Pollock-Halvarson v. McGuire

576 N.W.2d 451, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 346, 1998 WL 141798
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 31, 1998
DocketC3-97-1720
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 576 N.W.2d 451 (Pollock-Halvarson v. McGuire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pollock-Halvarson v. McGuire, 576 N.W.2d 451, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 346, 1998 WL 141798 (Mich. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

SHUMAKER, Judge.

Appellant and her husband entered into an antenuptial agreement. After her husband died, appellant challenged the validity of the agreement and petitioned the probate division of the district court for an award of her elective share of her husband’s estate. Adopting a referee’s findings and conclusions, the court upheld the agreement and denied the petition. Appellant hired the respondent-lawyers to appeal. They failed to perfect the appeal. Appellant sued them, alleging professional negligence, and they moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment and dismissed the lawsuit. Appellant appealed. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant, Jean Pollock-Halvarson, is the surviving spouse of Julius Norman Halvar-son. They attended school together, went their separate ways, married others, raised families, and met again many years later at a class reunion. They dated and eventually appellant moved into decedent’s home. About six years later, they decided to marry. Decedent obtained a marriage license on January 12, 1988,- but the parties did not immediately set a wedding date.

On January 15, 1988, appellant and a girlfriend went on a vacation cruise. Early in the trip, appellant suffered a heart attack and was hospitalized and unable to return to Minnesota for nearly a month. When she returned she realized that her poor health would preclude her from resuming her employment of 45 years as a personal banking officer.

Decedent had been laid off his own job and was receiving unemployment compensation. His health was precarious and he suggested that he and appellant marry soon so that he could be added to her ■ medical insurance coverage before she terminated her employment. She agreed.

The parties located a judge to perform the wedding and set the date for February 20, 1988. Within the week prior to that date, decedent said that he wanted an antenuptial .agreement. He did not explain his reasons, but appellant did not object because she trusted him completely and believed him to be the most honest person she had ever met.

The parties obtained a form contract. From that form appellant typed the agreement that she and her husband would sign the day before their wedding. The agreement noted that the parties expected to be married and mutually desired “to fix and determine their rights and obligations which will arise upon the death of either or both of them.” Each warranted and represented that each “has disclosed to the other all of the assets, property and estate which he now owns or to which he may be entitled and has disclosed his means and resources, including current income.” The parties also acknowledged having been informed of their legal rights to each other’s property upon death and each expressly waived and relinquished all rights in the other’s property. Further, they included a provision that “[ejach party expressly waives the surviving spouse’s award to which they might otherwise be entitled by reason of their marriage and subsequent death of either party.” Finally, each acknowledged

that she and he has had the advice of independent counsel with respect to this Agreement and is entering into this Agreement freely, ■ voluntarily and with full knowledge of its legal effect.

The acknowledgment to the agreement provides in part that appellant and decedent appeared in person before the notary and acknowledged that

they have each read and fully understand the effect of the foregoing Agreement; that each knows the approximate value and extent of the personal and real property *454 owned by the other, as well as the annual income of each party; that each knows the approximate share of property which each would take upon the death of the other if this Agreement were not entered into; and that the parties have signed, sealed and delivered the foregoing Agreement as their free and voluntary act.

The decedent attached to the agreement a handwritten exhibit listing as his assets his home; all household items except certain described items belonging to appellant; an automobile; an airplane; checking, and savings accounts; IRA’s; stocks; and the contents of a safe deposit box. For most of the assets decedent also gave values. Appellant made no written disclosure of her assets.

The parties executed the agreement on February 19,1988 before an apparent notary public and one other person, both of whom signed the agreement. Neither party sought independent legal advice before signing the agreement. Appellant chose to trust decedent and “to do anything he wanted.” The person who signed as the notary apparently was not commissioned. She did, however, hold herself out as a notary public and her notarial stamp affixed to the agreement identified her as such and showed her commission to be valid until March 12,1991.

In 1991, the parties hired a lawyer to prepare wills and trusts for them. This was a lawyer appellant had known from the trust department at the bank where she had worked. Appellant’s will and trust provided for her property to pass to her son and not to decedent. Decedent’s will and trust did likewise with respect to his. children and his will incorporated the antenuptial agreement.

When decedent died, appellant sought to obtain her elective share of his estate in probate. She claimed that the antenuptial agreement was invalid because it did not disclose all of decedent’s assets; it did not disclose any of her assets; the notary was not licensed; there was only one witness to the agreement; she did not have a meaningful opportunity to obtain independent legal advice; and she had no notion of what her rights were.

After an evidentiary hearing, a probate division referee found that the parties intended the antenuptial agreement to be binding; there was no procedural or substantive unfairness; and decedent relied on the ante-nuptial agreement when he made his will. The referee upheld the agreement. A district judge adopted the referee’s findings and conclusions. This lawsuit followed and another district judge granted summary judgment on the ground that an appellate court would affirm the referee’s findings and conclusions.

ISSUES

1. Did the parties’ antenuptial agreement satisfy the substantive and procedural fairness requirements of Minn.Stat. § 519.11 (1996)?

2. Did the parties’ antenuptial agreement sufficiently comply with the form requirements of Minn.Stat. § 519.11 (1996)?

ANALYSIS

In reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we must determine whether any genuine issue of material fact exists and whether the trial court erred in applying the law. Offerdahl v. University of Minnesota Hosps. & Clinics, 426 N.W.2d 425, 427 (Minn.1988). Since this is an attorney negligence action, we must also consider in our review the so-called case-within-a-case. Rouse v. Dunkley & Bennett, P.A., 520 N.W.2d 406, 409 (Minn.1994). An essential element in an attorney negligence action is a showing that but for the defendant’s deficient conduct the plaintiff would have succeeded in the underlying action. Id.

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576 N.W.2d 451, 1998 Minn. App. LEXIS 346, 1998 WL 141798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pollock-halvarson-v-mcguire-minnctapp-1998.