RICHARD G. STEARNS, District Judge.
Plaintiffs — Carol Diane Cooper, the mother of Peter M. Cooper, Jr., who is deceased, and Peter Cooper's estate (represented by John Scott Cooper) — seek to recover from defendant Alyssa Jane D'Amore, who is Peter Cooper's ex-wife, assets distributed to her from an individual retirement account (IRA) that Peter Cooper had owned. Discovery having been concluded on September 14, 2015, the parties now move for summary judgment.
Peter Cooper and D'Amore were married in September of 2003. At all times relevant to this action, Peter Cooper and D'Amore were residents of Florida. In October of 2003, Peter Cooper established an IRA with Mesirow Financial Inc. (where he was then employed). He designated D'Amore as the primary IRA beneficiary, and his mother, Carol Cooper, as the contingent beneficiary.
Peter Cooper and D'Amore divorced in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in November of 2006. The Final Judgment of Dissolution of Marriage incorporated a Marital Settlement Agreement (MSA) reached between Peter Cooper and D'Amore. Among its provisions, the MSA stipulated that "[e]ach party shall continue to own as his or her own separate property any Individual Retirement Account (IRA), pension or retirement plan in his or her name, and each does hereby waive any claim to such account of the other." Am. Compl. Ex. 3-A — MSA at 4.
In August of 2011, Peter Cooper established a second IRA with TD Ameritrade. He designated his mother (plaintiff Carol Cooper) as the sole beneficiary. He transferred the assets in the Mesirow IRA to the new Ameritrade IRA. Because of a quirk in the securities law, Ameritrade was unable to hold certain bonds contained in the Mesirow account. These securities remained with Mesirow. Peter Cooper died in July of 2012. He did not change the 2003 designation of D'Amore as the beneficiary of the Mesirow IRA prior to his death. In January of 2013, Mesirow distributed the remaining IRA assets to D'Amore pursuant to the 2003 beneficiary designation.
Plaintiffs filed this case against D'Amore in October of 2014 alleging six claims — Conversion (Count I), Money Had and Received (Count II), Breach of the Marital Settlement Agreement (Count III), Breach of the IRA Trust Agreement (Count IV); Constructive Trust (Count V); and Accounting (Count VI). Plaintiffs seek summary judgment awarding the Mesirow IRA assets to either Carol Cooper or Peter Cooper's estate. D'Amore seeks summary judgment confirming her legal entitlement to the assets.
Summary judgment is warranted where "the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Fed. R. Civ. P. 56. As recited above, the essential underlying events are not disputed. Consequently, the court may resolve the contested legal issues, all of which involve interpretation of contracts and statutes, as a matter of law. See Weiss v. DHL Express, Inc., 718 F.3d 39, 44 (1st Cir. 2013); Hernandez-Miranda v. Empresas Diaz Masso, Inc., 651 F.3d 167, 170 (1st Cir. 2011).
D'Amore relies on her unrevoked designation as the primary beneficiary on the Mesirow IRA as the basis for her claim. Plaintiffs in turn tender four alternative legal theories challenging the validity of D'Amore's designation as a beneficiary. Plaintiffs first contend that D'Amore waived her interest to the Mesirow IRA by entering the MSA; second, that the governing Illinois law automatically revoked D'Amore's designation; third, that Peter Cooper's 2011 transfer of the assets to the Ameritrade IRA effectively cancelled the beneficiary designation; and fourth, that Florida law operated to void the designation after the transfer. Because the court finds that under Illinois state law, Peter Cooper's designation of D'Amore as the beneficiary was revoked at the time of their divorce, it is unnecessary to address the other three theories.
The parties agree that the Mesirow IRA, pursuant to the terms of the Mesirow Financial Client Agreement in effect at the time of Peter Cooper and D'Amore's divorce, was governed by Illinois state law. Plaintiffs assert that the Mesirow IRA was at the time of the divorce a trust within the meaning of the Illinois Trusts and Dissolutions of Marriage Act. That Act provides that
760 Ill. Comp. Stat. 35/1(a). Plaintiffs reason that upon the entry of the divorce decree, the Act revoked D'Amore's designation as the primary beneficiary on the Mesirow IRA "as if [D'Amore] had died." Consequently, the right to the IRA assets passed immediately to Carol Cooper as the contingent beneficiary.
D'Amore disputes that the Merisow IRA was an express trust governed by the Act. The Act, by its own terms, operates on
760 Ill. Comp. Stat. 35/1(c). D'Amore contends that the IRA was created as a custodial account, and that plaintiffs have no evidence that Peter Cooper ever executed the necessary documents to establish a trust. D'Amore also argues that to the extent that Mesirow labeled the IRA a trust, it was only to take advantage of favorable treatment under the Internal Revenue Code.
Under Illinois law, an IRA may be established either as a custodial account or as an express trust. "A custodial account IRA is not an express trust because there is no intent to establish a trust." In re Estate of Davis, 225 Ill.App.3d 998, 1007 (1992).
Id. The Court in Davis grappled with the applicability of the Trusts and Dissolution of Marriage Act in a fact pattern identical for all practical purposes to this one. Michael Davis designated his wife Carol as the sole beneficiary of his IRA and never undertook to change the designation after they divorced. Following Michael's death, both Carol and Michael's estate claimed the IRA proceeds. The Court found that the requirements to establish an express trust were met because
Id. By way of contrast, in Tucker the Court found that the IRAs in question did not constitute trusts giving rise to a fiduciary duty because
Tucker, 2012 IL App (1st) 103303 ¶ 34.
The record reflects that Peter Cooper expressly authorized the creation of a trust when he opened the Mesirow IRA. On the October of 2003 beneficiary designation form that serves as the only basis for D'Amore's claim to the IRA assets, Peter Cooper "appoint[ed] Delaware Charter to serve as Trustee." Am. Compl. Ex. 2-A.
That Peter Cooper authorized the assets to be held in trust by Delaware Charter is further supported by the 2003 Mesirow Financial Client Agreement he executed when he opened the IRA. The Client Agreement indicated that the "Institution Type" was "Delaware Charter Retirement Account (IRA, SEP, etc)."
Decl. of Ketan Shah Ex. C-1.
In sum, the court holds that by operation of the Illinois Trusts and Dissolutions of Marriage Act, D'Amore's designation as the IRA beneficiary was revoked "as if [she] had died upon entry of the judgment of judicial termination of the settlor's marriage." The remaining assets therefore belong to Carol Cooper as the contingent beneficiary.
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment is
SO ORDERED.