s attorney sent a letter to Trustee challenging Trustee’s
    appointment as successor trustee before Grandmother’s death. The letter claimed that the
    execution of the 2007 amendment to the Trust should be voided, and it also requested an
    accounting. A response from Trustee’s attorney pointed out, among other things, that
    Grandmother “retained the power to direct under [section 456.8-808] even though the
    direction might have been contrary to the terms of the [T]rust.” Later that month, Trustee’s
    counsel supplied Dawn’s counsel with copies of bank records and other documentation
    concerning the Trust from 2007 to “the most recent [bank] statement in 2012.” The letter
    accompanying these documents also advised Dawn’s counsel that the uncles intended to buy
    the farm “[i]n accordance with the provisions of the [T]rust,” and that the farm had been
    appraised at $253,000. The letter did not further detail the terms of the anticipated purchase
    by the uncles, and the letter did not indicate that a copy was sent to Derek.
    In early August 2012, Dawn’s counsel sent a letter to Trustee’s counsel requesting
    additional information, including Trustee’s annual accountings and specific accountings for
    8
    things like certificates of deposit and rents, details of Grandmother’s funeral expenses, and
    details for specific checks written on one of the Trust’s bank accounts.
    Trustee’s counsel replied with a letter providing some additional information
    responsive to this request, and, regarding the sale of the farm, the letter stated: “We will be
    closing on the sale of the [farm] in the next few days. After that is done and we have taken
    steps to prepare a final tax return, I will prepare a proposed distribution and provide you
    with a copy.” The letter does not indicate that a copy was sent to Derek.
    Respondents purchased the farm at the end of August 2012. Each couple wrote a
    check for “$126,000 and some change” toward a purchase price of $253,000. The total
    netted by the Trust, after settlement costs and a credit for prorated property taxes, was
    $252,096.07.
    When asked why he did not “do the financing over 10 years at 8 percent interest[,]”
    Trustee replied, “Who’s going to pay 8 percent interest, when you can go to the bank and
    borrow it for 2?” Trustee acknowledged that it was “cheaper” to buy the farm using a bank,
    and doing so meant that the beneficiaries would not “be collecting any interest.”
    On September 27, 2012, Trustee’s counsel sent letters to Dawn’s counsel and Derek
    (“September letters”) enclosing the schedule. The September letters highlighted that
    $25,000 was being withheld from Dawn’s distribution under the Trust, and $10,000 was
    being withheld from Derek’s “distribution as a set off for the balance due on [his]
    outstanding loan.” The September letters also advised the recipients of their right to object
    to the proposed distribution for “a period of thirty (30) days” following the date of each
    letter. The letters did not expressly refer to any “termination” of the Trust or to the terms of
    the sale of the farm to the uncles.
    9
    The schedule bore the title:
    WILMA G. JAMES TRUST
    SCHEDULE OF PROPOSED DISTRIBUTION
    The schedule reflected a checking account balance of $299,049.77, plus a “Partial
    Distribution” of $175,000.02, such that the Trust was shown as having assets worth
    $474,049.79. Attorney and trustee fees (plus taxes) were shown as subtractions, leaving net
    proceeds of $457,648.79 to be accounted for in beneficiary distributions “AS OF
    SEPTEMBER 15, 2012[.]” The schedule did not expressly identify the proceeds from the
    sale of the farm as part of the checking account balance, and it did not specifically refer to
    any termination or partial termination of the Trust.
