Martin v. Dieringer

108 P.3d 234, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 27, 2005 WL 503639
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 2005
DocketS-11102
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 108 P.3d 234 (Martin v. Dieringer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin v. Dieringer, 108 P.3d 234, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 27, 2005 WL 503639 (Ala. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This case involves an estate that remained open for more than seventeen years. William Martin died in 1985. He was survived by two children, Donna, then age fourteen, and Darrel, then age eighteen. His will left everything (after payment of debts and certain expenses) in equal shares to the children, in trust. James Dieringer (“Dieringer” or “PR”) was the personal representative, and with his wife Nancy Dieringer, co-trustee of the trust.

The assets of the estate included a house in Fairbanks, a lot on Summit Lake, a motor home, some snowmachines, an escrow, and some life insurance. The net value of the estate was less than $250,000.

Dieringer put all cash generated by the estate in estate accounts when he received it. Under the terms of the trust, the funds were to be distributed as necessary for the children’s education at least twice each year. The trust was to terminate when Donna turned twenty-two, and the remainder distributed to the children. Although money was not distributed biannually, Dieringer applied funds to the children’s needs. He appears to have performed this aspect of his duties well. He required the children to make budgets and they received substantial funds from the trust for educational purposes.

About the time Donna turned twenty-two, in 1992, the children met with Dieringer. At the meeting he presented them with the option of distributing the remaining assets to them then or leaving the estate open so he *236 could collect the assets and close the estate at some later time. The children agreed that they preferred the latter option, but Darrel testified that he believed this would mean that the estate would remain open only for a matter of months.

By 1997 the only remaining assets of the estate were the Summit Lake lot, which was subject to a mortgage, and a loan Dieringer had made to a company that he owned a half interest in. The children agreed that Darrel would receive the Summit Lake property and Donna would receive more cash from the estate. Darrel contacted Dieringer a number of times concerning the Summit Lake property and closing the estate. Dieringer informed Darrel that he wanted to buy the Summit Lake property for $15,000. Darrel had received a substantially larger offer for the property and was reluctant to agree to sell to Dieringer at Dieringer’s price. When this occurred Dieringer took the position that unless Summit Lake were sold to him he would charge the estate fees for his services. Further, he stated that the proceeds of a $50,000 life insurance policy he and Nancy had received when William died were actually owned by him and Nancy, that they had merely loaned the proceeds to the estate, and that the proceeds would have to be repaid. Darrel was unpersuaded and the parties apparently remained at an impasse for some time. Eventually Darrel became concerned that the Summit Lake property would be foreclosed. Dieringer told him there were insufficient funds in the estate to pay the mortgage, so Darrel loaned the estate $6,700 of his own funds to pay it in March 2000. Darrel expected to be conveyed the property from the estate when the mortgage was paid.

Dieringer used the funds to pay off the mortgage. There was some delay in obtaining the necessary releases and the deed was not transferred to Darrel. Darrel petitioned to have Dieringer removed as personal representative. While the petition to remove was pending, Dieringer took steps to close the estate. After a series of hearings and an aborted settlement agreement, the petition to remove and Dieringer’s motion for approval of a final accounting were scheduled for hearing. At that point Darrel filed an independent civil action against Dieringer and sought to have his petition to remove withdrawn. The petition to withdraw was denied, and after an evidentiary hearing and a supplemental evidentiary hearing the master issued extensive findings and conclusions that denied the petition to remove. The master’s findings and conclusions were approved by the superior court, which also granted Dier-inger’s final accounting motion and closed the estate.

The final accounting shows that the estate sold the Summit Lake property to a third party for $30,000. In round numbers and less appraisal costs the final sum was distributed as follows: $16,320 in attorney’s fees for Dieringer’s counsel, $5,850 in fees for Dier-inger’s services (pared down from a $49,000 request), and $7,430 as a distribution to Darrel.

Darrel appeals, focusing primarily on the findings that supported the denial of the petition to remove Dieringer. Although the estate has closed and Dieringer is no longer its personal representative, many of the challenges to the master’s findings and conclusions may still be important because of the collateral estoppel effect the latter were given in the dismissal of Darrel’s separate civil action against Dieringer. 1 Because of this effect and because Darrel’s challenge might impact the award of counsel fees and fees to Dieringer, this case is not moot. 2

On appeal Darrel contends that Dieringer breached his duty as a fiduciary with respect to his rental of the house at what Darrel contends were submarket rates, with respect to his sale of the motor home to his partner, with respect to the loan of estate funds to a company half-owned by Dieringer, and with respect to his efforts to buy the Summit Lake property at submarket rates. Darrel further challenges the master’s finding that *237 the $50,000 in life insurance proceeds received by James and Nancy Dieringer in 1985 on account of William Martin’s death were the property of the Dieringers rather than trust property for the children.

We conclude that the master’s findings concerning the house and the motor home are supported by the evidence and are not clearly erroneous. But the master’s findings concerning the loan, the Summit Lake transaction, and the $50,000 life insurance policy are erroneous, as explained in the following paragraphs.

Darrel presents seven primary arguments. We summarize each below together with our decision concerning it.

ARGUMENT I

Darrel argues that numerous findings made by the probate master and adopted by the superior court are erroneous. We conclude that several of the findings are erroneous.

Findings 21 through 25

Findings 21 through 25 are clearly erroneous. These findings have to do with an $8,000 loan made by the estate. The master found:

21. The estate made a loan of $8,000 to a company called AEC. Without being asked, PR volunteered the information that he was a shareholder in AEC Corp. The AEC loan was documented with a Promissory Note. The note was unsecured and was set at an interest rate that was equal to the savings account rate that the money was earning at the bank at that time. The loan was paid back in full. This loan clearly involved a conflict of interest between the estate and the PR.
22. A.S. 13.16.400 Sale, encumbrance, or transaction involving conflict of interest voidable; exceptions provides [sic] as follows:

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Related

In Re the Necessity for the Hospitalization of Joan K.
273 P.3d 594 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2012)
Dieringer v. Martin
187 P.3d 468 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2008)
Peter v. State, Department of Health & Social Services
146 P.3d 991 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)
Enders v. Parker
125 P.3d 1027 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P.3d 234, 2005 Alas. LEXIS 27, 2005 WL 503639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-v-dieringer-alaska-2005.