Schmidt v. Feikert

631 N.W.2d 537, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 362, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 152
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 2001
DocketNo. A-00-832
StatusPublished

This text of 631 N.W.2d 537 (Schmidt v. Feikert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Feikert, 631 N.W.2d 537, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 362, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 152 (Neb. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

Hannon, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Elena F. Schmidt appeals the trial court’s denial of her petition to set aside a deed conveying real estate from a trust, of which Elena is a beneficiary, to her brother-in-law and sister, Merlin C. Feikert and Janene M. Feikert. In this appeal, Elena maintains the trial court erred in determining that the deed was delivered with intent to transfer the property. We find that the deed was not delivered in the legal sense and therefore must be set aside as void and ineffective. Accordingly, we reverse, and remand with directions to enter a decree canceling the deed in question.

BACKGROUND

Loyal W. Sheen and Veona G. Sheen were husband and wife. They had three children: Elena, Allan Sheen, and Janene. On January 17,1979, Loyal created the Loyal W. Sheen Family Tmst in which he and Veona conveyed real property, including the property which is the subject of this litigation. The tmst was irrevocable, but it appears that it was created with the thought that Loyal and Veona could continue to do whatever they wished with the tmst property, even though the tmst document does not so provide. The tmst was apparently intended to pass the tmst estate in undefined amounts to Loyal and Veona’s children, but apparently a 1981 action in the county court for Buffalo County was thought to be necessary to clarify that the children as well as Loyal and Veona were beneficiaries. Loyal died on August 18, 1982.

The tmst document provided for two tmstees at all times, giving them broad powers to sell and manage the tmst assets. For many years after Loyal’s death, Veona and Elena were the tmstees. The tmst assets were used to benefit the family. Tmst land had been sold to Elena and her husband in the 1980’s, and tmst assets had been used to pay substantial debts of Allen. Before Elena purchased the land from the tmst, she paid [364]*364approximately $100 to $150 per month in rent. The Feikerts have lived on the real estate that is the subject to this litigation since 1981 without the payment of rent and with the tmst paying the taxes and insurance. For many years, there had been discussion within the family about the Feikerts’ purchasing this property from the tmst. It is clear that the tmst assets were used by Veona and the children to benefit the children in ways which they, but principally Veona, thought advisable and fair between them. In short, the tmst assets were used in about the same way that propertied parents frequently use their assets to benefit their adult children by either gifts, rent free use of real estate, advantageous sales of property to them, or payments of debts. Apparently, this family was close and got along well, until the problem involved in this litigation arose. After this litigation began, Veona and Elena were removed as tmstees by the court in a separate proceeding. It is not clear who the subsequent tmstees were, but it is evident from the record that one of them was an accountant. At trial in this case, Elena admitted that before she and Veona were removed, they had spent more than $10,000 of tmst assets to remodel Elena’s home.

Richard Gee, an attorney who practices law in Grand Island, Nebraska, but who did not draft the original tmst, acted as the trust’s attorney for a number of recent years. In 1981, Gee brought the action in county court to obtain the modification of the tmst agreement to name the children as beneficiaries, and he had prepared a deed in 1988 when the tmst sold real estate to Elena and her husband.

In May 1993, Merlin telephoned Gee and told him Veona had agreed to sell him the “farm,” which was understood to be the land upon which they were living. Merlin asked him to prepare a warranty deed for the sale of the property by the tmst to the Feikerts. Gee had no memory of having talked to Veona at that time about the sale, and at that time, he did not know the details of the purchase price, but he knew the Feikerts were going to pay something for the land.

Gee prepared a warranty deed for the signatures of Veona and the three children to convey the “farm” to the Feikerts as joint tenants. The deed stated the consideration was $1 and other valuable consideration. Gee obtained the description from [365]*365information he had in the office, but at trial, it was clear that he had erred in that he used a description that included only the abutting acreage and not the parcel upon which the house was situated. All of the designated signers were identified on the deed as trastees notwithstanding the fact that only Veona and Elena were trustees at the time. Gee testified that he did this because an attorney representing the buyer of other trust property had insisted upon this procedure.

Gee sent the deed to the Feikerts with a cover letter dated June 28, 1993, which stated simply: “Here is the deed, ready for signatures. After it is signed, take it to the Courthouse for registering.” Over the course of the next year, Merlin personally acquired the signatures of Veona, Elena, Allen, and Janene. He then returned it to Gee, who notarized the signers’ signatures in one prepared acknowledgment. The deed recites that it was executed on “5-25-94,” and Gee testified that he acknowledged the signatures of all the signers. Gee admitted that he had neither seen the grantors sign the document nor did they acknowledge their signatures to him in any manner. Gee testified that he then mailed the deed back to Merlin. Gee also testified that he remembered having prepared the deed in June 1994, not 1993, but he testified that he acknowledged the deed on May 25,1994. He persisted in this testimony in spite of the evidence on his cover letter, mailed with the unsigned deed to Merlin, which was dated June 28,1993, and in spite of a statement in evidence from Gee to Veona dated July 6, 1994, which lists a charge of .40 hours and a notation which stated, “6/10/94 Talked to son-in-law about notarizing the deed. Later in the afternoon he brought it in and I notarized it.” This evidence plus the testimony of the Feikerts clearly established Gee was in error. The evidence is clear that the deed must have been prepared in June 1993 at about the time of Gee’s letter and that Merlin personally returned it with the grantors’ signatures on June 10, 1994. This point is not controlling on the outcome of the litigation, but we find these facts are clearly established. Gee also testified that he was aware that Merlin was going to take the deed rather than a sales contract to the bank to acquire a loan. Later, after Veona called him, he also learned she had asked Merlin to return the deed, but he had refused.

[366]*366Whom Gee was representing in these matters is not clear. He sent a statement to Veona for his charges in preparing the deed, but Merlin testified that after Veona received the statement, she told him or Janene that part of the bill was theirs because part of it was for Merlin’s visit with Gee. The Feikerts paid the $28 designated in the bill for the conference on June 10, 1994, but they did not pay the remainder designated as previously billed.

Merlin recorded the deed on July 5, 1994, The real estate transfer statement Merlin signed when he recorded the deed showed the purchase price to be $25,000. At Gee’s suggestion after Veona learned that the deed had been recorded, Gee prepared an affidavit for Veona’s signature, which she signed and recorded with the register of deeds, in which she stated that the deed should not have been recorded because the grantees had not paid the purchase price.

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Bluebook (online)
631 N.W.2d 537, 10 Neb. Ct. App. 362, 2001 Neb. App. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-feikert-nebctapp-2001.