Sipp v. Yeager

459 S.E.2d 343, 194 W. Va. 66, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 107
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1995
DocketNo. 22715
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 459 S.E.2d 343 (Sipp v. Yeager) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sipp v. Yeager, 459 S.E.2d 343, 194 W. Va. 66, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 107 (W. Va. 1995).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

This case involves a dispute over Earl Yeager’s estate between Mr. Yeager’s children, Nancy Yeager Sipp and Earl Stephen Yeager, M.D., the appellants who are co-executors under Mr. Yeager’s will and Mr. Yeager’s widow, Emily Yeager, the appellee. Ms. Sipp and Dr. Yeager appeal an order of the Circuit Court of McDowell County removing them as co-executors, holding the antenuptial agreement between Mr. and Mrs. Yeager to be void ad initio and holding Mr. Yeager’s will to be valid. On appeal, Ms. Sipp and Dr. Yeager maintain that the circuit court erred in removing them as co-executors and in voiding the antenuptial agreement. Ms. Sipp and Dr. Yeager urge this Court to remand the case with directions to remove Mrs. Yeager as manager of the corporate estate assets and appoint a Special Receiver. After reviewing this case’s record, we find that the circuit court’s decision is an interlocutory rather than a final order and therefore, we dismiss this appeal as improper before this Court.

I

Earl Yeager died testated on March 1, 1992. Earl Yeager was survived by his wife, the appellee, and his three children by his first wife, who is also deceased. After a long courtship of about nine years, Mr. and Mrs. Yeager were married on June 28, 1971. Three days before their wedding, Mr. Yeager showed an antenuptial agreement to Mrs. Yeager. On the morning before their wedding, Mrs. Yeager signed the antenuptial agreement, which she alleges that although she had the opportunity, she did not read or discuss. The agreement does not disclose either party’s assets. Mrs. Yeager testified that it was not until after her husband’s death that she received and read a copy of the agreement. The agreement states, in pertinent part:

[68]*68... each of the parties ... hereby agrees to waive, and does hereby waive, all and every right whatsoever which he or she might have or acquire by law by such marriage in any and all property of every kind and character, real, personal or mixed, now owned or which may be hereafter acquire by the other party ... [and that each parties’ property] shall pass to her or his heirs-in-law, devisees or legatees in precisely the same manner and with the same effect as through the marriage were never consummated.

Although the agreement indicates that each will maintain his and her property separately, Mrs. Yeager testified that she and Mr. Yeager had joint checking accounts, made joint furniture purchases, signed personal guarantees for business loans and jointly financed the purchase of a bulldozer. Mrs. Yeager said that she deposited the money she inherited from her aunt and uncle into a joint account. Mrs. Yeager also testified that she bought supplies for a farm owned by Mr. Yeager, loaned Mr. Yeager’s business $70,000 that she inherited from her aunt and uncle, and at Mr. Yeager’s suggestion, paid $30,000 to improve some rental property owned individually by one of Mr. Yeager’s corporations.

Mr. Yeager’s will, signed on October 11, 1991, was prepared at the direction of Ms. Sipp. Ms. Sipp testified that based on numerous conversations with her father, she had her lawyer in New Jersey prepare Mr. Yeager’s will. The will was returned to Ms. Sipp who sent it to Mr. Yeager who, in turn, signed it before disinterested witnesses.

Mr. Yeager’s will appoints Ms. Sipp and her brother, Dr. Yeager, co-executors. Under Mr. Yeager’s will, Mrs. Yeager was to receive all the Yeager Ford Sales, Inc. shares, subject to the two following conditions:

a. All money owed by Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., to Yeager, Inc., must be paid in full; and
b. All debts which have been incurred by Yeager, Inc. on behalf of, and for the benefit of, Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., must be fully repaid by Yeager Ford Sales, Inc. to Yeager, Inc.

Dr. Yeager, one of the appellants, was to receive all of Mr. Yeager’s personal effects and furniture and the will contained some specific bequests to Mr. Yeager’s sisters. The residual beneficiaries of Mr. Yeager’s estate are his three children, Ms. Sipp, Dr. Yeager, and their sister, Sally Yeager Goings.

The major assets of Mr. Yeager’s estate include: all the stock shares in two corporations, Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., an automobile dealership, and Yeager, Inc., a real estate holding company for rental property, a farm, some stock in local banks and proceeds for life insurance policies.

The record indicates that numerous problems arose during the administration of the estate. One of Mr. Yeager’s corporations, Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., which was managed by Mrs. Yeager, owed substantial money to various banks, the Ford Motor Company, and Yeager, Inc., Mr. Yeager’s real estate holding company. Mr. and Mrs. Yeager personally guaranteed the payment of some of the dealership’s debts.1 Mr. and Mrs. Yeager borrowed against several of Mr. Yeager’s life insurance policies to assist the dealership and Mrs. Yeager loaned the dealership $70,-000 of her inherited money. Based on this bleak picture, the co-executors closed the dealership over Mrs. Yeager’s protests. The co-executors maintain that the dealership was a drain on the estate’s assets and Mrs. Yeager claimed that the dealership was slowly reducing its debt.

The parties argued over the management of Yeager, Inc. Mrs. Yeager alleges that the co-executors failed to make necessary repairs to the rental properties, failed to pay real estate taxes and other fees, failed to pay for utilities for the rental properties and refused to pay her for her management services. The co-executors allege that Mrs. Yeager set [69]*69up a separate account for Yeager, Inc., bypassing the estate, thereby, removing the corporation’s transactions from their knowledge. The parties also disagreed over whether the maintenance costs exceed the rental income for various rental properties and whether the estate should charge rent for the house in which the family of Mrs. Yeager’s daughter is living that was improved with $30,000 of Mrs. Yeager’s personal money.

The parties disagreed on the classification of various items. Believing that certain furniture at Mr. Yeager’s farm was part of his personal property that was bequeathed to Dr. Yeager, Ms. Sipp and Dr. Yeager removed some furniture. Mrs. Yeager maintains that because certain of these items were purchased jointly by Mr. Yeager and her, she, as the surviving entity-in-common and not Dr. Yeager, is entitled to them. The parties also disagree about the ownership of various items on the farm, which Ms. Sipp and Dr. Yeager attempted to include with their sale of the farm. One of these items is a bulldozer, which Mrs. Yeager claims was jointly purchased, jointly financed and therefore, now her personal property. Another ownership dispute concerns an antique car, that Ms. Sipp shipped to her New Jersey home. Mrs. Yeager alleges that because the antique car was titled to Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., the ear was not part of Mr. Yeager’s personal property. Mrs. Yeager also alleges that several vehicles and tools on the farm were the property of Yeager Ford Sales, Inc. Mrs. Yeager also maintains that the draperies in the farmhouse were a Christmas present to her from Mr. Yeager.

The proceeds from Mr. Yeager’s life insurance policies also may be in dispute. The record is not clear if all the insurance money due the estate was paid to the estate. • The proceeds of two policies that listed Yeager, Inc. or Yeager Ford Sales, Inc., as the beneficiary were received by Mrs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
459 S.E.2d 343, 194 W. Va. 66, 1995 W. Va. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sipp-v-yeager-wva-1995.