In Re Estate of Hammond

547 N.W.2d 36, 215 Mich. App. 379
CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 1996
DocketDocket Nos. 158154, 158155, 158302, 158303, 158579 and 158580
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 547 N.W.2d 36 (In Re Estate of Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Estate of Hammond, 547 N.W.2d 36, 215 Mich. App. 379 (Mich. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Mackenzie, P.J.

Appellee John N. Kirkendall was the independent personal representative of the estate of Stella J. Hammond, deceased, and the trustee under the Stella J. Hammond Living Trust agreement. Appellants are certain beneficiaries of the Stella J. Hammond estate and trust who unsuccessfully sought the removal of Kirkendall as fiduciary, along with an accounting, a determination of liability, and other relief. Appellants appeal as of right from an order granting summary disposition for Kirkendall pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10). Appellants also appeal an order granting Kirkendall’s motion for the taxation of costs and attorney fees. The appeals were consolidated. We affirm.

Kirkendall commenced independent probate of Hammond’s estate in February 1989. The estate was closed in 1991. Appellants subsequently filed petitions to reopen the estate and to remove Kirkendall as fiduciary of Hammond’s estate and trust. In these petitions, appellants alleged that Kirkendall engaged in a number of improprieties as fiduciary of Hammond’s estate and trust. First, they claimed that Kirkendall, who was at all pertinent times a probate court judge, breached his fiduciary duties and violated MCL 700.582; MSA 27.5582, which provides that a probate court judge "shall not be appointed as a fiduciary in an estate except for a member of his or her immediate family.” Next, they set forth several specific instances of Kirkendall’s allegedly improper discharge of his fiduciary duties, including allegations that he appropriated for his own use unknown *382 personal property bequeathed to Hammond’s sister, Mary Heeter; he surreptitiously placed items of value, including personal checks, in amounts exceeding $10,000 which were marked "loan” by Hammond, outside Hammond’s house for garbage collection; he forgave as gifts certain loans made by Hammond, to the detriment of the estate and without full disclosure to the beneficiaries; he failed to account for the proceeds of the sale of certain stock during the last year of Hammond’s life; he fraudulently induced appellants to approve his request for a $50,000 fiduciary fee; and he improperly requested that estate beneficiaries release him from liability "as a condition precedent to the distribution of the assets of the trust.”

Kirkendall filed motions for summary disposition pursuant to MCR 2.116(C)(8) and (10). In conjunction with the latter motions, he filed his affidavit averring that Hammond was his first cousin once removed, but that she treated him as a nephew and he treated her as a member of his immediate family. Further, he averred that a representative of the State Bar Ethics Committee had assured him that he could act as Hammond’s personal representative. Kirkendall also filed motions for protective orders. These alleged that "[t]he 115 all-inclusive requests for documents served by the combined petitioners are unwarranted by any cause of action, oppressive and untimely subsequent to the completion of independent probate in this matter.”

In support of their position, appellants filed the affidavit of Mary Heeter averring that she was closer to Hammond than Kirkendall had been and that Hammond would not have considered him a member of her immediate family. Later, a second affidavit of Mary Heeter was filed. The allegations of that affidavit were essentially that Kirkendall *383 had disposed of certain trust documents in bags and placed them on the curb outside Hammond’s house and that a loan to James Kirkendall had been treated by appellee as a gift.

The probate court partially granted Kirkendall’s motion for a protective order in ruling that appellants would be allowed discovery related only to the check to James Kirkendall that appellee had treated as a gift rather than a loan, and to attorney fees charged to the estate; the court denied appellants’ motion to reopen the estate. With respect to Kirkendall’s alleged violation of MCL 700.582; MSA 27.5582, the court noted that appellants had failed to object to Kirkendall’s appointment as independent personal representative when the estate was open, and that a violation of the statute, without more, was not a ground to reopen the estate.

Appellants filed a motion for additional discovery, accompanied by another affidavit of Mary Heeter. This affidavit alleged that Hammond’s sale of certain stock was ill-advised; that Hammond’s companion, Dorothy Simonds, converted some of Hammond’s money for her own use; and, again, that Hammond’s financial records and family mementos had been discarded. Appellants also supplied an attorney’s affidavit opining that attorney fees charged against the estate were excessive.

At an August 19, 1992 hearing, the court denied appellants’ motion for additional discovery. At the same hearing, the court found that the attorney fees charged to the estate were reasonable and that appellants’ discovery had not revealed any specific defect rendering the fees excessive. Further, the court ruled that appellants had failed to present sufficient evidence of impropriety by Kirkendall to warrant reopening the estate or his removal as fiduciary. Consequently, the court *384 granted summary disposition for Kirkendall. Rehearing was denied.

On September 4, 1992, Kirkendall filed a motion for attorney fees incurred in the defense of appellants’ litigation to have him removed as independent personal representative and trustee. A response to the motion was filed by Marian B. Jones, a Hammond estate and trust beneficiary who did not take part in the claims against Kirkendall. In this response, Jones alleged that appellants did not represent all interested parties in the matter and stated that "it seems clearly unjust and inequitable that those beneficiaries that chose not to be embroiled in this controversy should now have their share of the trust surcharged for the payment of attorney fees.” Following an evidentiary hearing at which Kirkendall’s counsel testified concerning his services, the probate court awarded $148,758.78 in attorney fees to Kirkendall, to be paid jointly by appellants, "or the fees and costs shall be surcharged against any personal distributive share from the trust.”

On appeal, appellants claim in four related issues that the probate court erred in dismissing their claims against Kirkendall and in refusing to reopen the Hammond estate. We disagree.

Appellants’ primary allegation of wrongdoing involves Kirkendall’s violation of MCL 700.582; MSA 27.5582, which provides that a judge "shall not be appointed as a fiduciary in an estate except for a member of his or her immediate family.” The statute does not define "immediate family.” Even assuming that Kirkendall was not a member of Hammond’s immediate family, however, appellants have failed to establish that the violation entitles them to relief. Appellants assume, with no support, that a violation of the statute entitles them to the reopening of the estate and the ap *385 pointment of a successor administrator. We are satisfied that the Legislature did not contemplate such relief in the absence of any evidence of wrongdoing by the judge/administrator.

Appellants’ further claims of improper estate and trust administration are without merit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
547 N.W.2d 36, 215 Mich. App. 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hammond-michctapp-1996.