    The schedule listed how the net proceeds would be divided, then provided the
    following summary of distribution payments to be made to the uncles and Grandchildren:
    [Uncle]
    1/3 of Trust                                 152,549.60
    Proportionate of $25,000                      10,000.00
    1/3 of Repayment of Loan                       3,333.33
    Partial Early Distribution Paid              -66,666.67
    6/23/2012
    Total to [Uncle]                                                $99,216.26
    [Trustee]
    1/3 of Trust                                 152,549.60
    Proportionate of $25,000                      10,000.00
    1/3 of Repayment of Loan                       3,333.33
    Partial Early Distribution Paid              -66,666.67
    6/23/2012
    Total to [Trustee]                                              $99,216.26
    [Dawn]
    1/6 of Trust Less $25,000                     51,274.79
    1/6 of Repayment of Loan                       1,666.67
    Partial Early Distribution Paid               -8,333.34
    6/23/2012
    Total to [Dawn]                                                 $44,608.12
    10
    [Derek]
    1/6 of Trust Less $10,000                             66,274.80
    Proportionate of $25,000                               5,000.00
    1/6 of Repayment of Loan                               1,666.67
    Partial Early Distribution Paid                      -33,333.34
    6/23/2012
    Total to [Derek]                                                             $39,608.13
    TOTAL DISTRIBUTIONS                                                         $282,648.77
    OF TRUST
    Derek testified that he received the schedule “and spoke to a lawyer” about it, but he
    sent no objection to Trustee. Dawn testified that she received the schedule, but she “did
    not” notify Trustee of any objection to it. On October 26, 2012, Trustee issued a check from
    the Trust to Derek for the listed distribution amount of $39,608.13 and another to Dawn for
    the listed distribution amount of $44,608.12. The checks were accompanied by letters
    requesting that each return an enclosed “RECEIPT OF DISTRIBUTION” (“receipt”)
    certifying that the individual received the check “as distribution of the [Trust.]” The receipts
    did not expressly state that the distribution resulted from a termination of the Trust, that
    consent was given to any other action by Trustee, or that Trustee was being released from
    any breach of trust. Derek executed his receipt and returned it to Trustee; Dawn did not.
    Both checks had cleared the Trust’s bank account by mid-November 2012.8
    Pertinent Procedural History
    Grandchildren’s third amended petition alleged that Trustee had breached his
    fiduciary duties as trustee under sections 456.8-801-804 and 813, and that Respondents had
    been unjustly enriched by Trustee’s administration of the Trust.9 Respondents’ answer
    8
    We will refer to these distributions as “the September distribution.”
    9
    The docket included in the legal file does not go back as far as the filing of the original petition; it does show
    that the case was transferred to the probate division on February 25, 2013. Grandchildren assert that they
    “filed suit” “[a]pproximately four months” after Trustee mailed out checks as described in the schedule, but
    they simply cite their third amended petition in support of this statement. Respondents maintain that
    11
    included affirmative defenses asserting that Grandchildren were “barred from seeking . . .
    relief” because: (1) Grandchildren did not object to the schedule within 30 days pursuant to
    section 456.8-817; and (2) Trustee acted in good faith in making all decisions regarding the
    Trust.
    Before the September 2014 trial began, Grandchildren filed a written “REQUEST
    FOR FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW” that presented 24
    questions. The parties were permitted an opportunity to file after-trial briefs, proposed
    findings of fact and conclusions of law, and proposed judgments for the trial court to
    consider.
    The trial court’s October 2014 judgment found “the issues in favor of [Respondents]
    and against [Grandchildren]” and contained legal conclusions that followed specific factual
    findings. A summary of those findings and conclusions will be included in our analysis of
    Grandchildren’s points.
    Grandchildren filed a motion to amend the judgment (“the motion”) that asserted the
    “judgment fails to include findings on most of the controverted fact issues specified by
    [Grandchildren].” The motion specifically requested an amended judgment “that . . .
    includes findings and conclusions on issues [Grandchildren] requested prior to the
    hearing[,]” but it identified no particular requests that should have been addressed in the
    judgment. The motion was denied after a hearing on the matter, and this appeal timely
    followed.
    Analysis
    For ease of analysis, we address Grandchildren’s points out of order.
    Grandchildren filed their lawsuit on January 21, 2013, but they do not cite the record in support of this
    statement. The trial court found that the original petition was filed on January 21, 2013.
    12
    Point VIII—Request for Findings
    Grandchildren contend in Point VIII that the trial court “failed to issue findings on
    all issues that [Grandchildren] requested.” In support, they rely on Rule 73.01(c)’s
    provision that a trial “shall include in the opinion findings on the controverted material facts
    issues specified by the party.” Grandchildren further assert that they had requested findings
    on whether five
    acts of [Trustee’s] were breaches of his fiduciary duties: his 2007 assumption of the
    role of successor trustee; his participation in the 2007 second amendment transaction with
    [Grandmother] that resulted in increasing his share of the trust distribution; his failure to
    inform [Grandchildren] at any time prior to [Grandmother’s] death that he had assumed the
    role of trustee; his failure to deposit the rent money he received into the trust account or
    otherwise credibly account for it; his claim that Derek took a loan from the trust when the
    trust contains a “spendthrift provision” that forbids loans to beneficiaries, and his act of
    sending [Grandchildren] a proposed distribution schedule that he knew was not in
    accordance with trust provisions without telling [Grandchildren] of this fact.
