In Re the Estate of Gosmire

331 N.W.2d 562, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 281
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1983
Docket13790, 13876
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 331 N.W.2d 562 (In Re the Estate of Gosmire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South 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 the Estate of Gosmire, 331 N.W.2d 562, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 281 (S.D. 1983).

Opinion

HENDERSON, Justice.

ACTION

The decedent, Norman C. Gosmire, was a cattle feeder and farmer who lived north of Winfred, South Dakota. In 1980, he died intestate at the age of sixty-four. In the estate proceedings, appellees alternatively claimed (1) enforcement of an oral sale of a farm and equipment, (2) a decree of specific performance for conveyance of real estate, livestock, and farm machinery based upon an oral agreement allegedly made wherein and whereby appellees were entitled to such a conveyance if they performed certain work, and (3) failing these two alternatives, reimbursement on a quantum meruit basis. From a judgment granting specific performance of the oral contract to transfer all property of decedent unto appellees, Gerald E. Gosmire and Ricky E. Gosmire, the administrator bank and Edgar and Harold Gosmire have appealed. We affirm.

FACTS

This is a South Dakota farm story of long, hard hours of work towards a dream with inadequate legal planning culminating in family litigation. The years of work were accomplished by Donald Gosmire and his sons, Ricky and Gerald. Norman Gos-mire, Donald’s brother and uncle of Ricky and Gerald, failed to properly plan and effectuate written legal instruments.

Donald and decedent lived together and farmed together on decedent’s farm near Winfred, South Dakota. In 1956, Donald married and later had two sons, Gerald and Ricky. When briefs were filed herein, Ricky was twenty years of age and Gerald was twenty-three. During 1962, decedent made a cattle investment that financially devastated him. Decedent contemplated bankruptcy. Donald’s family gave generously of their money, milk, eggs, and labor to help reestablish decedent. In fact, dece-

dent told his neighboring farmer: “If it hadn’t been for Don’s cows and eggs, I would have been under.” Silage cut on Donald’s farm was hauled to decedent’s farm. Such generosity also included the following: decedent approached Donald and told him that if Donald would give him his dairy calves from Donald’s dairy herd, upon decedent’s retirement or death, decedent’s land and machinery would belong to Donald or his boys. From 1962 to 1972, Donald gave decedent his dairy calves, and sales of those calves, when fed out, established receipts of approximately $100,000. Some of these calves were contributed by Gerald.

Donald testified that decedent told him in 1962 that as a result of his family’s efforts, the land and machinery would be for Donald or his two boys upon his retirement or death. The trial court found: “The decedent was the type of person who felt that a man’s word was his bond and did not see the necessity of putting things in writing. Believing a person’s word was his bond, he did business orally and with a handshake.” Therefore, we do not have the nicety of a writing to examine. Shortly after decedent’s statement, Donald acquired his own nearby dairy farmstead and moved his family. Decedent never married. Donald’s family continued to dedicate the bulk of their time to helping decedent with his farming.

Numerous witnesses testified that Donald’s sons, Gerald and Ricky, operated decedent’s tractors when they were as young as seven years old. Gerald and Ricky plowed, raked hay, mowed, cultivated, baled, and ground feed. Donald and his sons worked long hours on decedent’s farm without remuneration. As a general rule, the only free time Gerald and Ricky had was on Sunday afternoons. When school started, the boys worked for their uncle both before and after school. High school sports had to be neglected because decedent’s chores were first. When Gerald told decedent that he wanted to go to college, decedent told him to stay on the farm as the farm would be his and Ricky’s when decedent retired or died. Decedent told others how close he *565 was to the boys and how his farm would be theirs. Donald and his sons worked decedent’s farm until decedent passed on. Decedent had planned on retiring at age sixty-five.

Donald, Gerald, and Ricky were never paid any wages for their years of hard work for decedent. Decedent was survived by three brothers, Donald, Harold, and Edgar, as well as several nieces and nephews who are issue of two deceased brothers. Witnesses testified that decedent was not fond of, and did not associate with, his brothers Harold and Edgar. Harold and Edgar asserted decedent was close to them. The facts do not bear this out. Decedent’s life insurance policy named Ricky as the only beneficiary.

Substantial disputes occurred regarding statements made by decedent during the fall of 1980. Gerald testified that in the fall of 1980 his uncle told him that he and Ricky should remove his farm machinery telling them to remove it to Donald’s farm because he was not going to be able to farm again. Gerald testified that his uncle told him “It’s yours and Rick’s, you can do whatever you want, you can take it to town, trade it off or fix it up to be ready to go next spring.” Two witnesses testified that they saw decedent’s machinery at Donald’s farm prior to decedent’s death. Appellants counter that after decedent’s death, Gerald and Ricky prepared a list with Ted Gosmire, a son of appellant Harold Gosmire, which set forth forty-three items of decedent’s machinery.

Strongly disputed is an offer decedent apparently made to Gerald just six days before his death. Gerald testified that decedent offered to sell his farmstead and machinery to Ricky and him for $150,000. Gerald said he accepted the offer. In their brief, Gerald and Ricky contend that their uncle’s offer was only the final fruitation of the ongoing agreement between decedent and Donald with Gerald and Ricky as third-party beneficiaries. Such a contention goes to the very crux of this case. For support, Gerald and Ricky point out that decedent still owed $150,000 on his real estate mortgage and decedent could not convey unto them more than what he owned, i.e., his equity. Appellants assert that Gerald did not accept decedent’s offer. Mary Jo Fa-ber, a daughter of appellant Harold Gos-mire testified that decedent told her Gerald had rejected his offer as too high. Appellant Edgar Gosmire testified that decedent told him that Gerald had rejected his offer as too high. The trial court responded by granting Gerald and Ricky’s claims and ordering specific performance of the oral contract to transfer all of the decedent’s property both real and personal to them. Appellants set forth five issues in their briefs. However, the record reflects that only three issues need be treated and they are separately set forth and examined below.

ISSUES

I.

DID THE TRIAL COURT COMPLY WITH SDCL 19-16-34 WHEN IT ADMITTED INTO EVIDENCE STATEMENTS OF DECEDENT?

II.

DID DECEDENT HAVE A VALID AND BINDING AGREEMENT TO CONVEY HIS PROPERTY ON RETIREMENT OR DEATH TO APPELLEES?

III.

WERE APPELLEES ENTITLED TO A DECREE OF SPECIFIC PERFORMANCE?

DECISION

Counsel for the administrator, at the outset of trial, asked for and received a continuing objection for “all testimony which is claimed to have been made by the decedent to another third party be excluded as hearsay except in such statements made by the decedent that might be admissible by the Court understanding the applicable rule ....

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Bluebook (online)
331 N.W.2d 562, 1983 S.D. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-gosmire-sd-1983.