In Re Baggette

26 So. 3d 98, 2009 La. LEXIS 2970, 2009 WL 3382958
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 20, 2009
Docket2009-B-1091
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 26 So. 3d 98 (In Re Baggette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Baggette, 26 So. 3d 98, 2009 La. LEXIS 2970, 2009 WL 3382958 (La. 2009).

Opinion

ATTORNEY DISCIPLINARY PROCEEDINGS

PER CURIAM. *

11 This disciplinary matter arises from formal charges filed by the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (“ODC”) against respondent, Wade R. Baggette, an attorney licensed to practice law in Louisiana.

UNDERLYING FACTS

The underlying facts of this matter are extremely complex. By way of background, Helen Smith Fuller (hereinafter referred to as “Helen”) died intestate in May 1976, survived by her daughter and only heir, Jo Anne Fuller (“Jo Anne”). Jo Anne administered some of the properties that had belonged to her mother but did not open her mother’s succession. Jo Anne, who had never been married and had no children, died intestate on January 20, 1984. She was survived by one maternal aunt, Elizabeth Smith Collins (“Mrs. Collins”), age 76, and two paternal aunts, Annie Mae Fuller Anderson (“Mrs. Anderson”), age 84, and Clara Fuller To-bin (“Mrs. Tobin”), age 87. 1 Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Tobin were also the great aunts of respondent’s wife. Mrs. Tobin died testate in August 1985. Her legatees consisted of respondent, his wife, and his wife’s parents.

\2Succession of Jo Anne Fuller

On January 25, 1984, five days after Jo Anne’s death, Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Tobin retained respondent to represent them in connection with Jo Anne’s succession. Mrs. Anderson also granted respondent a general power of attorney to handle her affairs. On that same day, upon the nomination of Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Tobin, respondent was appointed the provisional administrator of Jo Anne’s succession. He served in that capacity until October 31, 1984, at which time the maternal aunt, Mrs. Collins, was appointed ad-ministratrix. 2

*100 Mrs. Anderson and Mrs. Tobin also nominated respondent to be the administrator of Helen’s succession. Respondent was appointed to that position in March 1984. Mrs. Collins thereafter petitioned for respondent’s removal, claiming that he was not qualified to serve as administrator under the Louisiana Code of Civil Procedure. This effort by Mrs. Collins was unsuccessful, 3 and for a time Helen’s and Jo Anne’s successions proceeded in tandem with separate administrators.

In 1986, respondent petitioned the trial court for approval to sell all of the property of Helen’s succession at private sale. 4 The sales price was $180,000, with respondent and his wife, his wife’s parents, and Mrs. Anderson named as buyers. Mrs. Collins opposed the sale. In early January 1990, the trial court ruled that the pro _]£uta sale would be permitted. 5 Respondent, his wife, and in-laws were to receive a total of one-third of the property for $60,000. 6 However, on January 12, 1990, before the sale could take place, this court consolidated the assets of Helen’s succession into Jo Anne’s succession. 7 This action ended respondent’s tenure as administrator of Helen’s succession, and left Mrs. Collins as administratrix of the consolidated successions.

The administration of Jo Anne’s estate was complicated by tax problems. First, Jo Anne had failed to file income tax returns in the years prior to her death. On October 29, 1984, the IRS filed a proof of claim in Jo Anne’s succession showing that Jo Anne owed over $1 million in unpaid income taxes. On January 8, 1990, Mrs. Collins and respondent received a notice of levy from the IRS, seizing all the property of Jo Anne’s and Helen’s successions to satisfy the income tax obligation owed by Jo Anne. At that time, Jo Anne owed $1.65 million in unpaid income taxes, penalties, *101 and interest. 8

^Furthermore, the succession was at odds with the IRS over estate taxes. On April 14, 1988, the IRS notified Mrs. Collins of a $4.45 million deficiency in the estate tax liability of the Estate of Jo Anne Fuller. The IRS had placed a much higher value on the estate property than had Mrs. Collins when she filed the estate tax return. 9 The major asset in question was four promissory notes given to Jo Anne by an Arkansas physician, David Newbern. Although the estate ascribed a discounted value of $230,000 to the four “Newbern notes,” the face value of the notes was actually $4,910,000. It was the face value of the notes, plus other adjustments in the estate tax paid by Jo Anne’s succession, which formed the basis of the $4.45 million deficiency assessment.

At the same time, the Newbern notes were the subject of a lawsuit filed in February 1988 by respondent, his wife, his in-laws, and Mrs. Anderson against Mrs. Collins and her attorneys, the Shreveport law firm of Cary & Cary. 10 The plaintiffs alleged that Mrs. Collins and her attorneys had allowed the Newbern notes to prescribe and breached other fiduciary duties as administratrix of Jo Anne’s succession. On April 20, 1988, an Arkansas court agreed that the Newbern notes were prescribed and were not furnished for consideration. On July 14, 1988, attorney John Luffey, Jr., the tax counsel for Jo Anne’s estate, filed a petition in the United States Tax Court contesting the estate tax deficiency. Among other contentions, Mr. Luffey asserted that no value should be given to the Newbern notes among the assets of the estate.

Notwithstanding the position taken by Mr. Luffey in the Tax Court, respondent counseled his client, Mrs. Anderson, against accepting the assets of Jo Anne’s |succession. Respondent told Mrs. Anderson that with interest and penalties, the estate tax liability was $8.5 million, far in excess of her interest in the estate. The ODC contends that respondent intentionally and artificially overstated the estate tax liability so that he could acquire the succession assets for himself at a fraction of their fair market value, and that there was not a significant risk that the IRS would ever assess $8.5 million in estate taxes.

Meanwhile, respondent was working to amicably resolve the issues with the IRS and Mrs. Collins. By January 1990, respondent had proposed that he purchase the assets of Jo Anne’s estate, but the IRS agent in charge of collecting the income taxes, Winfred Weldon, informed respondent that the IRS would not support his proposal unless the purchase price would fully pay the outstanding income taxes. However, Mr. Weldon explained, the payment of the income taxes would have a “very positive impact upon the estate taxes owed by Jo Anne Fuller,” as the payment in full of the income taxes “will negate most if not all, the estate taxes owing by *102 both estates.” 11

On March 28, 1990, respondent and Mrs. Collins entered into a confidential settlement whereby Mrs.

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26 So. 3d 98, 2009 La. LEXIS 2970, 2009 WL 3382958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-baggette-la-2009.