    “[T]he failure of a trial court to make such findings mandates reversal only when the
    trial court's failure to issue requested findings materially interferes with appellate review.”
    Valentine v. Valentine, 
    400 S.W.3d 14
    , 20 (Mo. App. E.D. 2013). Here, Grandchildren’s
    motion made a broad request that the judgment should be amended to include “findings and
    conclusions on issues [Grandchildren] requested prior to the hearing[,]” but it identified no
    particular requests that should have been addressed. More significantly, Grandchildren
    make no attempt to explain to us how a lack of any particularly requested finding materially
    interferes with the review they seek on appeal. We are not permitted to formulate such an
    argument for them. Cf. Kline v. City of Kansas City, 
    334 S.W.3d 632
    , 648 (Mo. App. W.D.
    2011) (“this Court cannot develop arguments for a party that were not made before the trial
    court and that are still not developed after a full opportunity to brief them on appeal”). Point
    VIII is denied.
    13
    Points II-IV ‒ No Proof of Damages Regarding Sale of the Farm & Failure to Report
    Point II insists the trial court erred in finding that Trustee violated no fiduciary duty
    by selling the farm as he did because there was “no evidence” that the Trust was ambiguous
    concerning the sale of the farm.10 Points III and IV assert the trial court misapplied the law
    in denying Grandchildren relief because they did not prove damages resulting from,
    respectively, the conveyance of the farm to Trustee and Trustee’s “fail[ure] to report to the
    beneficiaries[.]” We address these points together because there was no evidence that
    Grandchildren were damaged or harmed by Trustee’s sale of the farm or failure to report.
    The trial court concluded that the purchase of the farm by Respondents “was not in
    strict compliance with Article IV of the [Trust,]” but Grandchildren demonstrated no loss as
    a result because Trustee “could easily have purchased the [farm] under the first option, and
    simultaneously conveyed an interest in it to [Uncle].” The trial court concluded that Trustee
    failed to follow the requirements of Article VIII of the Trust by failing to account to
    Grandchildren until after Grandmother’s death. The trial court also found, however, that an
    accounting was eventually made “in the course of this litigation” and Grandchildren “have
    failed to demonstrate any evidence of loss or damage by reason of the Trustee’s failure to
    account between January 23, 2007 and the date of [Grandmother’s] death.”11
    “To prevail on a breach of fiduciary duty, a plaintiff must show: (1) the existence of
    a fiduciary duty; (2) a breach of that fiduciary duty; (3) causation; and (4) harm.” Robert T.
    McLean Irrevocable Trust u/a/d March 31, 1999 ex rel. McLean v. Ponder, 
    418 S.W.3d 482
    , 490 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013). “The element of harm or damages cannot ‘rest upon
    10
    Point II is incorrectly couched as an evidentiary challenge. Because the Trust was admitted into evidence, if
    Grandchildren had proven damages (see discussion infra) the appropriate issue on appeal would have been the
    trial court’s legal interpretation of its language.
    11
    Based on our resolution of points I and IV, infra, we do not need to determine whether Grandchildren
    qualified as “Beneficiaries” of the Trust before Grandmother died.
    14
    guesswork, conjecture, or speculation beyond inferences that can reasonably decide the
    case[.]’” 
    Id. at 496
    (quoting Englezos v. Newspress & Gazette Co., 
    980 S.W.2d 25
    , 30 (Mo.
    App. W.D. 1998)).
    Regarding the farm, Grandchildren maintain that they “actually did demonstrate
    damages through [Trustee]’s admission that [Grandchildren] were cheated out of ten year
    favorable [sic] interest payments[.]” Trustee acknowledged that it was cheaper for him to
    buy the farm without financing it “over 10 years at 8 percent interest[,]” and that doing so
    would result in the beneficiaries not collecting interest payments, but he did not admit to
    cheating anyone in the transaction. More importantly, Grandchildren presented no evidence
    that Trustee, Uncle, or Derek would have purchased the farm via financing at 8% interest
    payable to the Trust over 10 years had Respondents been denied the opportunity to simply
    pay the appraised price for the farm all at once. Uncles did not have to buy the farm. There
    is no basis short of conjecture for the proposition that Grandchildren were harmed by the
    sale of the farm to uncles for its appraised value.
