Swartzendruber v. Lamb

582 N.W.2d 171, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 184, 1998 WL 426356
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 29, 1998
Docket96-1852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 582 N.W.2d 171 (Swartzendruber v. Lamb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swartzendruber v. Lamb, 582 N.W.2d 171, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 184, 1998 WL 426356 (iowa 1998).

Opinion

CARTER, Justice.

Joseph W. Lamb was appointed as executor of the estate of Hazel Belle Lamb pursuant to the terms of her will executed May 25, 1993. He was also the sole beneficiary of Hazel’s assets. Joseph now appeals from an adverse judgment in will-contest litigation brought by his sister, Roberta Swartzendru-ber. That litigation resulted in a judgment adjudicating in a single-jury trial that the will under which Joseph was appointed as executor, and four prior wills executed by Hazel, were the product of undue influence. These five wills were all executed by Hazel within a period of thirteen months.

Joseph urges that, under the statutory will-contest procedure established in Iowa Code section 633.308 (1995) until the will formally admitted to probate has been sue- *172 cessfully challenged, no issue of validity of prior wills is before the court. Consequently, he claims that the district court erred in allowing the jury to pass on the validity of four prior wills as well as the will that had been admitted to probate. He also contends that the district court erred in admitting evidence concerning transactions that occurred after Hazel’s death and thus beyond the time that any undue influence might have occurred. Finally, Joseph urges that the attorney fees incurred in defending the will should be paid from estate assets irrespective of the result of the litigation. After reviewing the record and considering the arguments of the parties, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

Both Joseph and Roberta grew up on their parents’ family farm near Oskaloosa. At the time of trial, Joseph was fifty-nine and Roberta sixty-one. Roberta obtained a B.A. degree at Simpson College following high school and immediately went to work for the United States Department of Agriculture in Washington, D.C. During her employment with that agency, she acquired an M.A. degree in economics and a law degree. She retired from government service shortly before this controversy arose. She is married. The evidence indicated that Roberta had maintained a close relationship with her mother after leaving home and visited her in Iowa regularly. In addition, Roberta frequently sent her mother cards, flowers, and presents.

Joseph, who has never married, continued to work on the family farm for seven years following his graduation from high school. He then worked for five years as a route driver for Pepsi-Cola and 7-Up bottling companies. Beginning in 1967, Joseph began working regularly as a steward on luxury yachts traveling in intercoastal waters between Florida and Maine and in the winters in the Bahamas. Between 1967 and 1990, this employment was interrupted only by a two-year period in the early 1980s when he managed an auto parts store in Ottumwa owned by his aunt. In 1990 Joseph returned to Oskaloosa and lived with his mother until her death. During this time, he and his mother purchased a house in Florida with their joint funds and spent considerable time there during the winter months.

Roberta testified at trial that after Joseph returned to live with their mother Hazel was reluctant to talk to Roberta when Joseph was present. She also testified that Joseph refused to allow her to speak to her mother on the telephone on more than one occasion when she had called. Roberta introduced evidence that, during the period of time Joseph was living with his mother, he purchased $150,000 in artwork with Hazel providing most of the funds. Roberta and her husband testified that, in their presence and in the presence of Hazel, Joseph had struck Roberta at Hazel’s home in 1990. They also testified that Joseph had struck his aunt, Edith Edgren, in Hazel’s presence in 1983. Although there was no evidence presented that Joseph had ever assaulted his mother, Roberta and her husband testified that Hazel would frequently caution them not to act against Joseph’s wishes to avoid “riling him up.”

Sometime in 1991, Roberta discovered that Hazel had a power of attorney authorizing her to transact the financial affairs of her sister, Edith Edgren. In conversations with Joseph and her mother, Roberta discovered that, at Joseph’s urging, Hazel had converted a substantial portion of Edith’s assets to cash. These funds had been used to purchase furniture for the home in which Hazel and Joseph lived, for vacation trips taken by Hazel and Joseph, and to purchase a new automobile for Joseph. In addition, another $268,000 of Edith’s money was used to purchase stock in a brokerage account in the names of Hazel and Joseph. In December 1992 Edith Edgren died.

In January 1993 Roberta, who was a beneficiary under Edith’s will, notified both Joseph and the lawyer handling Edith Edgren’s estate that she wanted an accounting made of her aunt’s assets during the time that the power of attorney held by Hazel had been in effect. 1 The lawyer for Edith’s estate testi *173 fied at trial that Joseph was furious when he learned of Roberta’s request and demanded in Hazel’s presence and in the presence of the witness that Hazel remove Roberta from her will. Sometime later in the month of January, Roberta contacted an Iowa City lawyer who made a formal demand for an accounting of Edith’s assets during the time the power of attorney was in effect. This resulted in certain assets that had been transferred to Hazel and Joseph being returned to the estate. It also resulted in a negotiated settlement between Hazel, Roberta, and Joseph with respect to the amount that would be paid to Roberta out of Edith Edgren’s estate.

Between April 28, 1992, and May 25, 1993, Hazel executed five different wills. The evidence established that Joseph was present during virtually all of Hazel’s business meet: ings with her accountants and attorneys during this time, including the conferences involving the making of these wills. Prior to the making of these five wills, Hazel had made three earlier wills. On May 23, 1975, she made a will leaving all of her property to her husband, Reuben. If Reuben did not survive her, Hazel’s 1975 will divided her property equally between Joseph and Roberta. Reuben died in December 1981. On April 6, 1983, Hazel made a new will that provided for an equal disposition of her property between Joseph and Roberta. A will made by Hazel on September 23, 1986, contained substantially the same terms as her 1983 will except, unlike that will, it provided that if either Roberta or Joseph did not survive that person’s share was to go to the other sibling. Roberta was named executor under the 1975,1983, and 1986 wills.

The five wills that were placed in issue in Roberta’s petition were in principal substance as follows:

(1) Will of April 28, 1992. Joseph was given a life estate in the family farm with an appraised value of $395,000, with the remainder .to Roberta. All other assets in the estate constituting approximately $200,000 were given to Joseph.
(2) Will of November 18, 1992. Some personal and effects were given to Roberta. The family farm was given to Joseph for life with the remainder to Roberta. All other assets were given to Joseph.
(3) Will of January 8, 1998. All of Hazel’s property was given to Joseph. If he did not survive, it was given to the tenants on Hazel’s farm.
(4)

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Bluebook (online)
582 N.W.2d 171, 1998 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 184, 1998 WL 426356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swartzendruber-v-lamb-iowa-1998.