Vogt v. Warnock

107 S.W.3d 778, 2003 WL 21197043
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2003
Docket08-01-00108-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 107 S.W.3d 778 (Vogt v. Warnock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vogt v. Warnock, 107 S.W.3d 778, 2003 WL 21197043 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

SUSAN LARSEN, Justice.

This case involves lifetime gifts of real property and liquid assets from Barton Warnock, an elderly man, to Rebecca Vogt, a younger woman. It presents this issue: Does execution of a power of attorney in favor of a person who has never acted under its authority create a fiduciary relationship as a matter of law? We conclude that the answer is yes, and the trial court properly charged the jury accordingly. Nevertheless, we find Vogt established the fairness of gifts to her from Dr. War-nock as a matter of law. We therefore reverse and render.

Facts

Barton Warnock was a professor of biology at Sul Ross University in Alpine, Texas. He was very prominent in his field, and many people sought his advice in his areas of expertise. Rebecca Vogt is an anthropologist and artist specializing in archaic basket making and weaving. War-nock and Vogt first met in 1994 when Vogt sought him out to identify certain plants she was using in her projects. At that time, their mutual friend Mary Ellen Kim-ball introduced Vogt to both Barton War-nock and his wife Ruel, who had been married for over 60 years. The Warnocks had a son, Tony Warnock, who was 57 years old at the time of trial.

Vogt and Dr. Warnock collaborated on several projects over the next few years, and their friendship grew despite their forty-year age difference. In 1996, Ruel Warnock died and Rebecca Vogt went through a divorce. After filing for divorce in Austin, Vogt began spending more time in Alpine where she stayed in a triplex unit owned by Dr. Warnock and his son Tony. Vogt began teaching courses at Sul Ross University. Vogt and Dr. Warnock spent a good deal of time together, and their *780 friendship became a romance. In June 1997, Warnock proposed to Vogt. He had made plans for a surprise wedding, but they delayed marriage at Vogt’s suggestion.

In December 1997, Dr. Warnock named Vogt his attorney-in-fact under a statutory durable power of attorney and a durable power of attorney for health care. Vogt never acted under these documents, but she knew that Warnock had so designated her. The statutory durable power of attorney contained this paragraph:

THE ATTORNEY IN FACT OR AGENT, BY ACCEPTING OR ACTING UNDER THIS APPOINTMENT, ASSUMES THE FIDUCIARY AND OTHER LEGAL RESPONSIBILITIES OF AN AGENT.

Warnock also employed Vogt under a written contract:

[F]or the remainder of Dr. Warnock’s lifetime, to manage his daily affairs, personal financial and health, and to assist him with and/or co-author profession publications.
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The parties intend that, as Rebecca Vogt’s management of Dr. Warnock’s care will last during the whole of his lifetime, her monthly income from him should, similarly, last for the whole of his lifetime.

In exchange for undertaking these responsibilities, Warnock paid Vogt $3,000 per month; she received all rights, including royalties, to works published by Warnock, all rights to author or approve any biographical work concerning Warnock, and she was given all items (slides, collections, photos, etc.) generated by Warnock in his professional capacity.

In early 1998, Dr. Warnock revoked a living trust he and Ruel Warnock had created in favor of their son Tony. He transferred ownership of four real properties to Vogt, retaining life estates for himself. Additionally, he named Vogt beneficiary of his brokerage account and his veteran’s life insurance policy.

During this time, Warnock and Vogt continued their relationship and intended to marry, although their families disapproved. They continued working on projects together, including a book Dr. War-nock had been writing for years. In February 1998, Warnock prepared a handwritten codicil to his 1994 will, leaving his furniture, household goods, jewelry and personal effects to Vogt, while making a number of specific bequests of a sentimental nature to Tony.

Monty Kimball, an attorney in Alpine and old friend of Dr. Warnock’s, assisted in making these changes to Warnock’s estate plan. Kimball considered Vogt to be his client, but characterized it as a hybrid transaction in which both parties wanted the same outcome. Kimball consulted numerous times with Warnock, sometimes with Vogt present and sometimes with Warnock alone, to insure that Dr. War-nock understood and desired these transfers. The title company agent also met with Dr. Warnock for the same reason.

Kimball held a taped session with War-nock in which they discussed the transfers, which was introduced at trial and in which this exchange occurred:

WARNOCK: He [Tony] kind of is piggish. He kind of wants everything, I guess. But I can’t see any reason why I couldn’t have her [Vogt] to have what I’ve got, all of it.
KIMBALL: There’s no reason whatsoever that you can’t dispose of your property the way you want to.
WARNOCK: Well, that’s—
KIMBALL: You can do that. The keys to it are — to be effective and to head off *781 future fights, is that it is made to be very dear you know what you’re doing, and this is what you want to do. Because if Tony’s ever going to attack it, the way he’s got to attack it is by saying that you were taken advantage of, undue influence, those kinds of things.
WARNOCK: Yeah. But that’s a lot of malarkey. It’s not true.
KIMBALL: Well, I understand that, Doctor, or I wouldn’t be participating. I can tell you that.
WARNOCK: Yeah.
KIMBALL: You and I have been friends for a long time. And I wouldn’t be participating in this if I thought Rebecca was taking any undue influence over you.
WARNOCK: She certainly is not.

Warnock’s physician signed a statement opining that Dr. Warnock was competent to make these decisions.

In December 1997, Barton Warnock was involved in a car fire. He went to his doctor on December 28 and 29, 1997, complaining of vomiting, stooling his pants, weakness, cough, and memory loss. His doctor diagnosed interaction of medications with carbon monoxide exposure from the car fire. In June 1998, at age 86, Barton Warnock was driving alone on a desert road near Alpine. He died in a single-car accident.

Dr. Warnock’s will designated Tony Warnock his executor. Tony declined to serve, and his cousin Kirby Warnock agreed to perform the duties of executor instead. In that capacity, he filed suit against Rebecca Vogt alleging fraud and undue influence. During trial, the estate amended its pleadings and dropped all claims except one for breach of fiduciary duty. The estate stipulated that Dr. War-nock had done what he wanted to do in transferring property, and his competency and undue influence were no longer questions that would be submitted to the jury. The jury failed to find that transfers of two real properties, “the big house” and “the triplex” were fair to Dr. Warnock.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.3d 778, 2003 WL 21197043, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vogt-v-warnock-texapp-2003.