Louise Litzinger v. Estate

CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 15, 2005
Docket04-6059
StatusPublished

This text of Louise Litzinger v. Estate (Louise Litzinger v. Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louise Litzinger v. Estate, (bap8 2005).

Opinion

United States Bankruptcy Appellate Panel FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT

________

04-6059EM ________

In re: * * Louise M. Litzinger, * * Debtor. * * Louise M. Litzinger, * * Appeal from the United States Debtor-Appellant, * Bankruptcy Court for the * Eastern District of Missouri v. * * The Estate of Victor Litzinger, * * Claimant-Appellee. *

Submitted: February 8, 2005 Filed: March 15, 2005 (Corrected March 25, 2005) ________

Before KRESSEL, Chief Judge, DREHER, and MAHONEY, Bankruptcy Judges. ________

DREHER, Bankruptcy Judge.

This is an appeal from an order of the bankruptcy court allowing a claim by The Estate of Victor Litzinger in the amount of $130,553.38. In allowing the claim the bankruptcy court held that debtor had participated in the conversion of at least that amount of probate estate assets. We remand with instructions to the bankruptcy court to address a jurisdictional issue which was never raised or briefed before the bankruptcy court or this Bankruptcy Appellate Panel.

BACKGROUND AND FACTS

Victor Litzinger (Victor) had two heirs, his nephews Guy Litzinger (Guy) and Warren Rosenfelder (Warren). Debtor, Louise Litzinger (Louise), was Guy's wife. Victor was an elderly man when, on July 7, 1997, he signed a durable power of attorney naming Guy his attorney-in-fact. The power of attorney gave Guy full authority, in his sole discretion, to deal with Victor's assets without limitation, except those imposed by statute. Only a few months later, on October 16, 1997, Victor executed a Last and Will and Testament which named Guy as Personal Representative of Victor's estate. After making a few special bequests, the will left all assets which Victor owned at the time of his death to Guy and Warren equally.

Using Victor's assets, on March 19, 1998, Guy opened a brokerage account (Victor/Guy account) at a brokerage company where Guy and Louise also had a joint account (Guy/Louise account). No one could find any documents evidencing the opening of this account. Guy did sign a Substitute W-9 which indicated that the account was opened as a joint account and the evidence showed that the brokerage company considered the account a joint account with right of survivorship. The parties further stipulated that Victor signed no document in connection with the opening of the Victor/Guy account.

Between July 1997 and Victor's death, Guy paid all of Victor's living expenses out of a separate checking account which Victor owned. No draws were made on the Victor/Guy account between the time it was opened and Victor's death.

-2- On January 7, 2000, Victor died. Shortly thereafter, on February 9, 2000, Guy signed a Letter of Authorization closing the Victor/Guy account. Pursuant to instructions from Guy, the assets in the Victor/Guy account, valued on January 1, 2000, at $219,392.86, were transferred to the Guy/Louise account. Immediately prior to the transfer, the Guy/Louise Account had a balance of $51,367.83. The only evidence of Louise's complicity in this transfer was the testimony of both Guy and Louise that, at Guy's direction, she called the broker to find out what steps needed to be taken to effect a transfer and then conveyed that information to Guy. Guy was the only person legally authorized to effect the transfer. Louise testified she thought the transfer was perfectly proper because Victor wanted Guy to receive the account and Warren to receive his real estate.

In March 2000 Guy, as Personal Representative of Victor's estate, opened Victor's probate estate in Michigan. On November 6, 2001, Guy filed an inventory in the Michigan probate proceedings which listed a parcel of real estate in Michigan and the Guy/Louise Account as Victor's only assets. This is apparently the first and only time until the claim was filed in this case that Guy took the position that the money in the Guy/Louise account was an asset of Victor's estate. On March 14, 2003, Guy resigned as Personal Representative of the probate estate and Warren was substituted in his place. The record does not indicate whether there has been any other activity in the Michigan probate proceeding.

During 2000, Guy and Louise withdrew $121,616.35 from the Guy/Louise Account for payment of their own living expenses. In an action which apparently sparked Guy's ire, Louise herself withdrew $40,000 of that sum from the account shortly before she filed for divorce on December 29, 2000.

Louise testified that she believed they were entitled to the money upon Victor's death. While Guy's current position is that the Guy/Louise account belongs to the estate, he took multiple actions which demonstrated otherwise. For example, Guy

-3- and Louise filed joint income tax returns for 2000 and 2001 in which they claimed the gains on the Guy/Louise account as theirs and paid taxes on them. Guy filed his own separate tax returns for 2002 and 2003, claiming once again that the earnings on the Guy/Louise account were his, and he paid taxes on them. Meanwhile, on January 6, 2003, Dorothy Litzinger, Guy's mother, obtained a judgment against Guy and Louise for $160,625.00 she claimed they both owed her. On February 28, 2003, Dorothy garnished the Guy/Louise account and obtained $90,553.38. Guy, who was still the Personal Representative of Victor's estate at that time, took no steps on behalf of Victor's estate to object to the garnishment. He testified that he failed to do so because he thought he and Louise owed his mother the money. Shortly thereafter, Guy resigned as Personal Representative and Warren was appointed in his place.

On August 13, 2003, Louise filed for Chapter 7 relief under the Bankruptcy Code. On December 2, 2003, Guy, on behalf of the estate, filed a proof of claim asserting that the estate was owed $130,553.38 ($40,000 for the amount taken by Louise from the Guy/Louise account on the day she filed for divorce and $90,553.38 taken by the garnishment). The parties later agreed that, while the claim should have been filed by Warren, this would not be considered a cause for objection to the claim. The estate's theory was that the transfer of funds from the Victor/Guy account to the Guy/Louise account was a conversion of the probate estate's property. The estate asserted that Louise was culpable because she knowingly participated in the conversion and took the benefit of the funds.

After trial, the bankruptcy court allowed the estate’s claim. First, the bankruptcy court noted that the parties had agreed that Missouri law applied to the question of whether there had been a conversion and itself agreed that such was the applicable law based on the quantity and quality of contacts with the State of Missouri. The bankruptcy court went on to hold that under Missouri law conversion consists in the wrongful unauthorized assumption of the right of ownership over personal property of another, that the money in the Victor/Guy account was subject

-4- to a fiduciary duty on Guy’s part not to use it as his own, that Louise knew of the durable power of attorney and that Guy was not authorized to use the money as his own, and that when Guy transferred the funds from the Victor/Guy account to the Guy/Louise account both Guy and Louise wrongfully assumed ownership of the account. The bankruptcy court held Louise liable for conversion because she assisted Guy in the conversion of the account and used the funds as her own. The bankruptcy court rejected Louise’s argument that Guy’s filing of the claim on behalf of the probate estate was a wrongful attempt to keep the money out of the divorce proceedings which are still pending.

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