Matter of the Guardianship and Conservatorship of Adam

965 N.W.2d 148, 2021 S.D. 54
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 2021
Docket29359
StatusPublished

This text of 965 N.W.2d 148 (Matter of the Guardianship and Conservatorship of Adam) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Matter of the Guardianship and Conservatorship of Adam, 965 N.W.2d 148, 2021 S.D. 54 (S.D. 2021).

Opinion

#29359-a-PJD 2021 S.D. 54

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

IN THE MATTER OF THE GUARDIASHIP AND CONSERVATORSHIP OF ALMON G. ADAM, A Protected Person.

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST JUDICIAL CIRCUIT YANKTON COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE TAMI A. BERN Judge

JASON R. SUTTON DAVID J. HIEB of Boyce Law Firm, LLP Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for petitioners and appellants Ronald Adam, Ruth Reiser, and Rebecca Thaler.

KEVIN J. LOFTUS of Kennedy, Pier, Loftus & Reynolds, LLP Yankton, South Dakota Attorneys for conservator and appellee First Dakota National Bank. DANIEL K. BRENDTRO ROBERT D. TRZYNKA of Hovland, Rasmus, Brendtro & Trzynka, Prof. LLC Sioux Falls, South Dakota Attorneys for interested persons and appellees Roland and Susan Adam.

CONSIDERED ON BRIEFS FEBRUARY 17, 2021 OPINION FILED 09/22/21 #29359

DEVANEY, Justice

[¶1.] In this guardianship and conservatorship action, the conservator filed

a motion for approval of a settlement agreement reached in a separate civil action

brought by the conservator against the protected person’s son and daughter-in-law.

Three of the protected person’s other children objected to the motion and requested

that they be allowed to present live testimony at the hearing on the conservator’s

motion. The circuit court denied the request but continued the hearing to allow the

children to submit affidavits and briefs. After the hearing, the court granted the

conservator’s motion for approval of the settlement. The objecting children appeal,

asserting the circuit court erred in denying an evidentiary hearing and in approving

the settlement agreement. We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

[¶2.] Almon Adam has seven adult children: Robin Brooks, Roxanne Evans,

Roland Adam, Rebecca Thaler, Ronald Adam, Ruth Reiser, and Ralph Adam.

Almon’s wife and the children’s mother, Joy, passed away from cancer in 1978.

After Joy’s death, Almon asked Roland to stay on the farm and help with the

farming operation and with raising his younger siblings. Roland was 20 years old

at the time, and two of the older Adam children were away at college. According to

Roland, although he was the one who primarily helped his father, his siblings

pitched in, especially as they got older. Eventually, Roland got married and moved

away from home, but he continued to farm with Almon.

[¶3.] Being together as a family was very important to Almon. Ruth

testified that the family members would gather routinely for holidays, stayed in

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regular communication with each other and with Almon, and for over 35 years, met

annually for a family campout at the farm. However, in 2010 or 2011, when Almon

was approximately 80 years old, the family dynamic began to change for the worse

and became strained over the next several years. By this time, Almon had moved

from the farm to a house in Pickstown, South Dakota. Ronald, Ruth, Rebecca,

Ralph, Roxanne, and Robin (the six children) felt as though Almon was being less

open with them on matters he was normally very open about, including his estate.

The six children also became concerned that Roland was trying to alienate Almon

from them. Roland spent the most time with Almon, and Almon relied on him for

assistance. According to Roland, he would help Almon anytime Almon asked, while

his other siblings would not.

[¶4.] In September 2015, Almon’s driving privileges were revoked, and

without the ability to drive, he could no longer continue taking care of his needs on

his own. In October 2015, Almon moved in with Roland and his wife, Susan, while

he waited for an opening at an assisted living center in Yankton, South Dakota.

Around this same time, Almon hired an attorney, Tim Whalen, to assist him on a

number of issues, one of which related to the selling of his house in Pickstown.

When Ronald and Robin were visiting Almon, they saw a draft purchase agreement

and questioned him about his decision to sell the house. Almon told them that he

was selling it to his neighbors, Jeff and June Reinders. Ronald and Robin pressed

Almon to give additional details, but he told them he did not want to talk about it

further. Thereafter, Robin and Ronald asked Almon’s previous attorney to talk to

Whalen about whether Almon was competent to handle his affairs, including the

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sale of the house. Whalen investigated the children’s claims and concluded that

Almon was competent. On November 22, 2015, Almon completed the sale of his

house in Pickstown to his neighbors.

[¶5.] The six children continued to have concerns that Almon was not able to

handle his affairs and that Roland was isolating Almon from the rest of the Adam

family. They also had concerns that Roland was improperly influencing Almon’s

estate planning. They had tried to get information from both Almon and Roland

about Almon’s finances and estate matters, but neither would answer their

questions. Consequently, they obtained counsel in January 2016, who sent Almon

and Roland a letter “to try to re-establish mutual respect between all members of

this family and avoid litigation.” The letter related the children’s concerns about

various transactions, including the sale of the house, and requested that Almon and

Roland provide the closing statement from the sale of the house, a list of gifts and

transfers of money and personal property from Almon to Roland since 2011, an

itemization of Almon’s property stored at Roland’s house, and assurances that they

would have future access to Almon’s personal information. Whalen responded to

the letter for both Almon and Roland, and eventually, the family members agreed to

hold a meeting. The meeting, at which all seven children and Almon attended, did

not resolve the six children’s concerns.

[¶6.] In April 2016, Almon, who was then 86 years old, transferred an 18-

acre tract of land, called the “horse pasture,” to Roland. According to Whalen,

Almon had told him on numerous occasions after he began representing him in the

fall of 2015 that he wanted to give Roland the horse pasture. On April 6, 2016,

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Almon asked Whalen to prepare the deed transferring the land. At this same

meeting, Almon indicated to Whalen that he wanted to change his estate plan.

Whalen refused to assist Almon with either of these tasks based on his belief that

the six children intended to seek a guardianship and conservatorship over Almon.

Ultimately, Roland’s long-time friend, who worked as the Deputy Register of Deeds

for Bon Homme County, drafted the deed and instructed Almon on how to register

it. On April 14, 2016, Roland and Almon traveled to the Gregory County Register of

Deeds Office, where Almon executed and recorded a warranty deed conveying the

horse pasture to Roland. Almon did not tell Whalen about the transfer.

[¶7.] On April 29, 2016, Rebecca, Ruth, and Ronald (the Petitioners)

petitioned for the appointment of a guardianship and conservatorship over Almon.

They proposed that Ronald be appointed as conservator and Robin be appointed as

guardian. Almon, through Whalen, objected to the petition; however, after Almon

underwent a medical evaluation, he withdrew his objection. He agreed that he met

the criteria for appointment, but he disagreed that either Ronald or Robin should be

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