Eriksson v. Palm

297 N.W. 765, 210 Minn. 77, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 717
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedApril 4, 1941
DocketNo. 32,766
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 297 N.W. 765 (Eriksson v. Palm) 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
Eriksson v. Palm, 297 N.W. 765, 210 Minn. 77, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 717 (Mich. 1941).

Opinion

Stone, Justice.

His final account as special administrator of this estate having-been surcharged in both probate and district courts, Mr. Leonard Eriksson appeals from the judgment.

The cyclone which on June 22, 1919, ravaged Fergus Falls and its vicinity ivas fatal to August Palm and his wife, Amelia Palm. (Mr. Eriksson became general administrator of her estate and a surcharge of his final account as such is dealt with in the companion case, In re Estate of Palm, 210 Minn. 87, 297 N. W. 765.)

Mr. Palm was a building contractor. Death claimed him with two of his contracts but partially performed. One provided for construction of a schoolhouse at G-ackle, North Dakota. The other ivas for the erection of a dormitory at the State Hospital for the Insane at Fergus Falls.

June 21, 1919, appellant was appointed and qualified as special administrator.2 In that capacity he undertook completion of the two contracts and finished both. Not until June 19, 1928, did he attempt a final accounting as special administrator. He then filed his final account with the probate court. “Believe it or not,” nothing further was done to have that account settled until July, [79]*791937, when the Palm heirs filed objections. The probate court, and on appeal the district court, surcharged the account in respect to the several items now to be considered.

The determinative issues oí fact have spotlights of legal standards which illuminate the path of consideration. In accounting by a fiduciary, the burden is on him to prove that his actions have conformed to the standard of his duty. Upon him and not upon the beneficiaries is the duty satisfactorily to explain. Corollary to that proposition, and first principle governing the conduct of a fiduciary, is his duty to keep dependable, distinct, and accurate accounts of his action as trustee. Smith v. Tolversen, 190 Minn. 410, 252 N. W. 423.

Because of the delay, although no one was so responsible for it as himself, appellant asserts that respondents are barred by laches (14 years of delay) from asserting the claims decided against him below. That we deny.

Upon appellant was the duty to account. That he recognized by filing a final account in 1923. He recognized it again in 1937 by an amended final account asserting errors in the first. So the issue is not, as it was in Hanson v. Swenson, 77 Minn. 70, 79 N. W. 598, whether appellant should now make any accounting; it is rather and only whether his account as presented is correct. Hanson v. Swenson, 78 Minn. 18, 80 N. W. 833. It is said that where both parties are at fault in respect to delay “neither can assert laches as against the other; and where each of the parties seeks affirmative relief against the other in reference to the same transaction, neither may assert that the other whs guilty of laches.” 21 C. J. p. 216.

There are additional considerations of equity which should have warned appellant against reliance upon the supposed laches of his adversaries. Three of the Palm heirs were minors, the youngest not having attained her majority until 1932. In the meantime, appellant had been instrumental in having a guardian appointed for them. He became attorney for the guardian, a position plainly [80]*80incompatible under the circumstances with Ms duty as special administrator. He suggests that delay in procuring settlement of Ms account was due to long delay in appointment of a general administrator. There is no suggestion of good reason for such delay, and it is the plainest Mnd of reasonable inference that appellant himself, had he proceeded diligently, could have procured the appointment of a general administrator and a reasonably prompt settlement of his own account.

Upon the guardian was the duty to review with searching and critical vision the conduct of appellant as administrator. He seems not to have done so. Upon him also was the duty, in the interest of his wards, to insist upon the prompt appointment of a general administrator. Whether the guardian’s dereliction was due to appellant’s advice as his attorney is an unanswered question. Silence of the record on that point, without more, goes far to bar appellant’s plea of laches. If attorneys will persist, inadvertently or otherwise, in representing such conflicting interests and, in consequence, are snared by results such as those which now entangle appellant, their own disregard of elementary standards of fiduciary and professional conduct will ordinarily be a proximate, if not sole, cause of their predicament.

When appellant filed his first account in 1923 he omitted to submit his vouchers. They were numerous and bulky but highly important. During the ensuing delay they have been lost because, according to appellant, they were carelessly stored and disappeared in moving his office. He offers no justification for their not having been filed with the probate court, where doubtless they Avould have been secure and noAV open to inspection. If, by the disappearance, appellant has been prejudiced, he has only himself to blame. At this point it should be said that the record discloses commendable diligence in the proceedings below to arrive at a just result notwithstanding the absence of underlying records.

Not only did appellant have the burden of proof below, but also it is noAV for him to show error in the judgment under review.

[81]*81Proceeding to the fact issues, the decision of which we must review, we take up first one arising from the contract for the Gackle school building. Appellant’s claim for a credit of $1,254.01 was disallowed. When Mr. Palm died there were outstanding against him the claims of certain laborers for work done on the Gackle job. It was necessary to pay those claims, and appellant paid them in the sum of $1,254.01.

One Albert Holmgren (since deceased) had been superintendent under Palm and continued in that capacity under appellant. Long afterward and on the basis of his then records, appellant submitted a detailed account thereof to the heirs or their representatives. It is respondents’ exhibit 4 and cannot be construed otherwise than. as an attempt to show in detail all the expenditures, from beginning to end of performance of the contract, covering the period both before and after Palm’s death. Names of laborers and amount paid each, including an item for “miscellaneous labor” of $517.88, are set out. In like manner, it shows the expenses for materials, transportation charges, insurance, contractor’s bond, and postage. It shows net gain on the contract, for which appellant is properly charged. In computing that item, so far as we can see, appellant took credit for all of his payments on account of labor, including those aggregating $1,254.01, for which he now wants what was held below to be a duplicating credit. The question is one of fact. The record discloses nothing to justify disturbance of the decision below on this item. In sum, it was but a refusal to credit appellant twice for the same outlay.

We cannot reverse the finding, implicit in the decision below, that when Holmgren accounted to appellant at the completion of the Gackle contract his statement covered the whole undertaking rather than only that part of it done after Palm’s death. February 18, 1920, appellant gave Holmgren a final receipt discharging him “from further liability under said contract.” It acknowledged receipt from Holmgren of “the amount due the estate as proceeds [82]

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Related

Schueller v. Palm
16 N.W.2d 773 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1944)

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Bluebook (online)
297 N.W. 765, 210 Minn. 77, 1941 Minn. LEXIS 717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eriksson-v-palm-minn-1941.