    Grandchildren also insist that proof of damages is not required “when there is
    evidence of self-dealing involving a trustee’s acquisition of trust property” and argue that a
    trustee’s conveyance of “trust property to himself and his wife, brother, and sister-in-law . . .
    is presumed to be a conflict of interest under [s]ection 456.8-802.3.” Section 456.8-802.3,
    subsections (1) and (2), provides that “[a] sale . . . is presumed to be affected by a conflict
    between personal and fiduciary interests if it is entered into by the trustee with” certain
    persons having the relationship of spouse, sibling, or spouse of a sibling. Section 456.8-
    802.2 provides, inter alia:
    Subject to the rights of persons dealing with or assisting the trustee as
    provided in section 456.10-1012, a sale . . . of trust property entered into by
    15
    the trustee for the trustee’s own personal account or which is otherwise
    affected by a conflict between the trustee’s fiduciary and personal interests is
    voidable by a beneficiary affected by the transaction unless [an enumerated
    exception applies.]”[12]
    (Emphasis added.)
    The critical question here is not whether the transaction could be “presumed to be
    affected by a conflict[,]” but whether the sale of the farm was voidable given that it did
    involve the rights of persons other than Trustee. See section 456.8-802.2 and .3. Section
    456.10-1012.1 and .2 provide:
    A person other than a beneficiary who in good faith assists a trustee,
    or who in good faith and for value deals with a trustee, without
    knowledge that the trustee is exceeding or improperly exercising the
    trustee’s powers is protected from liability as if the trustee properly
    exercised the power.
    A person other than a beneficiary who in good faith deals with a
    trustee is not required to inquire into the extent of the trustee’s powers
    or the propriety of their exercise.
    Thus, while the inclusion of a trustee’s sibling and the spouses of the trustee and
    sibling may be considered in determining whether there is a conflict in the transaction, see
    section 456.8-802.3, the voiding of such a conflicted transaction under section 456.8-802 is
    subject to the protections of section 456.10-1012. Grandchildren cite no authority for the
    proposition that a spouse of a trustee or a spouse of a beneficiary is excluded from the
    12
    One such exception is that “the transaction was authorized by the terms of the trust[.]” Section 456.8-
    802.2(1). Grandchildren are correct that Article IV.b.1 provided that if the farm was sold to Trustee as one of
    three listed individuals, it “shall be sold” using the promissory note(s) requiring 8% interest over the course of
    ten years and that this is not how the farm was sold. However, we need not determine whether language in:
    (1) Article VIII.b that authorized Trustee to sell trust property “in such manner and at such time . . . upon such
    terms and conditions as the [t]rustee deems advisable” and (2) Article VIII.p permitting Trustee to do what he
    “deems to be for the benefit of said trust and the Beneficiaries thereof, whether or not such acts and things be
    hereinabove specifically mentioned” would have authorized Trustee to sell the farm to Respondents in the
    manner it was sold because, as earlier noted, there was no evidence suggesting that the sale of the farm was
    harmful to the Trust or the Beneficiaries.
    16
    protection of section 456.10-1012 under the circumstances present in this case, and they
    assert no error by the trial court regarding any ruling concerning Donna and Connie.
    In their argument regarding Trustee’s failure to report to them, Grandchildren cite
    section 456.10-1001 in support of their position that they are “not required to prove
    damages, only a breach of trust, in order to receive the relief they requested in their
    [p]etition.”13 First, Grandchildren do not identify specifically what “relief” they were
    requesting and why that particular form of relief was the appropriate remedy. They also fail
    to cite any authority for the proposition that some relief identified as possible under section
    456.10-1001 must be ordered in the absence of any demonstrated harm.
    Points II, III, and IV are denied.
    13
    Section 456.10-1001 states:
    1. A violation by a trustee of a duty the trustee owes to a beneficiary is a breach of trust.
    2. To remedy a breach of trust that has occurred or may occur, the court may:
    (1) compel the trustee to perform the trustee’s duties;
    (2) enjoin the trustee from committing a breach of trust;
    (3) compel the trustee to redress a breach of trust by paying money, restoring property, or
    other means;
    (4) order a trustee to account;
    (5) appoint a special fiduciary to take possession of the trust property and administer the
    trust;
    (6) suspend the trustee;
    (7) remove the trustee as provided in section 456.7-706;
    (8) reduce or deny compensation to the trustee;
    (9) subject to section 456.10-1012, void an act of the trustee, impose a lien or a constructive
    trust on trust property, or trace trust property wrongfully disposed of and recover the
    property or its proceeds; or
    (10) order any other appropriate relief.
