Tighe v. Estate of Tighe

CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 22, 2022
DocketA-21-274
StatusPublished

This text of Tighe v. Estate of Tighe (Tighe v. Estate of Tighe) 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
Tighe v. Estate of Tighe, (Neb. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL (Memorandum Web Opinion)

TIGHE V. ESTATE OF TIGHE

NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).

STEVE TIGHE, APPELLANT, V.

ESTATE OF BARBARA BROTHERTON TIGHE, APPELLEE.

Filed February 22, 2022. No. A-21-274.

Appeal from the District Court for Sarpy County: MICHAEL A. SMITH, Judge. Affirmed. Heather Voegele Anson and David E. Fuxa, of Voegele Anson Law, L.L.C., for appellant. Andrew J. Wilson and Terry A. White, of Burnett Wilson Law, L.L.P., for appellee.

MOORE, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges. ARTERBURN, Judge. INTRODUCTION Steve Tighe appeals from an order by the district court for Sarpy County following a bench trial which found in favor of the estate of Barbara Brotherton Tighe on Steve’s claim of unjust enrichment. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm. BACKGROUND On February 9, 2018, Steve filed a complaint in which he asserted that his father, Jim Tighe, established an investment account that was worth approximately $800,000 at the time of his death. The investment account listed the owners of the account as Jim and his wife, Barbara Brotherton Tighe, as joint owners with right of survivorship. Barbara was Steve’s stepmother. Under the terms of Jim’s will, Steve was the sole beneficiary of Jim’s estate. Steve asserted that near the end of Jim’s life, Jim expressed a desire to remove Barbara from the investment account. Steve further alleged that Barbara agreed to execute the paperwork needed to change ownership

-1- of the account; however, Jim died before Barbara was able to execute the paperwork. Steve alleged that upon Jim’s death, Barbara took ownership of the funds and had not released any of these funds to Steve; therefore, she was unjustly enriched. In October 2018, Steve filed a motion for summary judgment. A hearing on this motion was held on November 6. At this hearing, several exhibits were received. Barbara offered into evidence her own affidavit, which the court ultimately received over objection by Steve. The court denied Steve’s motion for summary judgment finding that Barbara’s affidavit created a genuine issue of fact. On May 31, 2019, Steve filed a motion to strike the affidavit received at the summary judgment hearing. In this motion, he asserted that in a deposition taken of Barbara, she had provided testimony that contradicted the information contained in her affidavit. Steve asked the court to strike Barbara’s affidavit from the record and provide “such other, further and different relief, as this Court deems appropriate.” Following a hearing on the motion to strike, the district court denied the motion. The district court indicated that Steve had requested the court to first strike the affidavit and to then reconsider its ruling on the prior motion for summary judgment without relying on Barbara’s affidavit. The court denied both forms of relief. However, the court explicitly stated that its ruling was not a decision regarding any future admissibility of Barbara’s affidavit and noted that the denial of a motion for summary judgment did not preclude the filing of a subsequent similar motion. During the pendency of the proceedings, Barbara died. Her estate was then substituted as the defendant in the case. Steve filed a second motion for summary judgment on June 5, 2020, which the district court overruled following further hearing. The denial of the second motion for summary judgment is not referenced by either party on appeal. Trial was held on November 12, 2020. Steve and his wife, Peggy Tighe, testified. In addition, Steve’s former wife, Terri Straley (Terri), and Jim’s former attorney, Tom Kelley, also testified. The deposition testimony of Barbara and Jeremy Friedman, were also received. Friedman was the financial advisor to Jim and managed the investment account at issue. The evidence at trial revealed that Terri and Steve had a positive relationship with Jim from at least the beginning of Jim and Barbara’s marriage in 1997 until Steve and Terri’s divorce in 2008. However, following Steve and Terri’s divorce, Steve’s relationship with Jim and Barbara became strained. Steve and Jim did not speak to each other for approximately 10 years. Terri, however, maintained a close relationship with both Jim and Barbara even after her divorce from Steve. The evidence established that Jim was not only estranged from Steve, but from his daughters as well. Barbara had two adult children, but neither lived in Nebraska. Terri testified that in 2009, she began handling day-to-day tasks for Jim and Barbara, such as grocery shopping and picking up prescriptions. She continued to spend time with Jim and Barbara and visited them two or three times per week. Over time, Terri was asked to perform more functions which included making bank deposits and helping Jim organize his account statements and bills. She also provided transportation as health issues limited the amount of driving Jim and Barbara engaged in. Eventually Barbara changed her will to add Terri as a beneficiary along with her children. In her deposition, Barbara cited how good Terri had been to them and stated she considered Terri to be a

-2- daughter. Accordingly, Terri acknowledged that if the estate was successful in this case, she would benefit by inheriting a portion of the funds from the investment account in dispute. Steve rekindled his relationship with Jim in late 2016 and early 2017 after learning that Jim had fallen and was temporarily staying in a skilled nursing/rehabilitation facility. From there, Jim moved into an assisted living facility, and Steve began visiting him there two to three times per week. Despite Jim’s desire to return home, Barbara and Terri, following doctor’s orders, insisted that he stay at the assisted living facility. Two months later, Barbara moved into the same assisted living facility. Barbara did not move into the same room as Jim because there were not any two bedroom apartments available. Although Jim and Barbara saw each other most days, Jim ate with a group of men and Barbara with a group of women. According to Barbara, this decision was mutual. Steve testified to his father’s lack of satisfaction with the separation between them. The testimony regarding Jim’s health in 2017 varied. According to Barbara in her deposition testimony, when Steve appeared back in Jim’s life, Jim was “practically dead.” Other witnesses testified to a better state of health, but all agreed he was not capable of living independently. Steve became more involved in Jim’s life beginning in 2017. For instance, Steve testified that Jim relied on Steve to check on Jim’s bank accounts. Despite his condition, Steve took Jim to renew his driver’s license and deposit checks in various bank accounts. Jim executed a new will in October 2017. Steve was the sole beneficiary under Jim’s will. The parties presented evidence with respect to Jim’s financial accounts. It was undisputed that throughout their marriage, Jim and Barbara maintained separate financial accounts. According to Barbara’s testimony, the parties executed a prenuptial agreement wherein they agreed that both were free to distribute their estates as they saw fit. During the marriage, they did maintain a joint checking account from which they paid their household bills. That account was funded from each of their individual accounts. Steve presented evidence that several of Jim’s individual bank accounts included Steve’s name as a part owner. Steve testified that in September 2017, Jim added Steve’s name as the joint owner of one bank account while removing Barbara’s name. The dispute in this case centers on an investment account that Jim owned.

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