Firestone v. Greenberg

82 N.W.2d 239, 249 Minn. 254, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 567
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 15, 1957
DocketNo. 36,980
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 82 N.W.2d 239 (Firestone v. Greenberg) 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
Firestone v. Greenberg, 82 N.W.2d 239, 249 Minn. 254, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 567 (Mich. 1957).

Opinion

Thomas Gallagher, Justice.

Appeal from a district court order denying the motion of petitioner, Blanche H. Greenberg, widow of Arnold N. Greenberg, for amended findings and conclusions or a new trial in proceedings relative to the last will of Arnold N. Greenberg. In such findings and conclusions the district court affirmed an order of the probate court which denied letters of administration to petitioner and which admitted to probate an instrument determined to be a true copy of decedent’s last will executed by him on March 26, 1951, which had been lost or destroyed.

On appeal petitioner contends that (1) the evidence presented to prove that the will remained unrevoked as required by M. S. A. 525.261 was insufficiently clear, convincing, and satisfactory for such purpose; and (2) evidence of interlineations in the will as testified to by Zolle A. Dworsky, as well as his other testimony, compelled a finding that decedent had revoked the will prior to his death.

[256]*256Arnold N. Greenberg died in an automobile accident on June 5, 1954. He left surviving the petitioner herein and a son, Roger Greenberg, then of the age of 22 years. The challenged will was drafted by Linn J. Firestone, a St. Paul attorney, and was executed by decedent in Minneapolis at Mount Sinai Hospital on March 26, 1951. Firestone and his legal associate, James H. Levy, attested to decedent’s signature and declarations therein. The original will remained in decedent’s possession and a copy thereof was retained by Firestone.

The will names Firestone and petitioner as executors and provides for a specific bequest of $2,500 to a nephew of decedent. Thereafter it directs that the remainder of the estate of approximately $400,000 in value be divided into two equal parts, each part to constitute a separate testamentary trust. Peter A. Dworsky, a brother of petitioner, and Linn J. Firestone are named as joint trustees of each trust.

In the first trust thus created, the entire income is made payable to petitioner for her lifetime with provisions for withdrawal of principal up to $5,000 per year in the discretion of the trustees to meet emergency needs of petitioner. Upon her death the trust funds remaining in the trust at that time are to go to such persons as she appoints to receive them by her last will. If she fails to exercise this right, after her death the trust is to continue for the benefit of decedent’s son with provisions for ultimate distribution of principal to him, as well as alternative provisions for distribution applicable in case of his death and that of petitioner before such final distribution.

In the second trust petitioner is likewise the beneficiary of all income therefrom throughout her lifetime, but no power of appointment for distribution of principal upon her death is granted to her. Provisions for annual withdrawal of principal up to $5,000 to meet emergencies similar to those in the first trust are included. Upon her death the trust is to continue for the benefit of decedent’s son, and provisions are included for distribution of principal in his favor with alternative provisions therefor in the event of his death prior to the dates required for such distribution.

[257]*257In a discussion between decedent and Firestone about two months after the will was executed, decedent advised Firestone that he did not intend to change the will, and thereafter it was never discussed between them, although Firestone continued to act as decedent’s attorney up to the time of his death.

Zolle A. Dworsky, a brother of petitioner and of Peter A. Dworsky, one of the trustees in the will, testified that on Thanksgiving Day of 1952 he was alone with decedent in decedent’s home and that after some conversation critical of the will decedent in his presence tore up the will and burned the fragments in his fireplace. This testimony was in conflict with that of attorney Joseph A. Bard of Minneapolis, who testified that in the summer of 1953 decedent had come to his office in Minneapolis on legal business, and in the course of the conversation had taken out the original will which Bard then had read at decedent’s request so that the former might express an opinion as to its merits. Bard at one time had testified that this meeting occurred in the summer of 1952, but in the district court proceedings he fixed the time as in the summer of 1953, testifying that reference to his office notes and memoranda had caused him to correct the date originally given.

The testimony of two additional lawyers, Ralph Stacker and Julius E. Kubier, was also in conflict with the testimony of Zolle A. Dworsky. Stacker testified that in conversations with decedent about two weeks before his death, decedent had stated that Milton Firestone had fixed him up a couple years prior thereto in connection with his will. Milton Firestone was the father of Linn J. Firestone and a member of the same law firm. Julius E. Kubier testified to a number of conversations with decedent during the early months of 1954, the last of which took place about 10 days before decedent’s death, wherein each time decedent indicated that his will was in existence and that he intended to bring it to the witness so that the latter might examine it and give an opinion with reference to it.

The evidence disclosed that on June 7, 1954, two days after decedent met death and prior to his funeral, petitioner had entered a safety deposit box in the Northwestern National Bank in Min[258]*258neapolis, to which she and decedent had access and which was in the name of Greenberg Investment Company, one of the companies owned by decedent; that she subsequently entered it on August 3, August 4, August 18, September 24, December 6, 1954, and January 25, 1955; and that on none of such occasions had any representative of the bank received notification of decedent’s death as required by M. S. A. 291.20. In testifying in probate court as to her search for decedent’s will, no mention was made by petitioner of such visits, and when in subsequent proceedings she was asked why she had not disclosed such facts or told of what she had found in the safety box, she replied that no one had questioned her with reference thereto.

It was not until November 30, 1954, that petitioner instituted proceedings for letters of administration in decedent’s estate on the rlaim that he had died intestate. Prior to the hearing thereon, the probate court was advised by Firestone relative to the will, and a photostatic copy thereof was submitted to the court. At the hearing on January 11,1955, petitioner testified that she knew decedent had made a will but thought that he had destroyed it; that she had searched all over for it but could not find it.

The probate court thereupon requested Firestone to petition to have the will admitted by copy as a lost instrument. At the hearing thereon bn April 1,1955, petitioner testified that she had never seen decedent destroy his will and had no knowledge that it had been destroyed. In subsequent hearings she testified that, prior to the time she was thus testifying, her brother Peter had told her that her brother Zolle had witnessed decedent destroy the will. Likewise, Zolle A. Dworsky was present at the April 1, 1955, hearing and heard petitioner testify that she had no knowledge that the will had been destroyed but said nothing with reference to his having observed its destruction or having advised petitioner to such effect prior to her testimony.

At the close of the testimony and prior to its findings and conclusions, the trial court stated:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.W.2d 239, 249 Minn. 254, 1957 Minn. LEXIS 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firestone-v-greenberg-minn-1957.