    (Emphasis added.)
    17
    Point I ‒ Trustee’s Fiduciary Duties to Grandchildren
    In their first point, Grandchildren assert that because Trustee “began acting as a
    trustee and accepted delivery of trust property” in 2007, the trial court erred in declaring that
    Trustee did not owe “fiduciary duties to [Grandchildren.]” Grandchildren’s argument
    reiterates that “[t]he trial court in this case held that [Trustee] did not owe [Grandchildren]
    any fiduciary duties.”
    The page of the judgment cited by Grandchildren does not include a finding that
    Trustee did not owe Grandchildren any fiduciary duties. The closest language we find on
    the referenced page states:
    12. There is no evidence of a significant breach of Trust by [Trustee].
    Section 456.7-706 . . . provides that a Court may remove a trustee if the
    [t]rustee has committed a serious breach of [t]rust. Although [Trustee] failed
    to account to [Grandchildren] for his transactions as [t]rustee between 2007
    and 2012, there is no evidence of any loss or damage suffered by
    [Grandchildren] as a result thereof. Although [Grandchildren] have
    requested a finding as to whether a fiduciary relationship existed between
    [Grandmother], [Respondents14] and [Grandchildren], the Court finds no such
    fiduciary relationship existed because [Grandmother] was the Settlor of the
    Trust and retained powers to amend or revoke it. The Court further finds and
    declares that there was no violation of any fiduciary duty by [Trustee] for any
    of the reasons requested in [Grandchildren’s] Request for Findings of Fact
    and Conclusions of Law.
    Even if the trial court’s finding that a fiduciary relationship did not exist between
    Grandmother, Respondents, and Grandchildren was understood to mean that Trustee did not
    owe Grandchildren any fiduciary duties beginning in 2007 and continuing for the duration of
    Grandmother’s life, Grandchildren cannot obtain a reversal based on Point I as “an appellate
    court is not to reverse a judgment unless it believes the error committed by the trial court
    14
    The judgment used the term “Defendants,” and we understand this reference to apply to all Respondents
    instead of solely to Trustee.
    18
    against the appellant materially affected the merits of the action.” Lewis v. Wahl, 
    842 S.W.2d 82
    , 84-85 (Mo. banc 1992).
    Here, the trial court also found that although Trustee had not accounted to
    Grandchildren for trust transactions “between 2007 and 2012,” there was “no evidence of
    any loss or damage” resulting from such a failure, and Trustee had not violated “any
    fiduciary duty” based upon “any of the reasons” that Grandchildren had suggested. As
    previously discussed, Grandchildren have failed to demonstrate any harm resulting from
    Trustee’s failure to report to them. Thus, whether the trial court alternatively found that
    Trustee owed no fiduciary duties to Grandchildren before Grandmother died has no legal
    significance in the resolution of this appeal. Point I is denied.
    Point VII ‒ Trustee’s Power to Make Particular Payments
    Point VII contends that the trial court misapplied sections 456.5-505.3 and 456.8-815
    in denying Grandchildren “any relief” because Respondents waived any affirmative
    defenses Trustee might have had based on these statutes by failing to assert them as required
    by Rule 55.08 and these statutes do not excuse a trustee’s breach of fiduciary duty.15 In the
    argument supporting the point, Grandchildren narrow the context of the point by stating that
    “[t]he trial court held that [Trustee] did not breach any of his fiduciary duties by paying
    [Uncle’s] funeral home $14,000 of trust money after [Grandmother]’s death, or by making
    personal donations out of trust money because of the application of [s]ections 456.8-815 or
    456.5-505.3.” “[I]f an argument is narrower than a point relied on, our review is limited to
    15
    Section 456.5-505 is entitled “Creditor’s claim against settlor[,]” and subsection .3 identifies circumstances
    in which a creditor may make a claim against an irrevocable trust despite a spendthrift provision. Section
    456.8-815 is entitled “General powers of trustee” and includes powers as provided in the trust along with
    specified powers as limited in the trust, such as those powers that an owner of property would enjoy. Section
    456.8-815.2 specifically provides that “[t]he exercise of a power is subject to the fiduciary duties prescribed by
    section 456.8-801 to 456.8-814.” Section 456.5-505 says nothing about a defense to a claim of breach of
    fiduciary duty.
