In Re Estate of Loomer

2010 ND 93, 782 N.W.2d 648, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 94, 2010 WL 1932421
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 2010
Docket20090175
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 2010 ND 93 (In Re Estate of Loomer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court 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 Loomer, 2010 ND 93, 782 N.W.2d 648, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 94, 2010 WL 1932421 (N.D. 2010).

Opinion

SANDSTROM, Justice.

[¶ 1] LeRoy Loomer appeals from a probate judgment confirming the partition of land owned by the decedent, Oline Loomer, and the distribution of the land to her three children, LeRoy, Orville, and Donald Loomer. We conclude the court’s partition decision is not clearly erroneous and the claimed misconduct by a referee appointed to assist in the partition of the land does not require reversal. We affirm.

I

[¶ 2] Oline Loomer died in 2002 without executing a will. She was survived by her three adult children, LeRoy, Orville, and Donald Loomer, who were appointed personal representatives of an estate that included about 2,160 acres of ranch and farm land in McKenzie County. The three sons disagreed about the distribution of the surface interest of their mother’s land and petitioned under N.D.C.C. § 30.1-20-11 to partition the land. LeRoy Loomer had lived on the family ranch since 1972 and had been involved in a ranching and farming arrangement with his parents since then. According to LeRoy Loomer, he had separately purchased 990 acres of land in the area, which he intends to combine with his share of his mother’s land and continue his ranching operation. He asserts his mother’s land should be partitioned to give his brothers cropland and to give him pasture land so he can continue his ranching operation. Donald and Orville Loomer left the family ranch and farm in the 1960s. They claim LeRoy Loomer has received a “free ride” under the arrangement with their parents for many years, and absent a devise in a will, Oline Loomer’s estate has no obligation to partition the land to ensure he can continue his ranching operation. Donald and Orville Loomer claim they want some of the pasture land “to commercially hunt their portion of the lands as a revenue generating business.”

[¶ 3] At a February 2004 hearing, the three sons presented conflicting proposals for partitioning the surface interest of their mother’s land. The district court ordered the sons to decide which issues could be decided by stipulation and which issues required further hearing. The three sons thereafter stipulated for appointment of three referees, Roger Cym- *650 baluk, Greg Hennessy, and Craig Melvor, to assist in the sale or partition of the land under N.D.C.C. § 32-16-12. Melvor is a certified appraiser from Williston who appeared at the February 2004 hearing as a witness for LeRoy Loomer. Cymbaluk is also a certified appraiser from Williston, and Hennessy is an attorney from Willi-ston. The parties’ stipulation provided that “[u]pon receipt of the report from the three referees, the Court shall decide if partition can be made without great prejudice to the estate’s beneficiaries or if a sale will be necessary.” The court thereafter ordered the referees “to make a report of their proceedings, specifying the manner in which they executed their trust, and describing the property divided, if possible and the share allotted to each party with a particular description of each share.”

[¶ 4] Cymbaluk and Melvor submitted a joint report to the court, which divided the land into three tracts. Tract one consisted of 136 acres of cropland, 5 acres for the farmstead, 643.5 acres of pasture, and 15.5 acres of wasteland for a total of 800 acres valued at $179,000. Tract two consisted of 369.5 acres of cropland and 350.5 acres of pasture for a total of 720 acres valued at $180,000. Tract three consisted of 566.9 acres of cropland, 66.8 acres of pasture, and 6.3 acres of wasteland for a total of 640 acres valued at $210,500. The joint report proposed to give LeRoy Loomer tract one and identified the two other tracts of land for Donald and Orville Loomer without specifically designating either tract for either brother. The joint report said there was adequate cash in the estate to equalize the difference in land values and said each tract of land was accessible by a county road, the proposed division minimized fencing problems, and “[bjoth parties would have pasture and some water and the cropland could be utilized for upland game if the owners want a commercial fee hunting business.”

[¶ 5] Hennessy submitted a separate report to the court, which stated LeRoy Loomer had no legal or equitable right to improve his position over his brothers because Oline Loomer died without a will. Hennessy’s report said LeRoy Loomer had rejected a leaseback of Donald and Orville Loomer’s two-thirds interest in the land as uneconomical and terminable at will. Hennessy’s report divided the land into three 720 acre tracts. Tract one consisted of 371.5 acres of cropland and 348.5 acres of pasture valued at $215,000, tract two consisted of 357 acres of cropland and 363 acres of pasture valued at $175,000, and tract three consisted of 353.5 acres of cropland and 366.5 acres of pasture valued at $177,000. Hennessy’s report proposed distribution of tract one to LeRoy Loomer, tract two to Orville Loomer, and tract three to Donald Loomer.

[¶ 6] Orville and Donald Loomer asked the court to confirm Hennessy’s report and objected to the joint report, arguing the joint report failed to allot to each of the three brothers their separate and distinct shares of the land. LeRoy Loomer asked the court to reject Hennessy’s report and to confirm the joint report, arguing the joint report was equitable under the circumstances because it would allow him to continue his ranching livelihood. LeRoy Loomer argued, “[i]f the Court determines that the acreage between Orville and Donald needs to be delineated, so be it,” but “that should not effect [sic] the land that Referees Melvor and Cymbaluk felt was equitable for LeRoy to be provided with.”

[¶ 7] The district court adopted Hennessy’s report and ordered partition of the land according to that report. The court said the joint report had a “serious flaw,” because it proposed to allocate two tracts of land to Donald and Orville Loomer as *651 tenants in common and they had not agreed to that ownership arrangement.

[¶ 8] LeRoy Loomer requested reconsideration, claiming the “serious flaw” in the joint report could be corrected easily by having the two referees identify separate tracts of land for Donald and Orville Loomer. After a hearing, the court denied LeRoy Loomer’s motion for reconsideration, stating the report adopted by the court “took into consideration sentiments, economics, viability, living arrangements of the parties, the operations of the parties. And completed the partition without great prejudice to any. There may have been other preferred options that each of the parties would have liked had they had the only say, but they did not.”

[¶ 9] LeRoy Loomer subsequently moved to vacate the partition judgment, arguing referees Cymbaluk and Mclvor did not intend for Donald and Orville Loomer to own their two tracts together and the two referees intended for Donald and Orville Loomer to choose the tract of land they wanted. LeRoy Loomer also claimed Hennessy’s report was based on Hennessy’s improper ex parte communications with Orville and Donald Loomer. The court denied LeRoy Loomer’s request to vacate the partition judgment.

[¶ 10] After further proceedings to distribute other property in the estate, Le-Roy Loomer again moved to vacate the partition decision.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2010 ND 93, 782 N.W.2d 648, 2010 N.D. LEXIS 94, 2010 WL 1932421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-loomer-nd-2010.