Guilmette v. FRANKLIN REALTY CORPORATION

241 A.2d 323, 127 Vt. 130, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 6, 1968
Docket588, 589
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 241 A.2d 323 (Guilmette v. FRANKLIN REALTY CORPORATION) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guilmette v. FRANKLIN REALTY CORPORATION, 241 A.2d 323, 127 Vt. 130, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 188 (Vt. 1968).

Opinion

Holden, C.J.

The subject of this appeal is the settlement of the estate of Virginia Guilmette who died intestate on April 15, 1961. The appellants are the children and heirs of the decedent. By an appeal to Franklin County Court, they challenged the order of the probate court allowing the final account, contending the administrator failed to marshall all of the assets of the estate. In parallel proceedings, by petition to the court of chancery, they seek to set aside and avoid the administrator’s deed of a farm, owned by the decedent in her lifetime, which was conveyed to the defendants Bertrand Lussier and the Franklin Realty Corporation.

By agreement of counsel, the appeal from probate and the chancery cause were consolidated and heard by the chancellor, sitting alone. His findings report these facts.

For many years the plaintiffs’ parents, Joseph and Virginia Guilmette, resided on a farm in the Town of Richford. The chancellor referred to this property as the homestead farm. The property was held by Joseph and Virginia, as tenants by the entirety. The parents also owned an interest in a lower farm. Title to this property was in Joseph, Virginia and their son Merlin, as joint tenants with right of survivorship. Merlin is one of the plaintiff appellants in the present proceedings.

Joseph Guilmette died in November, 1960. At that time both farms were operated as a single unit, with the equipment and livestock interchanged as the farm work required. The dairy herd occupied barns at both locations.

The plaintiff Merlin Guilmette and his parents worked together and operated the farms, as a joint enterprise, during a period of forty-four years. Merlin received no wages, but shared in the income derived from the farming operations. The milk checks received for the dairy produce were made payable to Joseph, Virginia and Merlin.

*132 On the death of Joseph, farming at the homestead was discontinued and all operations were transferred to the lower farm. Merlin and his mother carried on the farming at this location until his mother’s death on April 15, 1961. At the time of her death she was the sole owner of the home farm, consisting of 175 acres.

The chancellor found that all of the livestock, farm tools and implements on both farms, at the time of Virginia’s death, were acquired and accumulated through the joint efforts of Merlin and his parents. The chancellor further found that, on the death of his mother, Merlin became the sole owner of the lower farm as the surviving joint tenant. Except for some pieces of furniture, the decedent owned no other personal property at the time of her decease.

On April 21,1961 the plaintiff Merlin and four of his sisters joined in a petition to the probate court for the district of Franklin, requesting the appointment of the defendant William B. Goldsbury as administrator of their mother’s estate. The application states the decedent possessed no personal estate, but sets forth that she owned real estate of the value of $5,000. The application was granted and the defendant Goldsbury was appointed.

The plaintiff Merlin claimed full ownership of all the livestock and farm equipment and so informed the administrator. Shortly after his mother’s death Merlin moved the livestock and farm tools from the homestead to the lower farm.

The court also found that the administrator never took possession of, nor operated, the home farm and derived no income from it. The property has been occupied by the plaintiffs, or their representatives, since their mother’s death.

The probate court commissioned a real estate broker, one Campbell, and Francis Whitney, husband of the plaintiff Barbara. Whitney (sic), to appraise and report, upon oath, the true value of the decedent’s real and personal property. They valued the home farm at $5,000 and reported this to be the only asset in the estate.

The administrator petitioned the probate court for authority to sell the real estate for the purpose of paying the decedent’s debts. After notice to the plaintiffs and hearing, the court issued a license to the administrator on January 25, 1962 authorizing him to sell all of the real estate for this purpose, at public or private sale.

Upon granting of the license, the administrator advertised the property in the Richford Gazette, a newspaper within the northern part *133 of Franklin County. The advertisement was continued for two consecutive weeks, but produced no offers.

The subject property was encumbered by a mortgage to the Franklin County Bank. On October 29, 1962, the mortgagee, by its attorney, notified the administrator that foreclosure proceedings would be commenced unless the mortgage indebtedness was satisfied at an early date.

On July 3, 1963 the administrator, acting on authority of the license issued by the probate court, conveyed the property to the defendants Franklin Realty Corporation and Bertrand Lussier, for the sum of $5,850. The purchasers agreed to pay the taxes assessed on the property for 1963 in the amount of $391.00. On July 8, 1963 the administrator paid the Franklin County Bank $4,846.47 in full satisfaction of the mortgage obligation.

At the time of the sale there was little demand for farm property for agricultural use in the Richford area. Such market- as did prevail was for uses other than farming. During the tax years 1961 through ■ 1963 the property was appraised in the tax list at $4,000. According to the findings, the tax appraisal represented one-third of the value.

The findings establish that the fair market value of the farm of Virginia Guilmette, at the time of her death, was $5,000. It increased in value to $6,000 from the date of her death to July, 1963, when it was sold to the defendants.

On these facts the chancellor confirmed the sale of the farm to the defendants and approved the administrator’s account. In so doing, the findings report an apparent deficiency in “the curiosity, the initiative and diligence” exercised by the administrator in ascertaining the property and assets of his intestate. Yet he held the plaintiffs had failed to sustain their allegation that the administrator had not marshalled all the assets of the estate.

It is at once apparent that the chancellor’s concern was generated by the inconsistency of Merlin’s position in this litigation. The administrator relied implicitly on Merlin’s representaton that he owned all of the personal property on both of the farms which he operated with his parents. Now Merlin joins with his brothers and sisters to complain that the administrator made no effort to verify his claim of title to the personality.

Of this aspect of the case, the chancellor reported: Upon the decease of his mother Virginia he contended and claimed that he was the lawful owner of all the livestock, farm implements and *134 tools located in, on and about the farm properties by virtue of being the surviving joint tenant. The defendant administrator after inquiries apparently became satisfied that such was the fact and abandoned this personal property to plaintiff Merlin.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 A.2d 323, 127 Vt. 130, 1968 Vt. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guilmette-v-franklin-realty-corporation-vt-1968.