Johnson v. Johnson

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 10, 2015
DocketYORcv-11-209
StatusUnpublished

This text of Johnson v. Johnson (Johnson v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Johnson, (Me. Super. Ct. 2015).

Opinion

~' INTERED FEB 1 2 1015

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT YORK, SS. CIVIL ACTION DOCKET NO. CV-11-209 '/OR-JON- D~-10-15 JO ROSEN JOHNSON, Personal Representative of the Estate of William I. Johnson,

Plaintiff,

v. ORDER

DANAE. JOHNSON,_ LINDA J. OUELLETTE, ESTATE OF EMERSON JOHNSON, ESTATE OF ETHEL IRVING, JOYCE STOBO, and SALEM ADVISORY GROUP, LLC, Defendants,

H. BECK, INC., and JO ROSEN JOHNSON,

Third-party Defendants,

ELEANOR PHINNEY,

Party-in-interest and Cross-claimant.

I. Background

A. Procedural Posture

Before the court are motions for summary judgment by Defendants Dana

Johnson, Linda Ouellette, Joyce Stobo, Salem Advisory Group, LLC, and H. Beck, Inc.

Joyce Stobo and H. Beck also filed motions to dismiss. Originally named to this action as

a Party-in-interest, Eleanor Phinney ("Phinney") later filed a motion to amend her answer

1 to assert various crossclaims, which was granted. The Cross-claim Defendants have also

moved for summary judgment. Plaintiff William Johnson 1 and Phinney oppose the

motions for summary judgment. Despite the many parties and motions before the court,

this entire controversy involves a pair of antique chairs and a securities account.

Specifically, Plaintiff William Johnson brings claims against Dana Johnson and

Linda Oullette in four counts including (1) tortious interference with an expectancy or

gift, (2) lack of capacity and unjust enrichment, (3) mistake of fact and misrepresentation,

and (4) return of property. The second and third counts request the court to impose a

constructive trust over the funds from the securities account at issue. Party-in-interest and

Cross-claimant Eleanor Phinney asserts tortious interference with an expectancy or gift

and unjust enrichment claims against Dana Johnson and Linda Oullette. Phinney also

asserts cross-claims for tortious interference with an expectancy and breach of contract

against Joyce Stobo, Salem Advisory Group, LLC, and H. Beck, Inc. William Johnson

later amended his complaint to mirror several of Phinney's claims.

B. Facts

Plaintiff William Johnson and Defendant Dana Johnson are the sons of Emerson

Johnson. Emerson Johnson died on August 12,2010. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 2i In the wake of Emerson's death, a dispute arose over entitlement to a securities account and a pair of

antique chairs. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 1.)

1. The Securities Account and TOD Form

Emerson Johnson and Eleanor Phinney began dating in 1983. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~

46.) They remained a couple and lived together until shortly before Emerson Johnson's

1 Jo Rosen Johnson, as personal representative of the Estate of William I. Johnson, has been substituted in this action. 2 "Def." and "Defendants" refers to Dana Johnson et al. unless otherwise indicated.

2 death in 2010. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~50.) Towards the end of Emerson's life, he was confined

to a wheelchair and Phinney helped take care of him. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~~55-56.) Although

Phinney never acquired a power of attorney for Emerson, she sometimes signed his name

for him. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~~57-58.)

On August 31, 2009, Phinney drove Emerson to a meeting with Joyce Stobo, a

financial advisor employed by Salem Advisory Group. (Def. 's S.M.F. ~ 62.) The purpose

of the meeting was to transfer Emerson Johnson's stock portfolio from Ameriprise

Financial to H. Beck, Inc. (Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~ 23.) At the meeting, among other

documents, Stobo prepared an Individual Transfer on Death Account Agreement form

("the TOD form") for a securities account with an account number of 47G-239248. (Def.

Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~ 26.) Stobo prepared the TOD form in Emerson and Phinney's

presence. (Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~ 28.) The TOD form called for 65% to be distributed

to Phinney and 25% to William Johnson upon Emerson Johnson's death. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~

65.) It is unclear whether Emerson Johnson signed the TOD form or Phinney signed the

form for him. (Pl.'s Resp. Def.'s S.M.F. ~~ 66, 68.) Phinney does not remember; she

believes she could have signed the TOD form, but is not sure. (Eleanor Phinney Opp.

S.M.F. ~ 30.) 3 If Phinney did in fact sign the form, she maintains that she did so at

Emerson's request. (Eleanor Phinney Opp. S.M.F. ~ 33.) Joyce Stobo was not in the room

when the TOD form was signed and did not review the papers after they were signed.

(Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~~ 29-30.) The TOD form replaced a prior TOD form

3 In her deposition, Phinney stated "I honestly do not know whether I signed or Emerson signed, and that's the God's honest truth, which is what thus all comes down to I guess .... I could have - I could have. I told - I told you that before. I'm not sure. I could have signed it, but I'm honest to God not sure." (Eleanor Phinney Dep. 37:20-23, 39:2-4.)

3 governing the securities account that called for half a million to be distributed to Phinney

and the remainder to Dana Johnson. (Eleanor Phinney Opp. S.M.F. ~ 22.)

After Emerson Johnson died, Dana Johnson met with Joyce Stobo and informed

her that the signature on the TOD form was not Emerson's. (Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~

41.) Dana Johnson claimed that he had a handwriting expert confirm the signature was

not Emerson's and showed Stobo signature samples for comparison, convincing Stobo

that he was correct. (Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~~ 42-45.) Convinced the signature on the

TOD form was forged and invalid, at Dana Johnson's request, Stobo transferred the

balance of the account to the Estate ofEmerson Johnson. (Def. Joyce Stobo S.M.F. ~ 46;

Eleanor Phinney Opp. S.M.F. ~ 42.)

2. The Chairs

Emerson Johnson possessed two hand-carved antique chairs that dated to the 19th

century. A former slave who lived on Strawberry Island off Kennebunk carved the chairs

and later gave the chairs to Elsie Libby. (Def. 's S.M.F. ~ 5.) Libby held the chairs until

Emerson Johnson stole them from her in the summer of 1973. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~~ 17-18.t

The Johnsons never acquired lawful title to the chairs from Libby. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 22.)

In the 1980s, the chairs were moved to a barn owned by William and Emerson's mother,

Ethel Irving, where William alleges he last saw them together. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 27.) By

2007, only one of the chairs remained in Ethel Irving's barn. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 32.) On

February 3, 2008, Emerson Johnson hand-wrote a note that purported to gift the chairs to

William Johnson. (Def.'s S.M.F. ~ 37.) William Johnson does not currently know where

4 The Defendants further allege that William helped his father steal the chairs. William denies this, but does not deny that his father stole them and does not allege that lawful title passed from Elsie Libby, but rather only vaguely references the acquisition. (Pl.'s Resp. Def. 's S.M.F. 1 22; Aff. William Johnson 11 6, 12, "The chairs were acquired by Emerson R. Johnson from Elsie Libby.")

4 the chairs are. (Def.'s S.M.F. ,-r 42.) Dana Johnson does not know where the chairs are

and denies that he removed them from Ethel Irving's bam. (Def.'s S.M.F. ,-r 45i

IT. Discussion

A. Summary Judgment Standard

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