Drudge v. Brandt

698 N.E.2d 1245, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 566663
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 8, 1998
Docket25A03-9801-CV-35
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 698 N.E.2d 1245 (Drudge v. Brandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Drudge v. Brandt, 698 N.E.2d 1245, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 566663 (Ind. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

This appeal involves a dispute between Louise Drudge and her daughter, Jean Brandt, over an annuity purchased by Drudge that was placed in Brandt’s name. At trial, this case also involved a dispute between the two parties over money Drudge advanced to Brandt for the purchase of a home. Drudge appeals from a $57,799.05 judgment entered in favor of Drudge following a bench trial in the Fulton Circuit Court.

The following restated issues are presented in this appeal:

1. Did the trial court err in failing to order that the agreement pertaining to the annuity be rescinded and the annuity transferred to Drudge?
2. Did the trial court err in not finding that Brandt had committed constructive fraud and in not ordering that the annuity be placed in a constructive trust?

We affirm.

The facts most favorable to the judgment are as follows. In January 1997, the then-ninety-two-year-old Drudge filed a three-count complaint against Brandt, alleging in Count I that Brandt “took advantage of the mother/daughter relationship and prevailed upon [Drudge] to advance to [Brandt] the sum of ... $51,216.95 ... in order that [Brandt] could purchase a house in Rochester, Indiana.” Record at 162. Drudge further alleged that such funds were advanced to Brandt “with the specific understanding that the monies so advanced would be repaid by [Brandt] when [Brandt’s] house in Punta Gorda, Florida, sold.” Id. Drudge also alleged that Brandt had not repaid the money advanced to her even though she had sold her house in Florida in 1995. Drudge claimed that Brandt’s actions constituted a breach of contract as well as constructive fraud. She sought to recover punitive damages and to have a constructive trust placed upon Brandt’s house in Indiana, which was purchased using the money advanced by Drudge.

In Count II of the complaint, Drudge alleged that, in an attempt at estate planning, she agreed in September 1996 to transfer money into an annuity with Jackson National Life Insurance Company which was to be placed in Brandt’s name, and Brandt agreed to pay the interest income on the annuity to Drudge. According to Drudge, Brandt breached the agreement by failing to pay Drudge the interest income. Drudge sought money damages equal to the amount of the interest income paid or to be paid to Brandt, a rescission of the agreement, and to have ownership of the annuity transferred to her own name.

In Count III, Drudge again alleged constructive fraud and sought to have the annuity placed in a constructive trust and to recover punitive damages.

*1247 In her answer, Brandt denied that she took advantage of Drudge in any way. She admitted that Drudge had given her money for the purchase of a home in Indiana and that she had originally agreed to repay Drudge when she sold her home in Florida, but claimed that the agreement was later modified by the parties. In addition, Brandt admitted that Drudge transferred the Jackson National Life annuity to her, but denied that there was any agreement to pay the interest income from the annuity to Drudge.

As an affirmative defense, Brandt alleged that Drudge had been incapable of handling her own financial affairs for several years and had executed a power of attorney authorizing Carol Sue Barts, another of Drudge’s daughters, to handle all of her financial and business affairs. Brandt claimed that, after she had agreed to repay the money advanced to her for the home purchase, Barts, acting as attorney in fact for Drudge, decided to “gift a substantial sum of money by [Drudge] to Carol Sue Barts”, Record at 154, in order for Barts to purchase a house which was to be titled in Barts’s name and used for her own benefit. At such time, according to Brandt, she and Barts agreed that Brandt need not repay the money advanced to her for the purchase of the home in Indiana and that the advancement of such monies to Brandt and to Barts would be considered gifts in contemplation of Drudge’s death. Brandt further alleged that, at the same time Brandt’s annuity was purchased with Drudge’s money, Barts used Drudge’s money to purchase another annuity which was placed in Barts’s name. Brandt also alleged that Drudge’s money was invested in these annuities with the understanding that the annuities would be gifts in anticipation of Drudge’s death, and that Drudge did not reserve a right to receive interest payments from either annuity.

At trial, Greg Brown, an insurance agent, testified that he had numerous discussions with Drudge, Brandt, and Barts about investing some of Drudge’s money in annuities that would be set up in Brandt’s and Barts’s names. According to Brown, Drudge wanted half of the money put into Brandt’s name and the other half put in Barts’s name. Brown described the agreement made among Drudge, Brandt, and Barts in the following colloquy:

Q [W]ere there any conditions on the transfer of these gifts by Louise [Drudge] to the two daughters?
A Um, the agreement was, between all of us, that Louise wanted to put half the money in Sue’s name, half the money in Jeanie’s name, any interest we would earn off the annuities, at the end—we couldn’t take any money out for twelve months—at the end of twelve months then I had Jean sign a form and I had Sue sign a form, the cheeks would come to me. When I received the checks I would take Sue’s check to her, Jeanie’s check to her, have them endorse it and then give the checks to Louise, so that Louise could use it for interest income to live on.
Q And was that one of the conditions which she transferred this was so that she would get the interest back to live on?
A That’s the only reason we transferred the money, so that with that agreement that that interest would go back to Louise to live on, until Louise was gone, and then that money would be the girls’ at that time—after Louise was gone.
* sj: ik $ ^
A [0]riginally, the day we did this, we put $102,761.00 into each annuity, but then after we had put it in there they realized that we needed money for mom to live on for the twelve months while the interest was earning on this amount, so we took $15,000.00 back out of Jean’s. We took $15,000.00 back out of Sue’s and we gave that money back to Louise to put in her checking account to have money to live on until the interest would come due twelve months from now.

Record at 192-93. When Brown received the first annual interest check from Barts’s annuity but no check from Brandt’s annuity, he made a telephone call to Jackson National Life and then called Brandt. Brandt informed Brown that, because Brown was very *1248 busy, she thought that it would be better for Brown if the annuity check were sent directly to her. Brown testified that he then asked Brandt if he could stop by her house and pick up the endorsed check to give to Drudge. According to Brown, Brandt informed him that she had other plans for the money and was not going to give it to him to turn over to Drudge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 N.E.2d 1245, 1998 Ind. App. LEXIS 1463, 1998 WL 566663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drudge-v-brandt-indctapp-1998.