    19
    that argument.” 8000 Maryland, LLC v. Huntleigh Fin. Servs. Inc., 
    292 S.W.3d 439
    , 445
    (Mo. App. E.D. 2009).
    As to the pages of the judgment cited by Grandchildren, we see no finding that
    Grandchildren were denied “any relief” by virtue of these statutes; rather, the trial court
    concluded that “the gifts or donations that [Trustee] made to the cemetery and community
    association were allowable under [s]ection 456.8-815 which provides in part that, ‘a Trustee,
    without authorization by the Court, may exercise . . . all powers over Trust property which
    an unmarried competent owner has over individually owned property.’” The trial court also
    concluded that “Trustee was authorized to pay the funeral bill in the approximate amount of
    $14,000.00.” The trial court found that “a funeral claim is a priority claim. Recovery of the
    funeral bill could have been sought by the funeral provider from the Trustee under [s]ection
    456.5-505.3[.]”16
    It was Grandchildren’s burden to prove that payment of a particular donation or the
    funeral bill was a breach of trust, see Jarvis v. Boatmen’s Nat’l Bank of St. Louis, 
    478 S.W.2d 266
    , 273 (Mo. 1972); it was not Respondent’s burden to disprove it. And whether
    such a duty was breached is a question of fact for the trial court to determine. See 
    Blair, 317 S.W.3d at 86
    ; 
    Watermann, 369 S.W.3d at 75
    . Significantly, the trial court did not find that
    either the donations or the payment of the funeral bill constituted breaches of fiduciary duty.
    Point VII and the argument supporting it are devoid of any explanation as to how the trial
    court erred in so finding, and Grandchildren do not explain why the alleged error was
    material. See 
    Lewis, 842 S.W.2d at 84-85
    (unless the error “materially affected the merits of
    the action[,]” there is no reversal).
    16
    The trial court also found that Derek did not contest the funeral bill at all, and Dawn contested it only as to
    its amount.
    20
    Point VII is denied.
    Point V ‒ Failure to Object to the Schedule
    Grandchildren’s fifth point states, verbatim:
    The trial court erred in ruling that [Grandchildren] were not entitled to
    any relief by reason of their failure to object to [the schedule] because the
    court erroneously declared and applied the law in that the court failed to
    consider that [Trustee] did not send any such schedule when he made the first
    distribution, nor did the court apply the law to [Trustee]’s admitted improper
    conduct of concealing from [Grandchildren] information necessary for them
    to make an informed decision regarding [the schedule], and also sending
    [Grandchildren] a proposed distribution schedule that [Trustee] knew did not
    follow the [T]rust directions.
    The point does not state a concise legal reason for the alleged error as required by Rule
    84.04(d)(1)(B), see Roberson v. KMR Constr., LLC, 
    208 S.W.3d 320
    , 322 (Mo. App. E.D.
    2006), and it asserts several error claims in a single point. Such a multifarious point does
    not comply with Rule 84.04(d) and fails to preserve an issue for review. Spradling v.
    Treasurer of State, 
    415 S.W.3d 126
    , 134 (Mo. App. S.D. 2013). Despite the violation, we
    may choose to review a multifarious point, or a part of it, ex gratia. See 
    id. The trial
    court made the following findings relevant to our analysis of this point:
    After Grandmother’s death, Grandchildren “were told that [Uncle] would purchase the real
    estate for cash, and cash would be distributed.” Grandchildren “were notified in writing of
    [Trustee]’s intended distribution of the balance of the entire Trust estate” and “of their
    statutory right to object to the proposed distribution for a period of thirty (30) days[,]” but
    Grandchildren did not object. “[N]o credible evidence [indicates] that [Trustee] acted other
    than in good faith and with the intent to handle the estate in a manner which would carry out
    the wishes of [Grandmother].”17 Based upon these factual findings, the trial court concluded
    17
    Grandchildren do not challenge the trial court’s finding that Trustee acted in good faith in handling the trust
    estate.
    21
    that “[e]ach of the [Grandchildren] have waived their right to challenge the form and amount
    of distribution made by [Trustee] by reason of their failure to object to the [schedule] as
    provided by [s]ection 456.8-817[.]”
