Nelson v. Woodworth

109 N.W.2d 861, 363 Mich. 244
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1961
DocketDocket 23, Calendar 48,784
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 109 N.W.2d 861 (Nelson v. Woodworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nelson v. Woodworth, 109 N.W.2d 861, 363 Mich. 244 (Mich. 1961).

Opinion

Smith, J.

The case before us concerns the validity of a constructive trust. The controversy is a family *246 one, involving the heirs of Bengta Nelson. The court files in 3 cases have been stipulated as exhibits. 1 The parties have stipulated, also, the facts from which the current action arises, which stipulation, shortened by deletion of nonessential numbering, follows in its substantial entirety:

“Bengta Nelson died July 25, 1925, leaving a last will and testament which was admitted for probate in Bay county, Michigan, and Edith Nelson was appointed executrix of this estate on August 25, 1925, and continued in this capacity until her death January 14,1956.
“Edith Nelson, as executrix of estate of Bengta Nelson, filed an accounting on or about February 21, 1934. This account was not noticed for hearing nor allowed. Edith Nelson died January 14, 1956, without making a further accounting and the estate of Bengta Nelson was still open, active, and contained property being administered. The estate of Edith Nelson is being probated in Bay county, Michigan. The Bay county probate court appointed Florence Russ Woodworth executrix of the estate of Edith Nelson and letters testamentary were issued on February 17, 1956.
“On December 11,1956, Florence Russ Woodworth, as executrix of the estate of Edith Nelson, filed an amended final accounting for Edith Nelson in the estate of Bengta Nelson. This accounting covered the period from February 21, 1934, to January 14, 1956, the date of death of Edith Nelson.
“A result of the opinion and order on said accounting was that Edith Nelson was indebted to the estate of Bengta Nelson in the sum of $3,967.30, which'indebtedness arose as more fully set forth in the accounting and court opinions thereon. The order was *247 appealed to the Bay county circuit court by the plaintiff in this case. Said circuit court affirmed the order of the probate court by order of March, 1959. (Bay circuit court file No 17,049.) ' Pursuant to the finding on the accounting, a claim for the said $3,967.30 was filed in the estate of Edith Nelson by the administrator d/b/n of the estate of Bengta Nelson, and the claim was allowed on April 20, 1959.
“The estate of Edith Nelson is insolvent. Except for said joint account, the subject matter of this litigation, her financial status at the time of her death is indicated by the inventory and other papers on file in her estate.
“On October 2, 1929, Edith Nelson, individually, opened account No 7,377 in the Mutual Savings & Loan Association of Bay City, Michigan. This account continued in her own name until December 12, 1950, when she made it joint as account No 06,266 with her brother, A. G. Nelson, who was the first executor named in her will. A. G. Nelson made no deposit or withdrawal nor performed any other act in relation to this account except to sign the signature card dated December 12, 1950. Edith Nelson .after December 12, 1950, continued to make both deposits and withdrawals in this account. A. G. Nelson died on February 12, 1955.
“By letter of February 17, 1955, Edith Nelson •changed this to a joint account with Florence Buss Woodworth, the alternate executrix named in her will, the balance then being $5,448.18. Florence Buss Woodworth paid nothing for this but signed a signature card for the joint account on February 17,1955. Otherwise, Florence Buss Woodworth made no deposit or withdrawal nor performed any other act in relation to this account during the lifetime of Edith Nelson. At the death of Edith Nelson on January 14, 1956, there was $5,585.22 in this account.
“From December 1, 1950, until the date of her death, Edith Nelson did not dispose of by gift or •othei’wise any significant properties except for the aforesaid transfer of the Mutual Savings & Loan *248 Association account. During such period her personal assets excepting for said joint account remained substantially the same as appears in the inventory filed in the' estate of Edith Nelson, deceased.
“Florence Russ Woodworth became executrix of the estate of Edith Nelson, deceased, on February 17,1956. On said date she withdrew $1,140 from the Mutual Savings & Loan Association joint account and of this sum paid $939.96 to Hyatt’s Funeral Home on the same date for the funeral expenses of Edith Nelson and on said date paid $131 to Bay City General Hospital on its claim against Edith Nelson. The remainder of said $1,140, Florence Russ Woodworth retained. On April 17, 1956, Florence Russ Woodworth withdrew the balance of said joint account in the sum of $4,445.22 and has retained the same as her sole, individual property.
“No part of the $3,967.30 for which Edith Nelson was surcharged in the accounting made on her behalf in the estate of Bengta Nelson has been paid to the estate of Bengta Nelson by either Florence Russ Woodworth individually or as executrix of the estate of Edith Nelson or in any other manner.”

Upon these facts, as stipulated, the trial chancellor decreed that “a constructive trust be and hereby is imposed on all funds withdrawn by defendant, individually or as said executrix, from Mutual Savings & Loan Association of Bay City to the total sum of $3,967.30, and said Florence Russ Wood-worth, individually and as executrix of the estate of Edith Nelson, deceased, be, and she hereby is, ordered to pay said sum forthwith to John P. Nelson as administrator with will annexed of the estate of Bengta Nelson, deceased, in payment of the claim for said sum for which Edith Nelson was surcharged as executrix of the estate of Bengta Nelson, deceased, together with statutory interest accumulated thereon *249 from the date of allowance of said claim on April 20, 1959.”

Much of the argument upon this appeal relates to the refusal of the probate court to remove appellant as executrix over the objection that a conflict of interest existed with respect to the above-mentioned Mutual Savings & Loan Association account, and to the court’s subsequent approval of her amended final accounting, in which a balance due the estate of Bengta Nelson was listed in the sum of $3,967.30. This accounting had been objected to upon several grounds, namely, the occupancy, rent free, of the property of the estate of Bengta Nelson by Edith Nelson, the allowance of expenditures for the maintenance of the property, for attorney’s fees, and for other items. The probate approval of this account closed with the words: “It is further ordered that Edith L. Nelson is not and was not guilty of any actual or bonstructive fraud in her administration of the estate of Bengta Nelson.” Such statement is urged as conclusive upon the issue before us, namely, the interests of the parties in the proceeds,, of the mutual savings account. The argument is not well taken. The interests of the contesting parties in the fund in question arising out of the circumstances hereinabove described was neither adjudicated nor found.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Blachy v. Butcher
35 F. Supp. 2d 554 (W.D. Michigan, 1998)
McTevia v. Adamo (In Re Atlantic Mortgage Corp.)
69 B.R. 321 (E.D. Michigan, 1987)
Hilliker v. Dowell
220 N.W.2d 712 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1974)
Sloan v. Silberstein
141 N.W.2d 332 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1966)
Thurn v. McAra
130 N.W.2d 887 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1964)
J. C. Else Coal Co. v. Miller
196 N.E.2d 233 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1964)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 N.W.2d 861, 363 Mich. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nelson-v-woodworth-mich-1961.