Fife v. Jayne

8 N.W.2d 222, 214 Minn. 388, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 618
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 5, 1943
DocketNo. 33,327
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 8 N.W.2d 222 (Fife v. Jayne) 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
Fife v. Jayne, 8 N.W.2d 222, 214 Minn. 388, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 618 (Mich. 1943).

Opinion

Loking, Justice.

This is an appeal by the heirs of Estella Simmons, deceased, from an order denying their motion for a new trial. The propriety of the allowance of the administrator’s compensation and attor[390]*390neys’ fees is involved. The probate court approved the second intermediate account of the administrators of the estate allowing Lawrence Jayne $60,000 for his services as administrator and the firm of Johnson, Sands & Brumfield $25,000 as attorneys for the administrators. The heirs appealed from this order to the district court, which made findings that the allowances were reasonable and proper. The heirs’ motion for a new trial challenged only that part of the findings and conclusions dealing with the reasonableness of these allowances.

Estella Simmons died intestate on February 11, 1939, leaving four heirs at law, who are the appellants here. The estate consisted mostly of negotiable bonds and cash in the amount of approximately $500,000 and some promissory notes of little value. These securities and some cash had been in two safety deposit boxes in St. Paul. One box was in Miss Simmons’ name and that of Addie Stephan, a niece, and Charles Powell, a cousin. The other, rented in January 1939, was in the name of Charles- Powell and a Miss Essie Williams, who had been consulted by Miss Simmons as an attorney. Three days before Miss Simmons’ death and again on the date of her death, Charles Powell and Miss Williams removed from the safety deposit boxes of the deceased a large number of negotiable bonds and a large amount of currency. Miss Williams took $30,000 in cash and bonds, and Powell took the rest to his home. It was claimed that in one of the boxes there was found a list of 32 donees with amounts of the donations which were to be made to each set opposite each name, that these donations aggregated $137,000, and that there was at the end of the list a statement that the balance was to be divided five ways between three of the heirs, Stephen Finnigan, a grandnephew of the deceased, and Charles Powell. The original of this alleged list was asserted to have been destroyed at the direction of Essie Williams, and only an alleged copy made by Powell appears. There is no contention that Miss Simmons signed the alleged original list or that the list was in her handwriting. Powell then made up “gift packages,” as he claims, in accordance with the list [391]*391and mailed some of them. Some of the “donees” were not residents of this state. He then delivered some cash and bonds to Essie Williams for division according to the “list.” On February 13, 1939, the day of the funeral, Miss Williams delivered $5,000 each to Dean White, son of one of the appellants, and Stephen Finnigan; and to Addie Stephan, one of the appellants, $8,200 for herself and $140,000, which later the same day Mrs. Stephan divided, somewhat unequally, between herself, the other three heirs, and Stephen Finnigan. Three of the heirs and Finnigan then returned to Freeport, Illinois. Some of the bonds they took with them were registered, so on February 15 they consulted Lawrence Jayne, an attorney of that city (who is now administrator of the estate), as to how they might have them transferred.

Mr. Jayne immediately advised these people that all of the estate was subject to inheritance taxes and that jurisdiction of the estate was in the state of Minnesota. He was then employed to clear title to the property and to discover the assets of the estate. Jayne immediately came to St. Paul and commenced his investigation. All four of the heirs, on Jayne’s advice, turned over to him for the estate the securities they, and in some cases their children, had received. February 22, Jayne and Mrs. Stephan went to the office where Powell was employed and questioned him but got no information. He told them to see Miss Williams. Finally, Jayne advised Powell to get a good lawyer, and Powell engaged Mr. William Oppenheimer of the St. Paul bar, who advised him to disclose everything to Jayne. Cash and bonds aggregating some $181,000 which Powell had taken from the deposit boxes before Miss Simmons’ death were then placed in a bank subject only to withdrawal by Powell or Mr. Oppenheimer. Through Mr. Oppenheimer, Powell filed written objections in the probate court to the appointment of an administrator by the heirs. It was his claim that the assets were in his possession under a gift causa mortis. At first he denied that Miss Williams had taken any money, but later admitted that she had taken $30,000 and that he had counted it.

[392]*392Jayne returned to Freeport on the following Saturday, February 25, 1939. On Tuesday, February 28, he returned to St. Paul,, spending about 12 days in the city discussing a settlement with Powell through his attorney and engaging in a search for more assets of the estate. Upon his return to Freeport, he inventoried the securities which the heirs had placed in their deposit boxes there. These securities aggregated $139,000. Together with the securities placed in the bank by Powell, they aggregated some $320,000. He again returned to St. Paul on April 1 and remained for 15 days, the first four of which were spent in concluding the negotiation with the four heirs, Mr. Powell, and Stephen Finni-gan. By the terms of this agreement, Powell retained the $16,-212.58 deposited in joint accounts with Miss Simmons in two St. Paul banks, of which he was owner by right of survivorship. Powell was also given $5,000 in cash and two tracts of real estate, deeds to which from Miss Simmons to him were found in. the safety deposit boxes. There is some evidence tending to show that the real estate was considered to be worth $12,000 . or $13,000. These deeds not having been delivered during Miss Simmons’ lifetime, quitclaim deeds from the heirs to Mr. Powell were executed and delivered. In addition to the foregoing, Mr. Powell’s son and daughter each received $5,000 and his mother $1,000, all of the Powells foregoing their claims to any of Miss Simmons’ property under the theory of a gift causa mortis. They also were to pay the inheritance or gift taxes due to the state on account of the money or property so received by them. All other property which Powell had taken from the Simmons estate was to be returned to the estate, and he represented that it was so returned.

It was also agreed that Stephen Finnigan, who was a son of a deceased sister of three of the heirs (one of the heirs was a half sister of the other heirs), but who, as the law then stood in Minnesota, was not an heir of Miss Simmons, would accept $25,000 in full discharge of any claim that he might have on the theory of a gift causa mortis or otherwise to the property left by Miss Simmons. Finnigan also agreed to act as coadministrator without [393]*393■compensation, but his connection with the estate was purely formal, as Jayne did all the work. Mutual releases were contained in the contract which disposed of all claims of gifts causa mortis insofar us parties to the contract were concerned. Jayne was then appointed one of the administrators of the Simmons estate.

The estate was inventoried, Jayne tracing the assets back through the Webb estate, from which much of the Simmons estate came. The furniture at Miss Simmons’ residence was inventoried and searched, and some cash was there found. Also, some coupons from bonds which were not found indicated that there were possibly $76,000 par of bonds which had either been disposed of by Miss Simmons or not discovered in the safety deposit boxes or turned into the estate.

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Related

In re the Pamela Andreas Stisser Grantor Trust
818 N.W.2d 495 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 2012)
Angelos v. Balafas
225 N.W.2d 539 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1975)
In Re Estate of Baumgartner
144 N.W.2d 574 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1966)
Jacobson v. State
64 N.W.2d 370 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1954)
In Re Estate of Simmons
10 N.W.2d 481 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1943)

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W.2d 222, 214 Minn. 388, 1943 Minn. LEXIS 618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fife-v-jayne-minn-1943.