In re Estate of Radford

297 Neb. 748, 901 N.W.2d 261
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 2017
DocketS-16-415
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 297 Neb. 748 (In re Estate of Radford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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 Radford, 297 Neb. 748, 901 N.W.2d 261 (Neb. 2017).

Opinion

Nebraska Supreme Court Online Library www.nebraska.gov/apps-courts-epub/ 11/22/2017 08:11 PM CST

- 748 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 297 Nebraska R eports IN RE ESTATE OF RADFORD Cite as 297 Neb. 748

In re Estate of Sheila Foxley R adford, deceased. Provident Trust Company et al., appellees, v. M ary R adford, appellant. ___ N.W.2d ___

Filed September 15, 2017. No. S-16-415.

1. Statutes: Appeal and Error. Statutory interpretation presents a ques- tion of law, for which an appellate court has an obligation to reach an independent conclusion irrespective of the decision made by the court below. 2. Trusts: Equity: Appeal and Error. Absent an equity question, an appellate court reviews trust administration matters for error appear- ing on the record; but where an equity question is presented, appellate review of that issue is de novo on the record. 3. Evidence: Appeal and Error. In a review de novo on the record, an appellate court reappraises the evidence as presented by the record and reaches its own independent conclusions on the matters at issue. When evidence is in conflict, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial judge heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. 4. Judgments: Records: Appeal and Error. Meaningful appellate review requires a record that elucidates the factors contributing to the lower court’s decision. 5. Evidence: Records: Pleadings: Appeal and Error. An appellate record typically contains the bill of exceptions, used to present factual evidence to an appellate court, and the transcript, used to present pleadings and orders of the case to the appellate court. 6. Evidence: Records: Appeal and Error. A bill of exceptions is the only vehicle for bringing evidence before an appellate court; evidence which is not made a part of the bill of exceptions may not be considered. 7. Trial: Testimony: Evidence. At a hearing, testimony must be under oath and documents must be admitted into evidence before being con- sidered by the trial court. - 749 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 297 Nebraska R eports IN RE ESTATE OF RADFORD Cite as 297 Neb. 748

8. Trial: Stipulations: Judgments: Time. While no particular form of stipulation is required when made orally in open court, except that it be noted in the minutes, its terms must be definite and certain in order to render the proper basis for a judicial decision. 9. Pleadings: Evidence: Waiver. Judicial admissions and stipulations constitute a substitute for evidence, thereby waiving or dispensing with the need to produce evidence by conceding for the purpose of litigation that a proposition of fact is true. 10. Pleadings: Evidence. Judicial admissions must be unequivocal, deliber- ate, and clear, and not the product of mistake or inadvertence. 11. Pleadings: Intent. An admission does not extend beyond the intend- ment of the admission as clearly disclosed by its context. 12. Judicial Notice: Evidence. Judicial notice of an adjudicative fact is a species of evidence. 13. Judicial Notice: Records: Appeal and Error. Papers requested to be judicially noticed must be marked, identified, and made a part of the record. Testimony must be transcribed, properly certified, marked, and made a part of the record. The trial court’s ruling should state and describe what it is the court is judicially noticing. Otherwise, a meaning- ful review of its decision is impossible. 14. Judicial Notice: Rules of the Supreme Court: Evidence. A court will take judicial notice of its own records. However, under Neb. Evid. R. 201(2), Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-201(2) (Reissue 2016), judicially noticing its own proceedings and judgment is proper only where the same matters have already been considered and determined. 15. Pleadings: Evidence: Records: Presumptions. In the absence of a bill of exceptions, an appellate court presumes that any issue of fact raised by the pleadings received support from the evidence. 16. Records: Pleadings: Appeal and Error. When a transcript, containing the pleadings and order in question, is sufficient to present the issue for appellate disposition, a bill of exceptions is unnecessary to preserve an alleged error of law regarding the proceedings under review. 17. Pleadings: Proof. Pleadings alone are not proof but mere allegations of what the parties expect the evidence to show. 18. Pleadings: Trial: Evidence. Pleadings and their attachments which are not properly admitted into evidence cannot be considered by the trial court. 19. Records: Pleadings. An application and its attachments are not evi- dence, and the allegations therein remain controverted facts until proved by evidence incorporated in the bill of exceptions. 20. Records: Appeal and Error. It is incumbent upon the appellant to present a record supporting the errors assigned; absent such a record, - 750 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 297 Nebraska R eports IN RE ESTATE OF RADFORD Cite as 297 Neb. 748

an appellate court will affirm the lower court’s decision regarding those errors. 21. Records: New Trial: Appeal and Error. When a record is deficient through no fault of the appellant, an appellate court will remand for a new trial if the deficiency in the record prevents the court from pro- viding the appellant meaningful appellate review of the assignments of error. 22. Evidence: Proof: Presumptions: Appeal and Error. When, on appeal, an appellant argues that the evidence is insufficient on a point for which the appellee bore the burden of proof, an appellate court will not pre- sume there was evidence before the lower court, when the filed bill of exceptions indicates that no evidence was offered.

Appeal from the County Court for Douglas County: Stephanie R. H ansen, Judge. Reversed and remanded for fur- ther proceedings. Richard A. DeWitt and Steven G. Ranum, of Croker, Huck, Kasher, DeWitt, Anderson & Gonderinger, L.L.C., for appellant. Jeffrey J. Blumel and Kelsey M. Weiler, of Abrahams, Kaslow & Cassman, L.L.P., for appellee Brigid Radford. Heavican, C.J., Wright, Miller-Lerman, Cassel, Stacy, K elch, and Funke, JJ. Funke, J. I. NATURE OF CASE Mary Radford appeals from a county court order concern- ing the distribution of the Sheila Foxley Radford Trust (Trust). Applying Neb. Rev. Stat. § 30-2350 (Reissue 2016), the court ruled that a gift from Sheila Foxley Radford to Mary, which preceded the Trust’s restatement but was acknowledged by Mary as an inheritance in a contemporaneous writing, was in satisfaction of Mary’s inheritance from the Trust. We find that the county court had insufficient evidence upon which it could base its findings. Accordingly, we reverse, and remand for a new hearing on the trustee’s motion for direction. - 751 - Nebraska Supreme Court A dvance Sheets 297 Nebraska R eports IN RE ESTATE OF RADFORD Cite as 297 Neb. 748

II. FACTS In November 2015, Provident Trust Company, trustee for the Trust, filed an application for direction asking whether the doctrine of ademption by satisfaction applied to Sheila’s gift to Mary, which it alleged Mary had contemporaneously acknowl- edged as an inheritance under § 30-2350. Attached to the appli- cation were copies of the Trust document, Sheila’s will, and Mary’s handwritten note. The trustee set forth the following factual allegations in the application. On May 30, 2007, Mary signed a handwritten note stating: “This letter acknowledges that Sheila Radford, also known as ‘mom’, is affording me $200,000 for pur- chase of a home and is recognized by me as inheritance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 Neb. 748, 901 N.W.2d 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-radford-neb-2017.