In re Accounts of McGolerick

32 Va. Cir. 488, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 98
CourtWinchester County Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 8, 1981
DocketCase No. (Estate) 4126
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Va. Cir. 488 (In re Accounts of McGolerick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Winchester County Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Accounts of McGolerick, 32 Va. Cir. 488, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 98 (Va. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

By Judge Henry H. Whiting

This case was heard on exceptions to the executor’s settlement of accounts. Evidence was taken ore tenus before the Court but without a court reporter. Because of this, the court has set forth an extensive statement of the evidence, should either party desire to appeal adverse rulings.

Joseph McGolerick, the father of Herbert McGolerick, his two brothers and two sisters and the husband of Esty N. McGolerick, by his will dated January 20, 1955, left everything to his wife, appointing her and Herbert McGolerick (hereinafter Herbert) executors of his will and providing that if Esty McGolerick predeceased him the estate would be divided equally among his five children. The will was not made an exhibit in the case, and the Court does now do so, marking a photocopy of the will as Court Exhibit “A.” In September of 1976, a certificate of deposit for $10,500.00 was purchased with the funds of Joseph McGolerick making him, his wife, and Herbert “joint tenants with right of survivorship.” Esty McGolerick died December 24, 1977, and Joseph McGolerick died in April of 1979, all five children having survived their parents.

Herbert paid $1,500.00 to his son, David McGolerick, from estate funds allegedly for unpaid rental due by Joseph McGolerick to the grandson.

The estate of Joseph McGolerick totaled $69,500.00 at the time of his death, and the evidence indicated it was approximately the same size in September of 1976.

[489]*489 Statement of Issues

(1) Did Herbert as executor improperly exclude the survivorship certificate of deposit from his final settlement in the sum of $10,500.00 purchased with the father’s funds in September of 1976?

(2) Did Herbert wrongfully credit himself with $1,500.00 rent on premises occupied by Joseph and Esty McGolerick at the rate of $150.00 a month allegedly accruing to Herbert’s son during a major part of the period from September of 1976 until April of 1979, the date of Joseph McGolerick’s death, although paid by Herbert to his son after Joseph McGolerick died?

Statement of Evidence

Herbert, one of several adult children of Joseph T. McGolerick and Esty McGolerick, aged eighty-two and eighty-nine respectively, testified [as follows].

On September 6, 1976, seven or eight days after they had been moved by him from their home in Brunswick, Maryland, to Winchester, Virginia, he had a discussion, apparently in his father’s presence, with his mother as to the “investment” of $10,500.00 admitted by Herbert to have been saved from a pension his father had received as a retired railroad man and kept in cash in a jar. The mother said she wanted the cash put in a bank.

During that conversation, he explained to his deaf father in a written note which he did not keep that he had his own savings set up with his son as a survivorship account so that his son would have it when Herbert died.

Herbert was told by his father on the following day to purchase a certificate of deposit in the name of the parents and Herbert as a survivorship account.

On the day following, Herbert’s father simply told him to take his mother to the bank, and he took his mother to the Farmers & Merchants National Bank in Winchester, where Betty Carroll, a Vice President of that bank, opened the account and “fully explained” the survivorship features to his mother while he was present.

Herbert denied helping the mother to sign the certificate of deposit, although she was blind.

Although his mother was blind, had heart trouble, and her mind was cloudy sometimes, she was not senile and was “pretty good” mentally most of the time.

[490]*490His father was deaf and had kidney trouble but was lucid up to the time of his death. For some unexplained reason, his father was unable to go to the bank on the day of the deposit. Herbert received a power of attorney from the father on September 13, 1976, five days after the certificate of deposit was purchased.

Although Herbert was a friend of Ruby Trenary, he had no romantic interest in her nor had he engaged in sex with her.

He listed the certificate of deposit as an asset of his father’s estate in the initial inventory.

Betty Carroll, a Vice President of the Farmers & Merchants National Bank, where the certificate of deposit was purchased, Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 1, testified on January 18, 1980, [as follows].

“WRS” thereon meant a deposit with right of survivorship and was the customary way of showing survivorship. She had sold over a thousand certificates of deposit in 1976 and could not remember the specific incident and “assumed the depositors knew what. WRS meant.” She said if she had been asked at the time of purchase, she would have explained that anyone could cash a certificate and on death it would belong to the survivor. She had never waited on Mrs. Esty McGolerick before and had a strong feeling she did make a full explanation because she usually did that the first time she waited on a customer.

She removed the names of the parents from the certificate at Herbert’s request after the parents died.

Ruby Trenary testified [as follows].

She was a widow and a licensed practical nurse who had known Herbert since 1942 and moved back to Winchester some time before 1976. Herbert had helped her in the renovation of several of her own rental properties, and she had been occupying Herbert’s son’s house, furnishing it with her furniture, for some months prior to September of 1976 without payment of rent but in exchange for her help in remodeling that house and helping periodically in the care of Herbert’s parents over in Brunswick, Maryland.

She had taken a number of vacation trips with Herbert, engaging in sex during those trips.

Joseph McGolerick had been discharged as a patient from a Frederick, Maryland, hospital in late August of 1976 and required nursing care upon his return to his Brunswick, Maryland, home. It was decided that the senior McGolericks would join her in David McGolerick’s home, bringing only the furniture for their bedroom. She was to act as [491]*491their nurse and receive $50.00 per week for her services, and they were to pay David McGolerick $150.00 each month as rent.

She was present at a conference at the house Herbert’s son owned and the parents occupied in Winchester when Herbert was asked about investment advice regarding the $10,500.00 by both parents. Herbert explained how his own certificates of deposit were titled so as to give his son the right to the certificates should he die, and the father indicated this was “OK” but he “wanted time to think it over.” The next day, the father said he had decided to invest this money in the Farmers & Merchants National Bank, and Herbert took the mother down the following day, and she heard no further comment about the certificate of deposit.

Woodrow McGolerick, another son of Joseph and Esty, testified [as follows].

His mother said the father’s money had been invested in the Brunswick, Maryland, bank up until 1976. He never saw or heard of any sums of cash kept by the parents on his frequent visits to them in Brunswick. Both his parents were too feeble and ill to go to the bank to get the money.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Va. Cir. 488, 1981 Va. Cir. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-accounts-of-mcgolerick-vaccwinchester-1981.