Burma v. Stransky

357 N.W.2d 82, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1461
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 14, 1984
DocketC3-83-282 to C9-83-884
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 357 N.W.2d 82 (Burma v. Stransky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burma v. Stransky, 357 N.W.2d 82, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1461 (Mich. 1984).

Opinion

WAHL, Justicé.

Charles Stransky and Jadeo Special Haulers, Inc./David J. Morris (Jadeo) appeal from an order of the Pine County District Court vacating the judgment of dismissal in a personal injury action brought against them on behalf of John Burma (Suit A). The district court vacated the judgment of dismissal because it was based on a stipulation of settlement entered into by Burma’s guardian, whose appointment by the Pine County Probate Court was found by the district court to be invalid for lack of probate court jurisdiction. We reverse and reinstate the original judgment of dismissal in Suit A.

Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers) appeals the dismissal without prejudice of claims made against it and others in a second personal injury action (Suit B) brought by a substituted guardian on Burma’s behalf based on the same injury as in Suit A. The district court, on vacating the judgment in Suit A, granted the Suit B defendants’ motions for summary judgment and dismissed the claims in Suit B without prejudice as to each of the defendants. We affirm the granting of summary judgment for defendants and reverse the dismissal without prejudice as to each defendant.

On March 3, 1980, John Burma, then 76 years old, suffered a subdural hematoma and other serious injuries in an automobile accident. David Morris, driving a truck owned by Jadeo, rear-ended the vehicle driven by Charles Stransky, in which Burma was a passenger, as it entered Interstate Highway 35W south of Pine City, Minnesota. After the accident, Burma’s nieces, Bernie Masden and Sylvia Wieben-ga, came to Minnesota from their homes in South Dakota to visit Burma in the hospital and to arrange for his care. While here, they contacted attorney Jay L. Bennett on Burma’s behalf with regard to commencing litigation. Bennett met with Burma and obtained Burma’s signature on a contingent fee agreement and Burma’s authorization to allow other lawyers associated with Bennett to review Burma’s medical records. Attorney Thomas Hunziker, who was associated with Bennett, pursued Burma’s personal injury action by bringing Suit A on June 19, 1980, against Stransky, Morris, and Jadeo.

On July 18, 1980, Bennett wrote to Mas-den and Wiebenga, telling them that he had obtained Burma’s signature on the contingent fee agreement and had explained the personal injury action to him. He also indicated the possible need for a guardian for Burma in order to continue the action and warned the nieces not to expend a lot of money on Burma’s behalf, because any recovery in the suit would not likely be large due to Burma’s age.

Burma recovered from his injuries by the fall of 1980, but his physicians concluded that he was incompetent to pursue a legal action. A guardian therefore became necessary. Bennett contacted Masden and Wiebenga, both of whom declined to assume the responsibilities of guardian for Burma because they lived so far away.

On November 6, 1980, Bennett wrote to Barbara Burke, Wiebenga’s daughter who lived in Blaine, Minnesota, with copies to Masden and Wiebenga, requesting that Burke serve as petitioner to appoint Bennett’s secretary, Deborah Carlson, guardian for John Burma. There was no written reply to this letter from any of the relatives until the following March. Early in *85 December 1980, Bennett filed with the Pine County Probate Court a petition for the appointment of Carlson as guardian for Burma. Carlson was also the petitioner, and the petition listed Masden, Wiebenga and Burke as nearest kindred. The probate court ordered a hearing on the petition for December 22, 1980, and further ordered copies served on Burma, the director of the nursing home where Burma lived and on the relatives. Notice was personally served on Burma and the director, but no notice was ever served on any of the relatives. Bennett, Carlson and Burma appeared at the hearing on the petition. A letter from Burma’s neurosurgeon, Dr. P. Thienprasit, was introduced into the record, advising that a guardian be appointed to handle Burma’s personal affairs. The probate court granted the petition and issued letters of guardianship to Carlson. The probate court was aware that Carlson was Bennett’s secretary and that the purpose of the guardianship was to pursue the personal injury action.

On March 2, 1981, Masden responded in writing to Bennett’s letter of November 6, 1980. She said that neither she nor Wie-benga wanted an “outsider” appointed guardian; that the guardian should be her husband or herself; and that they would like to move Burma to a nursing home in South Dakota, where they could better look after his needs. There was no written response to this letter from Bennett. On May 4, 1981, Masden again wrote, asking to move Burma to South Dakota and requesting information as to how the law suit was progressing and the state of Burma’s finances. Bennett replied with a list of Burma’s expenses. On May 20, 1981, Mas-den again wrote for information as to how the suit was progressing, stating that she felt “in the dark on things.” Bennett replied that they were taking depositions and arranging expert testimony and that the “legal process consumes much time.”

On June 29, 1981, Hunziker sent a letter to Richard Lind, attorney for Charles Stransky, and Eugene Buckley, attorney for Jadeo and David Morris. The letter proposed a settlement of Burma’s personal injury action.

That fall, during a visit with Burma in the nursing home, Masden became suspicious about the guardianship arrangements. She wrote to Bennett on October 13, 1981, saying that unless he informed them of what was going on, they were going to find a different attorney. Bennett wrote back that his client was John Burma, not Masden or Wiebenga, and that, since his “office has assumed an additional burden in agreeing to function as Burma’s fiduciary during the course of these proceedings,” he was accountable only to Burma. This was the first notice to Masden, Wiebenga or Burke that the guardianship matter had been finalized.

Masden and Wiebenga retained attorney Jerry Rachetto of Deadwood, South Dakota, to look into the matter. On October 21, 1981, Buckley and Lind, the defendants’ attorneys, received a letter from Rachetto stating that there were problems with the guardianship and that Bennett was to be dismissed as attorney for Burma. Hunziker wrote a letter to Buckley and Lind on October 26,1981, stating that the guardianship appointment was proper and was done with the “full knowledge and consent” of Masden and Weibenga. Rachetto wrote to Bennett on October 27, 1981, specifically objecting to the continuation of any settlement attempts.

Following a telephone conversation on November 19, 1981, Buckley wrote to Hun-ziker, confirming agreement to a settlement offer by Hunziker. On December 10, 1981, Hunziker, Carlson and Burma appeared before the probate court and obtained approval of the proposed settlement. Burma’s participation at that hearing included his approval of the amount of the settlement, his concern that the money be deposited in a bank in a small town near the nursing home and his concern that the money be deposited so as to earn maximum interest.

Michael Fetsch, a Minnesota attorney who associated with Rachetto, wrote to Buckley and Lind on December 10, 1981, to *86 give notice that Burma’s relatives had moved the Pine County Probate Court to substitute Burke for Carlson as Burma’s guardian in a petition that was filed December 12, 1981.

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Bluebook (online)
357 N.W.2d 82, 1984 Minn. LEXIS 1461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burma-v-stransky-minn-1984.