In Re the Estate of Mellott

574 P.2d 960, 1 Kan. App. 2d 709, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 213
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 9, 1977
Docket48,959
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 574 P.2d 960 (In Re the Estate of Mellott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas 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 Mellott, 574 P.2d 960, 1 Kan. App. 2d 709, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 213 (kanctapp 1977).

Opinion

Spencer, J.:

Florence M. Mellott died testate on July 13,1969, a resident of Wyandotte County, Kansas. She was survived by her daughters, Margaret and Mary, and by her sons, Howard and Arthur. Her last will and testament dated July 27, 1958, was admitted to probate and her son Arthur was appointed and qualified as executor, without bond, on September 3, 1969. The admission of the will to probate is not in question.

Provision was made for the payment of debts and funeral expense, after which the testatrix made separate bequests to Margaret, Mary, and Howard in form as follows:

“I hereby bequeath to [name] . . . the following specific personal property, to wit: (here follow items of particular identifiable personal property) . . . two (2) shares of Brotherhood State Bank stock . . . .”

A fourth bequest in favor of Arthur is identical in form to the above except that, instead of a specific number of shares, he is to receive “the balance of the stock owned by me in the Brotherhood State Bank.” The residuary estate was devised and bequeathed in equal shares to the four children of the testatrix. The executor was granted the power to sell and dispose of property at his discretion without court order.

On the date the will was signed, the testatrix owned seven and one-half shares of Brotherhood State Bank stock. At the time of her death, her holdings stood at 86 shares; and at the time of the final accounting at 172 shares. One of the findings of the trial court is as follows:

“The Court further finds that testatrix, at the time of the execution of her will, owned seven and one-half shares of Brotherhood State Bank stock and thereafter acquired the following:
August 29, 1958 purchased one-half (VJ) share
January 10, 1962 Eight for one (8 for 1) stock divided for total of sixty-four (64) shares.
January 17,1968 Fifty percent (50%) stock dividend for total of ninety-six (96) shares.
February 19, 1968 Deceased purchased ten (10) shares for total of one hundred six (106) shares.
*711 May 14, 1968 Deceased sold Arthur M. and Olivia R. Mellott twenty (20) shares giving said deceased total of eighty-six (86) shares.
January 20, 1971 One hundred percent (100%) stock dividend giving estate total of One hundred seventy two (172) shares.”

On January 9, 1970, Arthur as executor filed an inventory and appraisal listing among the estate assets eighty-six (86) shares of Brotherhood State Bank stock and $1,400.19 in cash. These items were also listed as the personal property of the decedent on the form entitled “Information Concerning a Non-Taxable Estate” filed with the Kansas Director of Revenue.

The record reveals that the $1,400.19 in cash had been held by decedent in three separate bank accounts: $1,000 in a savings account and $327.34 in a checking account at the Wyandotte County Bank, and $72.85 in a checking account at the Commercial National Bank. Arthur later claimed the first two accounts as surviving joint owner. After Arthur qualified as executor, he transferred all of the funds to the Wyandotte County Bank checking account, which was thereafter referred to as the “estate account.”

Prior to her death, the testatrix had borrowed $1,500 from the Wyandotte County Bank and had pledged her Brotherhood State Bank stock as collateral. The principal of that loan was subsequently reduced to $1,400. On December 3, 1969, following his appointment as executor, Arthur pledged the eighty-six shares of Brotherhood State Bank stock as collateral for a personal loan of $4,000 from the Home State Bank. The proceeds from that loan were then deposited in the “estate account,” from which the decedent’s debt of $1,400 plus interest of $56, as well as a $500 personal debt of Arthur’s plus interest of $5, were paid. The remaining approximately $2,000 of the loan was transferred to the family-owned corporation, Mellott Timberlake, Inc. The executor did not seek court authority to pledge the stock for his loan, but the undisputed evidence at trial was that he had his brother’s and sisters’ prior permission to do so.

The “estate account” was merely a continuation of the checking account which the decedent had at the Wyandotte County Bank during her lifetime. The checks used were imprinted only with the name of Florence M. Mellott and were paid over the signature of Arthur M. Mellott without his designation as executor. He paid from this account, without the formality of claims *712 being filed, $150 to Howard Mellott, $250 to the Brotherhood State Bank, and $500 to Mellott Timberlake, Inc.

The executor filed his petition for final settlement together with a final accounting on November 6, 1972. “Bank a counts, joint with petitioner and savings accounts” in the amount of $1,400.19 were listed as estate assets. A payment to the “Wyandotte County Bank (note & interest)” of $1,961 was listed as a disbursement. The petition for final settlement proposed that all of the remaining estate be divided equally among the four children. The executor and his attorney waived fees for their services. Margaret and Mary filed written defenses, noting that the disbursement to the Wyandotte County Bank should have been for only $1,456. The executor admitted error and amended his accounting to reflect only that amount. At the same time the executor deleted from the amended account the sum of $1,327.34 which had been shown on the original accounting, but which the executor now claimed to be his personal property as the surviving joint owner of the two bank accounts standing in his name with the testatrix as joint tenants with right of survivorship. By his doing so, there remained only the sum of $72.85 as the beginning cash balance in the estate. In addition, the executor and his attorney now sought fees for their services and a petition for determination of intent was filed asking the court to determine the respective interests of the legatees in the Brotherhood State Bank stock in light of the substantial increase in the number of shares.

By its order filed April 5, 1973, the probate court directed distribution of the Brotherhood State Bank stock on the basis of two parts each to Margaret, Mary, and Howard, and one and one-half parts to Arthur. That court also found that the two bank accounts totaling $1,327.34 had been held in joint tenancy accounts by the testatrix with Arthur and passed to Arthur as the surviving joint owner upon the death of the testatrix. The court also approved the executor’s amended accounting and directed that he receive a fee of $500 and the further sum of $1,000 to be paid to his attorney.

Not satisfied with the order directing distribution of the bank stock, the executor appealed to the district court, where the matter was heard de novo. Arthur there testified as to the joint tenancy nature of the Wyandotte County Bank accounts; that he left that money in the “estate account” because he needed money to pay *713 expenses; and that when there were estate receipts he simply deposited them to the “estate account.”

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Bluebook (online)
574 P.2d 960, 1 Kan. App. 2d 709, 1977 Kan. App. LEXIS 213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-mellott-kanctapp-1977.