Thompson v. Nesheim

159 N.W.2d 910, 280 Minn. 407, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1120
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 14, 1968
Docket40846
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 159 N.W.2d 910 (Thompson v. Nesheim) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Nesheim, 159 N.W.2d 910, 280 Minn. 407, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1120 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

Nelson, Justice.

Defendants appeal from the judgment entered in favor of plaintiff in an action to impose a constructive trust on land in Iowa and on real and personal property in Minnesota.

Plaintiff, Lawrence Thompson, married Amelia J. Thoreson December 18, 1918. Four children were born of the marriage. Difficulties arose between the parties in 1936 and they were divorced in February 1938, In November 1939 plaintiff married Dora Boettcher, a divorcee with three children, defendants Irene Larson, Marianne Neuhalfen, and Willard Boettcher. This marriage lasted until the death of Dora July 13, 1963.

Plaintiff claims that prior to their marriage Lawrence and Dora agreed that they would share in the property accumulated after the marriage on a 50-50 basis. At the time of the marriage, Lawrence had assets of $2,250 and Dora had assets of about $5,250. Lawrence at that time operated a filling station and garage at Leland, Iowa, and continued its operation for a year or two. The parties lived on an 11-acre, tract for the first year or so and then bought Lawrence’s father’s farm, purchasing his sister’s interest therein.

Lawrence’s first wife brought an action in 1942 for an increase in support payments. Dora had taken title to all the property purchased prior to this time in her own name to protect herself from any claims Lawrence’s former wife might make against him. Lawrence and Dora purchased a farm, at Buffalo Center, Iowa, late in 1942, again placing the title in Dora’s name to protect them from demands of Lawrence’s first wife. For the same reason they also put the bank account in Dora’s name when they moved to Buffalo Center and from that time on it appears they deposited all of their money in an account in Dora’s name— *410 even the inheritance of $2,250 Lawrence received from a grandfather. Their automobile was also in Dora’s name although she did not drive.

When they bought the Buffalo Center farm, the conveyance to Dora was subject to mortgages to the Federal Land Bank and the Land Bank Commissioner. The farm was paid for and the mortgages paid off from the money each put into the account, but primarily from profits from the sale of livestock and farm produce. The parties moved to the farm in the spring of 1943. Lawrence did most of the farm work on the Iowa farm, but Dora helped him until 1948 when she had an operation. She did little farm work after that time.

In 1954 Lawrence negotiated for the purchase of a farm near Frost, Minnesota, and after a discussion the title was placed in Dora’s name. They moved to this farm in 1955 and opened a bank account in Dora’s name. Lawrence did most of the work, hiring others to do some of it. Dora was too sick to help very much. They rented out the Iowa farm, Lawrence transacting most of the business although Dora did some and they made important decisions together. There was testimony that only Dora signed the lease.

Lawrence and Dora borrowed money from time to time. There was introduced in evidence 13 notes which were signed by Lawrence alone and 14 notes signed by both Lawrence and Dora, but Dora never borrowed any money on her own or put any such money in the bank account. It was either borrowed by Lawrence alone or by both. Dora did write a few checks on the account. A deposit box at the bank was obtained in both their names and both used the box at will.

Lawrence and Dora obtained only one chattel mortgage and that was signed by both of them. Lawrence used the bank account to buy cattle, hogs, farm machinery, or whatever he wanted, without consulting Dora. He deposited all proceeds from the sale of livestock or crops in the bank account and wrote hundreds of checks in payment of bills from 1943 on, signing his name, Dora’s name with his initials under it, or merely her name. At trial Lawrence introduced hundreds of receipts and other items showing that he made purchases and carried on every kind of transaction pertaining to the business of farming in his own name.

Eddie Wright, who prepared the couple’s tax returns for 1958 and *411 each year thereafter following the purchase of the Minnesota farm, testified that he was instructed to file joint returns. Thus, Lawrence and Dora both had the benefit of the depreciation taken. Social security was assigned to Lawrence and Dora acquiesced in this. Dora, according to the record, never claimed any income or paid any social security tax.

Dora did not tell Charles Peterson, their banker and tax consultant from 1944 to 1958, that she owned the bank account. They filed joint returns and at no time did she claim any of the income or pay any social security. Mr. Peterson testified that Lawrence appeared to be the “boss” in the operation of the farm. Mr. Peterson looked to Lawrence for payment of all notes given for money borrowed although the bank account was in Dora’s name.

In 1961 it was learned that Dora had cancer and she was quite sickly until her death. After she was hospitalized, Lawrence spent large sums of money for her care and visited her as often as possible. While he did not know what was in Dora’s will, he did discuss it with her before it was drawn and advised her as to what he thought it should contain in view of their arrangement. Contrary to his expectation the will gave him only a life estate in 50 percent of her property, with no remainder interest for his children. The estate included the Iowa and Minnesota farms, farm machinery, cash in the bank, household goods, an automobile, and other miscellaneous property.

It appears that after Lawrence and Dora were married Lawrence signed a promissory note for $175 at 7-percent interest payable to Dora. He gave her this, he said, “so we could have the record straight” in case “something should have happened to me.” One witness said that Dora had told the witness the Iowa farm was “hers.” There was also testimony that Dora, while seated in the back seat of a car in 1951, said “everything was in her name so the first wife couldn’t cause any trouble”; that one Sunday evening in 1952 or 1953, Dora said it was in her name to keep it away from Lawrence’s first wife and children; that the bank account was in Dora’s name so the first wife “couldn’t collect alimony”; and that it was “a fifty-fifty deal.” In their depositions defendants Irene Larson and Willard Boettcher admitted knowledge of an agreement between Lawrence and Dora. Lawrence said that after the custody hearing in *412 volving his first wife and children in 1942, “That seemed to be the end of it pretty much, except once in a while you would hear from him [his first wife’s attorney]. But that is really the turning point.” It is his claim, however, that the parties by agreement continued to place their property in Dora’s name but that each owned half of it.

After trial to the court without a jury, the court found as a fact that at the time of the marriage Dora contributed to the joint resources of the marriage approximately $5,000, and that plaintiff contributed not more than $2,250; that in the years subsequent to the marriage the parties acquired the farms in Iowa and Minnesota hereinbefore described, farm machinery, household goods, an automobile, and cash in the bank, and that the title to all of the property was held in the name of Dora Thompson for the purpose of discouraging plaintiff’s first wife from making demands for additional support.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 N.W.2d 910, 280 Minn. 407, 1968 Minn. LEXIS 1120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-nesheim-minn-1968.