Godette v. Estate of Cox

592 A.2d 1028, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 170, 1991 WL 102883
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 11, 1991
Docket90-722
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 592 A.2d 1028 (Godette v. Estate of Cox) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Godette v. Estate of Cox, 592 A.2d 1028, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 170, 1991 WL 102883 (D.C. 1991).

Opinion

FERREN, Associate Judge:

Appellant, the former personal representative of the estate of Mildred Cox, appeals from a judgment entered against him for $56,279.64 in disallowed expenditures of estate funds, including $24,440 in administrative fees taken without prior court authorization. Appellant maintains that the disallowance is (1) contrary to the evidence submitted in the case and (2) contrary to the intent of the testator, whose will expressly immunized appellant from liability “except in case of willful default or bad faith.” Finding no merit to appellant’s contentions, we affirm.

I.

When Mildred Cox, a childless widow incapacitated for many years by arthritis and Parkinson’s disease, died on January 15, 1985, she left an estate valued at close to $240,000, including a home assessed at $65,000. Her will nominated McClure Go-dette, a neighbor and self-employed home contractor, as her personal representative. She gave most of her estate — the residuary estate — to three charities: the Arthritis Foundation, the Columbia Lighthouse for the Blind, and the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. About two weeks after Mildred Cox’s death, Godette filed a petition for probate. See D.C.Code § 20-304 (1989). Within days, the court approved his appointment, see id. § 20-303, and the decedent’s will was admitted to probate. 1 Fifteen months later, in May 1986, Godette filed his initial accounting, see id. § 20-722; Super.Ct.Prob.R. 114, followed by an amended accounting that valued the estate at $238,476.10.

*1030 On October 4, 1986, without filing a request for compensation or obtaining court approval as required by D.C.Code § 20-751 (1989), see Super.Ct.Prob.R. 124, Godette withdrew $23,659 in several checks from the estate bank account as payment for his services in administering the estate. Not until March 1987 did Godette file a request for compensation with the court, seeking $26,990. 2 In June 1987, the residuary charitable beneficiaries objected that Godette’s fees were excessive considering the size of the estate and that certain other expenditures were questionable.

After a hearing, the court referred the objections to an Auditor-Master, who conducted his own evidentiary hearings and issued a report on December 2, 1987. That report concluded that Godette should reimburse the estate $91,111.76 in disallowed expenses that included: $9,000 for payments to Godette’s contracting firm in the amounts of $7,000 3 and $2,000 (disallowed as unsupported by adequate documentation); $10,000 paid to Godette’s wife for nursing assistance (disallowed as unsupported by documentation and contrary to the testimony of two witnesses); $62,-709.16 in miscellaneous expenses (disallowed as lacking in adequate supporting documentation, as excessive, and as “made in total disregard of the interest of the beneficiaries of the estate”); and the entire $26,990 4 in fees Godette had paid himself as personal representative (disallowed with reference to 31 AiaJuR.2d Executors and Administrator § 953 (1989): “An executor or administrator who has been guilty of fraud, dishonesty, bad faith, gross neglect, gross negligence, or willful default may be denied compensation”).

In making payment of this claim, Mr. Godette sent the $7,000 payment to one Tariq Rai, who works as an employee of Mr. Godette. The $7,000 payment was not paid to ... Mr. Rai. It purchased a money order and then the cash went into the bank account of E & M, the incorporated firm of which Mr. Go-dette and his wife are the only principals and not to Mr. Rai to whom the covering letter was addressed.

The Auditor recounted the testimony of appellant’s own attorney, who, according to the Auditor,

feels the personal representative and the claimants took advantage of decedent and that [the attorney] went through matters with the personal representative that seemed irregular to him; ... he tried to convey to the personal representative the need to conserve and protect the estate.... He further discussed the inordinate amount of disbursements with the Personal Representative.

The Auditor-Master also found that, “[u]pon his appointment as Personal Representative, McClure Godette apparently commenced to expend exceedingly large sums for maintenance, repairs and upkeep of decedent’s real estate.” The Auditor-Master recommended removal of Godette as personal representative and concluded:

It is obvious to the Auditor-Master that McClure Godette, Personal Representative has completely mismanaged this estate. Commencing with an estate of $238,476.10, and after collecting additional interest of $692.18 and rentals of $1,025.00 for a total estate of $241,193.28 through August 18,1987, there is now an estate of $76,163.81. Excluding distribution of legacies totalling $19,547.00, he has expended a total of $145,482.37 for maintenance of real estate, payment of claims, administration costs and debts. Expenditures thus far total an unbelievable 63% of the value of decedent’s real estate.[] The sale of the property has still not been consummated although the Personal Representative was appointed on February 1, 1985 — two years and nine months ago. All of the costs of repairing and maintaining decedent’s real es *1031 tate could have been avoided by the more expeditious sale of the real estate with a contract providing an “as is” condition. Further, he lowered the sales price on [decedent’s home] without being requested to do so by the buyer.

Appellant filed objections to the report two weeks later.

In September 1988, the court issued an order adopting the report in part 5 but remanding the rest for the Auditor-Master to consider additional receipts and vouchers appellant claimed would verify that $62,-709.19 in disallowed expenditures had been made for the benefit of the estate and were not time-barred under D.C.Code §§ 20-902, -903. Meanwhile, after a hearing in October 1988, the court removed Godette as personal representative and appointed a successor.

In November 1988, the Auditor-Master issued a second report. He allowed $264.52 (two phone bills and a gas bill) but continued to disallow $76,282.24, including $24,440 Godette had taken in fiduciary fees. The Auditor-Master found that most of the vouchers Godette had submitted were for merchandise delivered to his home address or to his management company, “which manages several pieces of real estate in the same block as decedent’s real estate.” “Many of these checks written and vouchers submitted do not reflect [that] the various amounts paid for repairs and services were made for the benefit of the decedent’s estate.

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Bluebook (online)
592 A.2d 1028, 1991 D.C. App. LEXIS 170, 1991 WL 102883, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/godette-v-estate-of-cox-dc-1991.