Lauerman v. Destocki

622 N.E.2d 1122, 87 Ohio App. 3d 657, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 2731
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 11, 1993
DocketNo. 92 CA 1847.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 622 N.E.2d 1122 (Lauerman v. Destocki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lauerman v. Destocki, 622 N.E.2d 1122, 87 Ohio App. 3d 657, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 2731 (Ohio Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

Per Curiam.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered by the Ross County Common Pleas Court, Probate Division, finding Ronald G. Smith, Ronald J. Harkless, Sr., Paul W. Destocki, and Irita N. Lauerman (in her individual capacity), defendants below and appellants herein, guilty of concealing estate assets pursuant to R.C. 2109.50.

Appellants assign the following errors:

“First Assignment of Error:
“The lower court erred in conducting a summary proceeding in this matter since full and complete relief could only be afforded to the parties in a plenary action.”
“Second Assignment of Error:
“The lower court erred as a matter of law in finding that there had not been a delivery of the stock certificates to the intended donees, and that therefore, decedent’s attempt to make an inter vivos gift of his interest in the corporation failed.”

A review of the record reveals the following facts pertinent to this appeal. One week prior to his death, Robert L. Frazier signed certain stock certificates in blank, purporting to transfer his one-hundred-percent interest in R.F. Agency and Associates to five employees of the company (four of whom are appellants in the present action). Attorney Paul E. Destocki then had the transfer information typed onto these certificates. When Destocki returned so that Frazier could *660 “review” the certificates, Frazier refused to review the documents, stating that he was too tired. Frazier died the next day without having reviewed the documents. Following Frazier’s death, Destocki distributed the certificates.

On November 14,1991, Irita N. Lauerman, as executor of Frazier’s estate, and as plaintiff below and appellee herein, filed a complaint for concealment and conversion of the estate assets. Lauerman named Smith, Harkless, Destocki, Daniel Estell, and John Mayfield and herself in her individual capacity as defendants. The purpose of the action was to recover the shares of stock allegedly concealed from the estate.

On December 4,1991, the trial court issued its “Judgment Entry on ‘Complaint for Concealment of Assets and for Conversion of Decedent’s Assets.’ ” The judgment entry provides in pertinent part as follows:

“This cause came on for hearing before the Court on November 25, 1991, upon the ‘Complaint for Concealment of Assets and for Conversion of Decedent’s Assets’ filed herein by the Executrix on November 14, 1991, against Paul Destocki, the decedent’s attorney, and against Ronald G. Smith, Daniel Estell, Ronald J. Harkless, Sr., John W. Mayfield and Irita N. Lauerman (in her individual capacity), the five (5) persons who were purported donees of shares of stock (Harkless — 53 shares, Lauerman — 24 shares, Estell — 11 shares, Smith — 10 shares and Mayfield — 2 shares) of R.F. Agency & Associates, Inc., an Ohio corporation, of which the decedent, Robert L. Frazier, was the sole shareholder prior to his death on September 18, 1991.
“Pursuant to Section 2109.50 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Court by citation ■ ordered the named defendants to appear before it to be examined on oath, touching the matter of the Complaint. All of the parties were duly served with said citations, and appeared at said hearing with legal counsel present (except that Irita N. Lauerman was represented only in her fiduciary capacity as Executrix of the decedent’s Estate and not in her capacity as an individual).
“The Court proceeded to hear and determine the matters set forth in Plaintiffs Complaint as well as such other matters related to the property of the decedent as were determined by the Court’s examination. All of the named Defendants were called as witnesses by the Court to be examined pursuant to O.R.C. Section 2109.50. Counsel for Defendant Paul Destocki also said Defendant’s wife, Carol Jean Hampton, to testify in this matter.
“After full hearing, and the presentation of testimony of witnesses and of documentary evidence as exhibits, the Court announced its findings and rendered its judgment, pursuant to Ohio Revised Code Section 2109.52, as follows:
U * *
*661 “4. Decedent’s signatures (regardless of the additional signatures of Defendant Lauerman) on said R.F. Agency, Inc., R.F. Agency & Associates, Inc. and RATF, Inc. stock certificates, in blank uncompleted form, did not constitute his execution of valid legal documents, and did not effect any legal or equitable dispossession, disclaimer, or transfer of title, by the decedent of his ownership interest in either or both of said corporations.
“5. The decedent gave Defendant Destocki no verbal or written instructions as to the delivery of any of the R.F. Agency & Associates, Inc. and RATF, Inc. stock certificates to any of the persons whose names appear thereon, whether to be made prior to, upon or after the decedent’s death.
“6. Even assuming that any such delivery instructions had been given by the decedent to Defendant Destocki (but Defendant Destocki testified that no such instructions were ever given), Destocki, as custodian of said stock certificates, would have been only the decedent’s agent, and not agent for any of the defendants whose names appear on said certificates. Upon the evidence adduced at the hearing, the Court finds that none of said stock certificates was ‘delivered’ by Defendant Destocki to any of the other five (5) defendants until September 30, 1991 (and then only photocopies of the completed typed certificates were delivered). However, even if Defendant Destocki did possess some agency authority from the decedent to make delivery of said stock certificates, such agency authority terminated upon the death of the decedent on September 18, 1991. Therefore, said September 30, 1991 ‘delivery1 was of no legal force and effect.
“7. In order for the decedent to have made a valid inter vivos gift of all or any of the shares of R.F. Agency & Associates, Inc. and RATF, Inc. to any person, it was necessary for there to have been, in addition to a valid donative intent on the part of the decedent (if the decedent in fact did have the mental capacity to have such an intent), a physical transfer and delivery to the donees of some tangible evidence of ownership, coupled with a relinquishment by the decedent, as donor, and a transfer to and vesting in the donees, of dominion and control of the property which was the subject of the purported gift. Even if such donative intent did exist, no such transfer and delivery of evidence of ownership occurred prior to the decedent’s death, and no relinquishment by the decedent of dominion and control over the business and assets of said corporations ever occurred prior to his death on September 18, 1991.
« ^ ‡ ‡
“Upon the foregoing findings and pursuant to the provisions of Sections 2109.52 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Court HEREBY ORDERS that:
“A. The decedent’s ownership interests, held by him prior to September 11, 1991, in R.F. Agency & Associates, Inc., (formerly known as R.F.

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Bluebook (online)
622 N.E.2d 1122, 87 Ohio App. 3d 657, 1993 Ohio App. LEXIS 2731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lauerman-v-destocki-ohioctapp-1993.