In Re Estate of McCormick

2001 ME 24, 765 A.2d 552, 2001 Me. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 31, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 2001 ME 24 (In Re Estate of McCormick) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine 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 McCormick, 2001 ME 24, 765 A.2d 552, 2001 Me. LEXIS 26 (Me. 2001).

Opinion

DANA, J.

[¶ 1] Mark Lukas appeals from judgments entered in the York County Probate Court {Nadeau, J.) in favor of Lorraine Bowdoin, the personal representative of Pearl McCormick’s estate. On appeal, Lu-kas contends that: (1) his motion for reference should have been granted because allowing part-time probate judges to maintain active probate practices denied him due process of law; (2) the Probate Court erred in ordering him to pay Bowdoin’s attorney and personal representative fees, and in denying his request for attorney fees; (3) he should not have been sanctioned, pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 37, for asserting the attorney-client privilege during a deposition; (4) the judgment disallowing the holographic will should have been vacated; and (5) the Probate Court abused its discretion by ordering separate trials. We agree that the Probate Court erred in requiring Lukas to pay Bowdoin’s attorney and personal representative fees. In all other respects we affirm.

I. CASE HISTORY

[¶2] The record supports the following facts: In 1976, Mark Lukas and his wife Suzanne purchased a home in Kennebunk across the street from Mearl Stiller. The Lukases and Stiller became close friends, and in late 1988, Mark Lukas agreed to serve as Stiller’s guardian. Stiller had previously created an inter vivos trust naming her sister, Pearl McCormick, beneficiary. Stiller died in January 1989, and McCormick became the owner of the trust’s equities, valued at approximately $300,000. Lukas was appointed guardian and conservator for McCormick in February 1989.

[¶ 3] Throughout 1988 and 1989, McCormick had urged her attorney, Stephen Hodsdon, to draft a will on her behalf. Despite McCormick’s requests, Hodsdon never drafted the will because he questioned McCormick’s testamentary capaci *556 ty. 1 In October 1989, however, Lukas and his wife assisted McCormick in drafting a holographic will. The will provided that $40,000 be given to an English relative of McCormick’s deceased husband, with the remainder going to the Lukases.

[¶ 4] McCormick died in January 1997. Mark Lukas began to close the conserva-torship estate, and Hodsdon drafted an affidavit to assist Lukas with the closing. The Lukas affidavit provided that McCormick had no living relatives. Lukas closed McCormick’s bank account and retained the balance of that account, $895, as a fee for unpaid services. Lukas admits that he overcharged McCormick for his conserva-torship services by approximately $90,000, and he has placed $90,000 in an escrow account to cover those overcharges.

[¶ 5] In June 1997, Lorraine Bowdoin, McCormick’s cousin, was appointed personal representative of McCormick’s estate. James Mitchell entered his appearance as Bowdoin’s counsel in September 1997. At that time Attorney Mitchell served, and continues to serve, as Probate Judge in Kennebec County.

[¶ 6] Lukas, through his counsel James Young, filed McCormick’s holographic will in October 1997. Young testified that Lu-kas had a “clear statutory duty” to file the holographic will. In November 1997, Lu-kas filed an inventory and accounting of his conservatorship, and a petition to probate the holographic will and for him to be appointed the personal representative. Bowdoin filed objections to the inventory, the accounting, and the petition for probate.

[¶ 7] Approximately one year later, Bow-doin filed a motion for separate trials regarding the inventory dispute, the accounting dispute, and Lukas’s claim for extra fees against the estate. In early December 1998, Bowdoin testified at her deposition that she had met with McCormick in June 1989, and that McCormick discussed making a will. On December 14, 1998, the court entered an order dismissing with prejudice Lukas’s petition to probate the holographic will because Lukas had voluntarily abandoned the petition. One week later, Bowdoin filed a motion seeking recovery from Lukas directly for her attorney and personal representative fees incurred during the holographic will contest.

[¶ 8] In March 1999, the court granted in part Bowdoin’s motion for separate trials by ordering successive inventory and accounting trials. Approximately one month later, Lukas filed a motion for appointment of a referee pursuant to M.R. Prob. P. 58. Lukas sought a reference of the inventory dispute, the accounting dispute, and Bow-doin’s request for attorney and personal representative fees, contending that a reference would be expeditious and would ameliorate the due process concerns raised by Attorney Mitchell’s appearance before a fellow probate judge. The court denied Lukas’s motion for reference in May 1999. The court subsequently reconsidered that order, affirmed its denial of a reference as to the attorney fees and inventory trials, but granted a reference on the accounting trial.

[¶ 9] Attorney Young was scheduled to be deposed in May 1999, in preparation for the fees trial, but Lukas refused to allow him to testify without an agreement between the parties regarding a limited waiver of the attorney-client privilege. Because the parties could not reach agreement on the limited waiver, the deposition was terminated after only ten minutes. Bowdoin then filed a motion to compel discovery and to award expenses pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 37, which the court granted in the amount of $3,690.02.

[¶ 10] The attorney fees trial was held on May 18, July 6, October 26 and 27, and November 17, 1999. In December 1999, Lukas filed a motion to vacate the judgment disallowing the holographic will, claiming newly discovered evidence and *557 fraud based on Bowdoin’s testimony during the fees trial. The court denied the motion. The next day, the court denied Lukas’s motion for attorney fees, stating that Lukas’s actions in offering the holographic will for probate were “dilatory and calculated to protect himself, rather than to benefit the estate.” In January 2000, the court entered an order requiring Lu-kas to pay Bowdoin the $40,420 in attorney fees and $10,263 in personal representative fees Bowdoin incurred as a result of the will contest and attorney fees litigation. By subsequent amendment, Bowdoin’s fee award was increased to $51,087. In March 2000, the court entered a judgment pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 54(b) with respect to the order denying Lukas’s motion to vacate the judgment disallowing the holographic will. This appeal followed.

II. MOTION FOR REFERENCE

[¶ 11] Before discussing the merits of Lukas’s claims, we first address Bowdoin’s contention that the order denying Lukas’s motion for reference is not ripe for appellate review. Bowdoin contends that the order is not a final judgment because two of the three trials addressed in the order have yet to take place. Ordinarily, an appeal is only cognizable if it arises from a final judgment. See Millett v. Atl. Richfield Co., 2000 ME 178, ¶ 8, 760 A.2d 250, 253. Interlocutory orders that are not immediately appealable merge with a final decree and become appealable at that time. See Boyle v. Share, 377 A.2d 458, 462 (Me.1977) (stating that because “an interlocutory order is related to the main action, the rule allowing merger of the appeal from the order with the appeal from the final decree is well founded”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 ME 24, 765 A.2d 552, 2001 Me. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-mccormick-me-2001.