In the Matter of the Estate of Lessie May Steil

CourtIdaho Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 14, 2010
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Estate of Lessie May Steil (In the Matter of the Estate of Lessie May Steil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Estate of Lessie May Steil, (Idaho Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

ALLEN L. WISDOM, ) ) Docket No. 36616 Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) JANET C. MALLO, an individual; KAREN ) McMURTRIE, an individual; WILLIAM F. ) YOST, III, an individual; ALLIED ) MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, an ) Iowa Mutual Insurance Company, ) ) Defendants-Respondents. ) ) IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF ) LESSIE MAY STEIL, AKA LESSIE W. ) STEIL. ) ALLEN L. WISDOM, ) ) Docket No. 36617 Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) JANET C. MALLO, personal representative ) of the ESTATE OF LESSIE MAY STEIL, ) aka LESSIE W. STEIL, ) ) Defendant-Respondent. ) ) ALLEN L. WISDOM, ) ) Docket No. 36976 Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) 2010 Unpublished Opinion No. 667 v. ) ) Filed: October 14, 2010 JANET C. MALLO, an individual; KAREN ) McMURTRIE, an individual; WILLIAM F. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk YOST, III, an individual; ALLIED ) MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY, an ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED Iowa Mutual Insurance Company, ) OPINION AND SHALL NOT ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY Defendants-Respondents. ) ) )

1 Appeal from the District Court of the Third Judicial District, State of Idaho, Canyon County. Hon. Thomas J. Ryan, District Judge.

Judgment dismissing tort action and order for submission of will to probate, affirmed.

Allen L. Wisdom, Idaho City, pro se appellant.

Terry Michaelson of Hamilton, Michaelson & Hilty, LLP, Nampa, for respondents. ________________________________________________

LANSING, Chief Judge In this consolidated appeal, Allen L. Wisdom challenges the dismissal of his tort claims against William Yost, Janet Mallo, Karen McMurtrie, and Allied Mutual Insurance Company, and the order submitting his mother‟s will to probate. Wisdom asserts the district court made multiple errors. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND These consolidated cases arise out of a dispute concerning the disposition of the estate of Wisdom‟s mother, Lessie May Steil. From 2004 to 2005, Steil executed three different wills, which were drafted and notarized by her attorney, Defendant William Yost. Steil‟s last will revoked all previously made wills and trusts, appointed Defendant Janet Mallo as the personal representative of the estate, and appointed Defendant Karen McMurtrie as the alternate personal representative. Mallo, in her capacity as personal representative of Steil‟s estate, filed a petition for formal probate of this will after Steil‟s death. Wisdom filed an objection in the probate case, challenging the validity of the will and requesting the appointment of a disinterested personal representative. The magistrate court ultimately entered an order admitting the will to probate and appointing Mallo as the personal representative. Wisdom appealed the magistrate court‟s decision to the district court. While the probate case was pending in the magistrate court, Wisdom filed a separate tort action in the district court naming Yost, Mallo, McMurtrie, and Allied Mutual Insurance Company (Allied Mutual) as defendants (collectively referred to as Defendants). Wisdom alleged that the Defendants were liable for civil conspiracy, breach of fiduciary duty, tortious

2 interference with economic expectancy, undue influence, and fraud. Additionally, Wisdom asserted a claim against Yost for legal malpractice and against Yost and his surety, Allied Mutual, for breach of the Idaho Notary Public Act. Upon Wisdom‟s appeal to the district court in the probate case, the district court decided to hear the probate appeal as a trial de novo and consolidated the tort action with the probate appeal.1 The district court conducted a bench trial despite Wisdom‟s request for a jury. Before trial, Wisdom moved for defaults against Defendants in the tort case for failure to timely file responsive pleadings. Defendants filed motions to dismiss or, alternatively, motions for summary judgment. The court denied Wisdom‟s application for defaults and granted summary judgment for Defendants on Wisdom‟s tort claims for undue influence and fraud because the court determined that they were duplicative of Wisdom‟s claims in the probate case. The court also granted summary judgment on Wisdom‟s civil conspiracy and tortious interference with economic expectancy claims because Idaho does not recognize causes of action for civil conspiracy or for attempted interference with an inheritance. Yost was granted summary judgment on Wisdom‟s legal malpractice and breach of fiduciary duty claims on the ground that Yost did not owe Wisdom a fiduciary duty. Mallo and McMurtrie were granted partial summary judgment on Wisdom‟s breach of fiduciary duty claim. The court determined that transactions conducted after the appointment of the personal representative should be heard in the probate action and granted summary judgment in the tort case with regard to those transactions. However, the court concluded that to the extent Wisdom was making claims regarding sales of Steil‟s property or other transactions that Mallo and McMurtrie conducted under a power of attorney while Steil was still living, the claims would remain in the tort action. Finally, the court dismissed Wisdom‟s breach of the Idaho Notary Public Act claim against Yost in the tort action for failure to plead fraud with particularity and dismissed all claims against Allied Mutual because Allied Mutual‟s only connection to the suit was as surety for Yost, who had been dismissed. In sum, the court dismissed all tort claims against Yost and Allied Mutual and granted summary judgment on all claims against Mallo and McMurtrie except for the breach of fiduciary duty prior to Steil‟s death.

1 Whether a de novo trial was authorized under the circumstances of this case is not an issue raised by the parties. 3 After these dismissals and partial summary judgments, Wisdom filed motions to enter defaults against Yost, Mallo, and McMurtrie; compel discovery; vacate the scheduling order; and postpone the trial. Wisdom argued that tort claims still existed against Yost, Mallo, and McMurtrie and that they were in default for failing to file an answer to the remaining claims against them. Wisdom also argued that Defendants had not responded to his discovery requests, making it impossible for him to be prepared for trial. Defendants asserted that they had made available to Wisdom all the requested information they possessed. The court never ruled on Wisdom‟s motion for defaults. Wisdom‟s other motions were denied, and the consolidated cases proceeded to trial on May 19, 2009. On that date Wisdom continued to maintain that he was not prepared for trial, and he did not proffer evidence to support his claims. The extent of his participation at trial was to cross-examine some of Defendants‟ witnesses and make some objections. Thereafter, the court entered an order admitting Steil‟s will to probate and appointing Mallo as personal representative and a judgment dismissing Wisdom‟s remaining breach of fiduciary duty claims against Mallo and McMurtrie. On appeal, Wisdom argues that the district court erred by not granting his requests for entry of defaults, granting partial summary judgments to Mallo and McMurtrie, “transferring” tort causes of action to the probate case “and later causing the transferred causes of action to disappear,” refusing to order Mallo and McMurtrie to file an answer, granting summary judgment to Yost, dismissing Allied Mutual, denying Wisdom the opportunity to participate in scheduling, conducting a bench trial instead of a jury trial, denying Wisdom the opportunity to conduct discovery, declining to continue the trial, refusing to hear Wisdom‟s motion for the appointment of a special administrator, allowing irregularities at trial, admitting Steil‟s last will and testament to probate, appointing a conflicted personal representative, and awarding attorney fees to Defendants. Wisdom also claims these various errors violated his due process rights.

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Bluebook (online)
In the Matter of the Estate of Lessie May Steil, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-the-estate-of-lessie-may-steil-idahoctapp-2010.