Stewart v. Walters

602 S.E.2d 642, 278 Ga. 374, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 2951, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 602
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 13, 2004
DocketS04G0291
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 602 S.E.2d 642 (Stewart v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stewart v. Walters, 602 S.E.2d 642, 278 Ga. 374, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 2951, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 602 (Ga. 2004).

Opinions

HUNSTEIN, Justice.

This appeal involves a dispute between siblings appellant Howell E. Stewart, Jr. and appellee Alice C. Walters. The testator Howell E. Stewart, Sr. executed his will in 1972 naming appellant executor under the will. In 1995 the testator gave appellant $50,000 that appellant applied to the purchase of lake property. The transaction was not memorialized in writing by the testator or appellant. The testator died in 2001, the will was probated, and the probate court qualified appellant as executor. Appellee brought suit against appellant individually and as executor under the will seeking a declaratory ruling that the $50,000 the testator gave to appellant amounted to an advancement against appellant’s inheritance and alleging that the money should be deducted from the portion of his inheritance. Appellant denied that the transfer was an advancement. The trial court granted summary judgment in favor of appellant on the ground that the law does not recognize an advancement that is not memorialized in a writing according to OCGA § 53-1-10 (c). On appeal, the Court of Appeals held that although no written documentation of the monetary transaction existed as required by the statute, a jury question remained on the issue of whether appellant had breached his fiduciary duty as executor to acknowledge the transfer as an [375]*375advancement. Walters v. Stewart, 263 Ga. App. 475, 477 (588 SE2d 248) (2003). We granted certiorari to determine whether the executor of an estate who is also a beneficiary of the estate and who received funds from the testator during the testator’s life is required in the exercise of the executor’s fiduciary duty to acknowledge the receipt of funds in writing.1 For the reasons that follow, we reverse.

Whereas the former Code section2 dealing with advancements made to an heir or a beneficiary left the job of discerning the transferor’s intent after the transferor had died to the court, the Revised Probate Code of 1998 requires that the intent to treat a lifetime transfer as a satisfaction or an advancement must be evidenced in the language of the will or declared in writing. OCGA § 53-1-10 (c)

clears up potential confusion by defining the circumstances in which an advancement or a satisfaction is deemed to have occurred. [T]his Code section requires the transferor and/or transferee to declare an intent that the transfer be considered a satisfaction or advancement. Without this declaration, the transfer is not charged off against the heir’s or beneficiary’s share of the transferor’s estate. The declaration of intent must be in writing and may appear either in the will, in a writing signed by the transferor within thirty days of the transfer, or in an acknowledgment signed by the transferee at any time.

(Footnotes omitted.) Radford and Sugarman, Article: Georgia’s New Probate Code, 13 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 605, 617 (1997). Based on the language of OCGA § 53-1-10 (c),3 the comment to the revised probate statute explains that only written evidence will now suffice to show that an inter-vivos transfer is intended to operate as an advancement against a testamentary gift.

It is undisputed that the inter-vivos monetary transfer from father to child in this case did not involve a writing signed by the [376]*376testator within 30 days of making the transfer, a declaration of intent in the testator’s will, or any written acknowledgment by appellant. Nevertheless, the Court of Appeals concluded that summary judgment was inappropriate because appellant may have breached the duty that he owed to appellee in his fiduciary capacity as executor of their father’s will by accepting the $50,000 but failing to acknowledge that it was an advancement of his inheritance in writing. According to the Court of Appeals, appellant has “the sacred duty as executor to acknowledge the transfer as an advancement, if that was in fact his father’s intention.” Walters, supra, 263 Ga. App. at 477. We do not agree.

While an executor owes the maximum amount of good faith in the exercise of the executor’s fiduciary duties, it is well-settled that the exercise of that obligation does not attach “prior to... qualification by the court as executor. [Cits.]” Daniel v. Lipscomb, 225 Ga. App. 135, 137 (2) (483 SE2d 325) (1997). An individual who qualifies as the executor of the estate subsequent to a lifetime monetary transfer cannot be in breach of any fiduciary duty imposed upon an executor at the time of the monetary transfer.4 The Court of Appeals’ application of OCGA § 53-1-10 to a transferee who subsequently agrees to serve as the executor of his transferor’s estate unduly penalizes the transferee who assumes this service, with the consequence that nominated executors may be forced to decline the position thereby thwarting the expressed desires of the testator. See OCGA § 53-6-10 et seq.

Accordingly, we hold that the Court of Appeals erred by finding that appellee was not foreclosed from claiming that appellant’s refusal to declare the money transferred to him years before the testator’s death amounted to an advancement and should have been deducted from his portion of the estate.

Judgment reversed.

All the Justices concur, except Thompson and Hines, JJ., who dissent.

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Related

Cubbedge v. Cubbedge
650 S.E.2d 805 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2007)
Walters v. Stewart
606 S.E.2d 644 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 2004)
Stewart v. Walters
602 S.E.2d 642 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
602 S.E.2d 642, 278 Ga. 374, 2004 Fulton County D. Rep. 2951, 2004 Ga. LEXIS 602, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-v-walters-ga-2004.