Monroe v. Marsden

2009 MT 137, 207 P.3d 320, 350 Mont. 327, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 148
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 2009
DocketDA 08-0291
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2009 MT 137 (Monroe v. Marsden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monroe v. Marsden, 2009 MT 137, 207 P.3d 320, 350 Mont. 327, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 148 (Mo. 2009).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE McGRATH

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Melissa Michelle Marsden, a/k/a Melissa Michelle Worley and John Jace Worley, defendants below, appeal from the judgment against them entered by the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, Missoula County, the Hon. Douglas G. Harkin presiding. We affirm.

¶2 The Worleys present the following issues for review:

¶3 Issue One: Whether the District Court erred in finding that the Worleys exercised undue influence over Josephine Marsden.

¶4 Issue Two: Whether the District Court erred in imposing a constructive trust on certain parcels of real property, in favor of the Estate of Josephine Marsden.

¶5 Issue Three: Whether the District Court erred in finding that the Worleys converted the property of Josephine Marsden.

¶6 Issue Four: Whether the District Court erred in awarding damages against the Worleys and in favor of the Estate of Josephine Marsden.

¶7 Issue Five: Whether the District Court erred in awarding attorney fees and costs to Robert Monroe and Leatha Cancelosi.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶8 Josephine Marsden was the mother of Robert Monroe, Leatha Cancelosi, Melissa Marsden (Worley) and Jody Connell. Jody was not a party to this litigation. Josephine died at the age of 84 on June 5, 2004, after several years of steadily declining health.

*329 ¶9 In October and again in November, 1999, Josephine was hospitalized as a result of numerous serious health impairments including diabetes, hypertension, acute renal failure, digestive disorder and depression. Upon her discharge from the hospital she could no longer care for herself and live alone in her own home. Her four children met and Melissa offered that she, her husband John, and her daughter could move into Josephine’s home and care for her. The siblings did not discuss whether Melissa should be compensated for caring for Josephine. Melissa did not expect to get paid for her services and offered her help because Josephine had taken care of her and it was her turn to repay her mother. Josephine’s physical and mental health declined steadily until her death and she was bedridden and confined to her bedroom for the last year and a half of her life.

¶10 Up until the time Melissa and John moved into Josephine’s house, they had lived for some time rent free in another house owned by Josephine. Melissa had worked part time at a casino and the highest gross yearly income she could recall was just over $10,000. She only sporadically filed income tax returns. John did occasional construction jobs and worked on cars, and had never filed an income tax return in his life. Neither of them had a checking account, credit card or any material assets.

¶11 Throughout her life Josephine Marsden was frugal and independent, took great care in her financial transactions and was a meticulous record-keeper. At the time of her 1999 hospitalizations she owned several pieces of unencumbered real estate; including her home, the house that Melissa was living in, land near Ovando and land in Florida. She had monthly income from Social Security, a pension and an annuity that typically exceeded her monthly expenses by several thousand dollars. In 1999 the balance in her checking account was over $17,000 and her medical expenses were covered by Medicare and a private supplemental policy. Josephine kept collections of stamps, silver dollars and dolls in her house, and had varying amounts of cash on hand in an envelope, often running into the thousands of dollars.

¶12 When Melissa moved in to care for her mother in late 1999 or early 2000, she also assumed all control over her mother’s financial affairs. She controlled Josephine’s checking account, her mail and payment of bills and expenses. By the time of Josephine’s death in 2004, Melissa had obtained title to all of Josephine’s real property; had sold the Ovando and Florida land; had encumbered the remaining property with over $175,000 in loans taken out in Josephine’s name; and had used part of the loan proceeds to buy property in Missoula and Las Vegas. The Las Vegas property was a condominium unit that John *330 bought from his family. Melissa had exhausted all the cash in J osephine’s house and had repeatedly overdrawn J osephine’s checking account. Melissa had fraudulently cashed one of Josephine’s certificates of deposit, established for the designated benefit of her children and grandchildren, by forging Josephine’s name to it. She attempted to cash a second of Josephine’s certificates of deposit by forging her signature but was stopped by the credit union. Melissa and John obtained and used credit cards in Josephine’s name and charged the account to the credit limit of $9,000. They exhausted all of Josephine’s savings, social security, retirement and annuity income. Melissa and John retained for their own use all rental income from Josephine’s two rental units and never accounted for it. They destroyed years of Josephine’s financial records and kept very few records of Josephine’s financial affairs after Melissa assumed control. Melissa fabricated lease documents and forged signatures on them to obtain loans in Josephine’s name. Melissa lied about the lease forgeries and other forgeries at the trial in District Court.

¶13 After moving to Josephine’s home, Melissa used Josephine’s money to pay all of her and John’s personal bills and obligations, and in doing so repeatedly overdrew Josephine’s checking account. Melissa made no attempt to separate Josephine’s bills and expenses from those incurred by her family and has never provided any accounting of the expenditures of Josephine’s income and assets.

¶14 Melissa undertook the real estate transactions involving Josephine’s property and assets during Josephine’s deteriorating illnesses. Melissa obtained control over Josephine’s assets without ever telling her siblings and all the transactions benefitted only Melissa and John. Shortly after their mother died, the siblings met and asked Melissa about a will and about the assets of Josephine’s estate. Robert knew that he had been designated the personal representative of the estate by his mother’s will. Melissa told them that Josephine’s residence was now hers, that the land near Ovando had been given to a conservation organization, that there were no other assets, and that there was no will. She refused to provide any other information or to answer questions. Further attempts by Robert and Leatha to obtain information from Melissa were fruitless.

¶15 Robert obtained Josephine’s will from the attorney who prepared it. The will left to Melissa the rental property that she had lived in before moving in with Josephine. The remainder of her assets were left equally to Robert, Leatha and Melissa. There was no distribution to Josephine’s daughter Jody.

¶16 Robert and Leatha commenced this action to recover assets of *331 Josephine’s estate from Melissa and John. The District Court heard several days of testimony from numerous witnesses and on December 14,2007, entered Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Order. The District Court found that there was a confidential relationship between Melissa and Josephine based on Josephine’s trust of Melissa and Melissa’s control over all aspects of Josephine’s finances.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 MT 137, 207 P.3d 320, 350 Mont. 327, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monroe-v-marsden-mont-2009.