    Although Point V fails to state a legal reason why these findings and the court’s
    conclusion were erroneous, the argument that follows the point claims that the limitation on
    a beneficiary’s ability to object to a proposed partial or final distribution under section
    456.8-817.1 does not apply to Grandchildren because “exceptions” in section 456.8-817.3
    apply instead. We review that claim, ex gratia.
    Section 456.8-817.1 provides:
    Upon termination or partial termination of a trust, the trustee may send to the
    beneficiaries a proposal for distribution. The right of any beneficiary to
    object to the proposed distribution terminates if the beneficiary does not
    notify the trustee of an objection within thirty days after the proposal was
    sent but only if the proposal informed the beneficiary of the right to object
    and of the time allowed for objection.
    Grandchildren do not challenge the trial court’s finding that the schedule informed
    Grandchildren of their right to object to the proposed distribution and the time allowed for
    doing so.
    Section 456.8-817.3 provides:
    A release by a beneficiary of a trustee from liability for breach of
    trust is invalid to the extent:
    (1) it was induced by improper conduct of the trustee; or
    (2) the beneficiary, at the time of the release, did not know of the
    beneficiary’s rights or of the material facts relating to the breach.
    (Emphasis added.)
    No evidence in the record indicates that Trustee requested (let alone received) from
    Grandchildren any release from liability for breach of trust, and Grandchildren do not
    otherwise address how or why section 456.8-817.3 must be interpreted as an “exception” to
    22
    section 456.8-817.1. The case they cite in support of their claim, John R. Boyce Family
    Trust v. Snyder, 
    128 S.W.3d 630
    , 637-38 (Mo. App. E.D. 2004), does not construe section
    456.8-817.3. Grandchildren, as the appellants in this case, have the burden of demonstrating
    trial court error, and they have failed to do so here. Point V is denied.
    Points VI and IX‒ Offset Based on a Loan from Grandmother
    and Grandchildren’s Share of the Trust
    Grandchildren’s sixth point claims the trial court misapplied section 456.8-811 in
    ruling that Trustee “was entitled to enforce a $10,000 claim against Derek as an offset for
    repayment of a loan . . . [that] the trial court found . . . was from [Grandmother] and not the
    trust.” Point IX contends the trial court misapplied the law in “fail[ing] to give the legally
    unambiguous term per capita its well understood meaning” when it ruled that Trustee “did
    not breach any fiduciary duties by distributing shares of the trust assets in a manner other
    than per capita[.]” We address these points together because they are controlled by the
    same analysis.
    The trial court concluded “that [Derek] was justly indebted to [Grandmother] for the
    sum of $10,000.00 by reason of the loan that had been made to him, and [Trustee] was
    entitled to enforce a claim pursuant to [section 456.8-811] by offsetting the sum of
    $10,000.00 from the distributive share of [Derek].” The trial court also concluded:
    The Trust provides for an equal division of the Trust assets between
    [Grandmother’s] three sons as a class, and an equal division of [George’s]
    share among his children as a class. Accordingly, [Dawn] and [Derek] are
    not entitled to an equal distribution of Trust assets with [Trustee] and
    [Uncle], but rather they are entitled to share equally their father’s part of the
    trust estate.
    Before a judgment may be reversed, an appellant must demonstrate that “all of the
    reasons” the trial court relied on as supporting a challenged ruling in the judgment “were
    23
    wrong.” City of Peculiar v. Hunt Martin Materials, LLC, 
    274 S.W.3d 588
    , 591 (Mo. App.
    W.D. 2009). Thus, the failure to challenge an alternative basis supporting the trial court’s
    ruling “is fatal to [the] appeal.” STRCUE, Inc. v. Potts, 
    386 S.W.3d 214
    , 219 (Mo. App.
    W.D. 2012). Even if we would otherwise find merit in points VI and IX, the trial court
    found that Grandchildren had “waived their right to challenge the form and amount of
    distribution made by [Trustee] by reason of their failure to object to the [schedule] as
    provided by [s]ection 456.8-817[.]” For the reasons expressed in our analysis of Point V,
    Grandchildren have failed to demonstrate that this basis for the trial court’s ruling was
    erroneous.
    Points VI and IX are also denied, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
    DON E. BURRELL, P.J. – OPINION AUTHOR
    NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J. – CONCURS
    GARY W. LYNCH, J. - CONCURS
    24