Eggleston v. Kovacich

742 N.W.2d 471, 274 Neb. 579, 2007 Neb. LEXIS 168
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 2007
DocketS-06-684
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 742 N.W.2d 471 (Eggleston v. Kovacich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eggleston v. Kovacich, 742 N.W.2d 471, 274 Neb. 579, 2007 Neb. LEXIS 168 (Neb. 2007).

Opinion

Miller-Lerman, J.

I. NATURE OF CASE

Donna Eggleston, as special administrator of the estate of Lydia M. Mullis, appeals the order of the district court for Otoe County imposing a constructive trust on one bank account referred to as “account 547-745” but not on any other account owned by Mullis at her death. Eggleston asserts that the court erred in failing to impose a constructive trust on all of Mullis’ assets. Ardeith L. Kovacich cross-appeals and asserts that the court erred in imposing a constructive trust on *581 account 547-745. For reasons that differ from those of the district court, we affirm.

n. STATEMENT OF FACTS

Mullis died in September 2000. She was survived by two daughters, Kovacich and Eggleston.

In 1999, Mullis met with an attorney to discuss estate planning. As a result of such planning, Mullis established a revocable trust into which she transferred a farm she owned near Cook, Nebraska. She also executed a will which provided that all assets she owned at death would become property of the trust. The terms of the trust provided that after Mullis’ death, the trust would be divided equally between Kovacich and Eggleston. The trust document named Kovacich as the first successor trustee and Eggleston as the second successor trustee. Mullis’ will named Kovacich as the personal representative and Eggleston as the alternate personal representative in the event Kovacich was unable or unwilling to serve. At the time Mullis executed the trust documents and the will, she also executed a durable power of attorney naming Kovacich as her attorney in fact.

Shortly after the documents noted above were signed, Mullis and Kovacich went to the Syracuse, Nebraska, branch of the First National Bank of Unadilla, now known as Countryside Bank (hereinafter the Bank), to open an account. The account was numbered 351-213 by the Bank. The signature card, sometimes referred to as the “contract of deposit,” for account 351-213 named Mullis and Kovacich as owners of the account. The signature card included a section titled “Ownership of Account” which designated the account as a “Multiple-Party Account” and a section titled “Rights at Death” which designated the account as a “Multiple-Party Account With Right of Survivorship.” A section of the signature card titled “Agency (Power of Attorney) Designation” was left blank. The signature card was signed by both Mullis and Kovacich.

On August 24, 2000, another account, numbered 547-745, was opened at the Bank. The signature card for account 547-745 named Mullis and Kovacich as owners of the account. The signature card for account 547-745 included a section *582 titled “Ownership of Account” which designated the account as a “Multiple-Party Account” and was initialed by Kovacich but not by Mullis. In the section titled “Rights at Death,” the account was designated as a “Multiple-Party Account With Right of Survivorship” and was initialed by Kovacich but not by Mullis. A section of the signature card titled “Agency (Power of Attorney) Designation” was left blank. The signature portion of the card for account 547-745 was not signed by Mullis. Instead, beneath Mullis’ typed name, Kovacich signed her own name followed by the designation “POA” which the parties and the district court have assumed without contradiction stands for “power of attorney.”

Mullis died a few weeks after account 547-745 was opened. The inheritance tax worksheet prepared for her estate reported various accounts and bonds jointly owned by Mullis and Kovacich which totaled $148,650.72. Among the accounts were 351-213, which had a value of $13,889.66 at the date of Mullis’ death, and 547-745, which had a value of $42,954.96 at the date of Mullis’ death. The worksheet also showed that at her death, Mullis owned a farm valued at $60,000 and personal property valued at $3,000. The worksheet showed that the jointly owned accounts and bonds were to be distributed to Kovacich and that the farm and personal property were to be distributed evenly between Kovacich and Eggleston.

On October 1, 2003, Eggleston filed a complaint against Kovacich in district court. Eggleston had been appointed by the county court of Otoe County to act as special administrator of the estate. Eggleston alleged two causes of action. The first was for conversion. Eggleston alleged that Kovacich had used her position as Mullis’ attorney in fact to convert to her own use various assets, including accounts 351-213 and 547-745 and the bonds that were used as the initial deposit for account 547-745. Eggleston alleged that the bonds had been held in the names of Mullis and Eggleston. As her second cause of action for imposition of a constructive trust, Eggleston alleged that the accounts and bond proceeds were placed in Kovacich’s name under a constructive trust to be used for the benefit of Mullis during her lifetime and that at Mullis’ death, such funds were to be divided equally between Kovacich and Eggleston according to the terms *583 of the trust. Eggleston sought an accounting of such funds and an order directing Kovacich to turn the funds over to the estate for proper distribution.

Following trial, the district court entered an order dated December 5, 2005. The court concluded that with respect to all accounts and bonds other than accounts 351-213 and 547-745, there was no evidence to suggest that Mullis intended anything other than that the accounts and bonds were to belong to Kovacich upon Mullis’ death.

With respect to account 351-213, the court determined that the evidence, including testimony of the Bank employee who assisted in opening the account, indicated that the decision to designate this account as a joint account with Kovacich was Mullis’ decision without undue influence by Kovacich. The court concluded that the evidence failed to show conversion on the part of Kovacich. The court also concluded that the evidence did not support a finding that account 351-213 was set up as an account “for the convenience of’ Mullis.

With respect to account 547-745, the court found the evidence to be “more troublesome.” The court in its order found the following: In the summer of 2000, Mullis was taken to live with Kovacich in Rock Springs, Wyoming, due to Mullis’ declining health and her need for help in dealing with her affairs. In August 2000, Mullis returned to Nebraska to move into a nursing home in Syracuse. Mullis was concerned with the costs of the nursing home and decided to open a new account to take care of nursing home expenses and related finances. On August 24, the same day Mullis moved into the nursing home, account 547-745 was opened. The signature card for account 547-745 was not signed by Mullis but was signed by Kovacich pursuant to the power of attorney. The funds in the account came from two sources — U.S. bonds and a Commercial Federal Bank account. The Commercial Federal Bank account was jointly owned by Mullis and Kovacich and amounted to $25,248.08. The U.S. bonds that were liquidated to fund account 547-745 were held in the names of Mullis and Eggleston. There were also U.S. bonds held in the names of Mullis and Kovacich, but such bonds were not liquidated to fund account 547-745. Kovacich testified at trial that account *584

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
742 N.W.2d 471, 274 Neb. 579, 2007 Neb. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggleston-v-kovacich-neb-2007.