In Re the Estate of Greenheck

2001 MT 114, 27 P.3d 42, 305 Mont. 308, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 179
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2001
Docket00-190
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2001 MT 114 (In Re the Estate of Greenheck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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 Greenheck, 2001 MT 114, 27 P.3d 42, 305 Mont. 308, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 179 (Mo. 2001).

Opinion

JUSTICE TRIEWEILER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Joy Kocher and Judy Reed, heirs and co-personal representatives of Lois Greenheck's estate, filed a first and final accounting and consolidated petition for proposed distribution of Lois' estate in the District Court for the First Judicial District in Lewis and Clark County. Dr. Robert Greenheck, an heir who had been previously removed as a co-personal representative by the District Court, objected to the proposed distribution of the estate. Following a hearing, the District Court approved the proposed distribution. Robert appeals his removal as co-personal representative and from the District Court's order approving the proposed distribution. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

¶2 The parties present the following issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Did the District Court err when it removed Robert as a co-personal representative of Lois Greenheck's estate?

¶4 2. Did the District Court err when it allowed the remaining co-personal representatives to deduct $26,999.00 of gift taxes from Robert's share of the estate?

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶5 Lois V. Greenheck died on October 30, 1997, and left a Will, validly executed on July 2, 1963, which named her three children as co-personal representatives and divided her estate equally among them. On November 17, 1997, two of Lois' children, Joy Jean Kocher and Judy Fay Reed (the Sisters), submitted a petition for formal probate of Lois' Will to the District Court for the First Judicial District • in Lewis and Clark County. In their petition, the Sisters requested that they alone be appointed co-personal representatives due to a history of family conflict with their brother, Dr. Robert Roy Greenheck. After Robert objected and asserted his right to appointment as co-personal representative, the parties stipulated that all three childreh would be appointed and the District Court so ordered on December 22, 1997.

¶6 On June 2, 1998, the Sisters filed a Motion for Hearing on Proposed Distribution of Estate. On July 24, 1998, the District Court held a hearing to consider the motion. Robert was not present at the hearing. On July 29,1998, the District Court ordered Robert to provide a list of those personal property items that he did not consider part of the estate and those personal property items he wished to receive from *310 the estate. The District Court further ordered Robert to sign federal and state tax documents that had been prepared for the Sisters and return the proposed tax documents by July 30, 1998. The District Court specified that Robert's failure to sign and return the tax documents by July 30,1998, would result in his removal as co-personal representative.

¶7 On July 31, 1998, the Sisters filed a motion to remove Robert as a co-personal representative for failing to sign and return tax documents and checks. On August 26, 1998, the Sisters filed an amended motion, which cited Robert's failure to provide personal property lists and alleged a break-in to Lois' residence as additional reasons for his removal as co-personal representative.

¶8 The parties presented conflicting testimony at the October 22, 1998, hearing held pursuant to the motion to remove Robert. The Sisters testified that the tax documents were accurate and that Robert simply refused to sign, only belatedly asserting that the returns were inaccurate. They also testified that Robert did not provide the personal property lists ordered by the District Court. Joy testified that certain items were missing from her mother's house when she went to inventory the property and that she suspected that Robert had broken into the house and removed the missing items. Robert justified his failure to submit the personal property lists by alleging that he was denied access to the house. He further testified that the tax documents were incomplete and inaccurate.

¶9 Following the hearing, the District Court removed Robert as co-personal representative of the estate. The District Court determined that there was significant hostility between Robert and the Sisters, and that Robert's removal would "enable an expeditious settlement and closure of the estate.”

¶10 On October 26, 1999, the Sisters filed a First and Final Account and Report and Consolidated Petitions for an Order or Orders of Court Allowing and Settling Personal Representative's First and Final Account and Report, Approving Distribution of Testate Estate, and Adjudicating Complete Settlement of Estate and Discharging the Co-Personal Representatives. In the petition the Sisters requested that the $31,647.00 co-representatives fee be split equally between them. The Sisters also proposed a distribution of the estate.

¶11 On November 1, 1999, the Sisters filed an amendment to the proposed distribution which assessed Robert's share of the estate $26,999.00 for gift tax on a loan from Lois to Robert which they alleged had been cancelled. During the administration of the estate, the Sisters obtained documents which suggested that Robert had received a gift from Lois in the amount of $70,300.00. In a letter dated *311 November 12, 1998, the Sisters informed Robert's counsel that a $70,300.00 loan Lois made to Robert in January of 1996, which had been secured by a deed of trust for Robert's house, had not been repaid. Although Lois had recorded a release of the deed of trust on July 16, 1996, there was no record that Lois received a $70,300.00 payment from Robert. The letter also advised Robert that if he disputed the existence of a gift, he should provide the Sisters' counsel with facts in support of his position. He was advised that if he did not do so by December 1,1998, the Sisters would assume that a gift had been made and proceed accordingly. When Robert failed to respond, the co-personal representatives filed an amended federal estate tax return which reported the gift and then charged Robert's share of the estate the additional $26,999.00 in federal taxes which were owed because of the gift.

¶12 At the hearing on November 18,1999, Robert testified that he had received value as either gifts or loans from Lois and admitted that the $70,300 temporarily secured by his house bore some relationship to the value received. However, Robert testified that he executed the deed of trust to protect his equity in his home prior to filing for bankruptcy, and that he later released the lien when he learned that it might endanger Lois' assets during the bankruptcy proceedings. At one point during cross-examination, the following exchange took place:

A. It - my feeling was she had given me these as gifts and if I could I was going to give her money back as gifts.
Q. Okay. So - you do agree with me then that the $70,300 had some relationship to money your mother had given you in past years?
A. Yes sir.

¶13 Robert further testified:

Q. Why don't you explain to me how you were going to explain to the bankruptcy court that you had a 70 thousand dollar lien on your house and you owed your mother 70,000 but you are testifying now that you didn't owe her anything?
A. Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Estate of G. Williams
2023 MT 72 (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)
O'Neil v. Fox
2023 MT 77N (Montana Supreme Court, 2023)
Estate of Elliot
Montana Supreme Court, 2023
In Re the Estate of Bennett
2013 MT 228 (Montana Supreme Court, 2013)
In Re the Estate of Hannum
2012 MT 171 (Montana Supreme Court, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 MT 114, 27 P.3d 42, 305 Mont. 308, 2001 Mont. LEXIS 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-greenheck-mont-2001.