Watertown Concrete v. Foster

2001 SD 79
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 2001
DocketNone
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2001 SD 79 (Watertown Concrete v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watertown Concrete v. Foster, 2001 SD 79 (S.D. 2001).

Opinion

Unified Judicial System

Watertown Concrete Products, Inc.,
a South Dakota Corporation
Plaintiff and Appellee
v.
Thomas Foster, Executor of the Estate of
Ramsey Marlowe Foster, Deceased,

Defendant and Appellant

[2001 SD 79]

South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal from the Circuit Court of
The Third Judicial Circuit
Clark County, South Dakota
Hon. Robert L. Timm, Judge

J. Douglas Austin
Austin, Hinderaker, Hopper Strait & Bratland
Watertown, South Dakota

Attorneys for plaintiff and appellee

Robert M. Ronayne
Ronayne and Wein
Aberdeen, South Dakota

Attorneys for defendant and appellant

Considered on Briefs May 29, 2001

Opinion Filed 6/20/2001


#21688

KONENKAMP, Justice

[¶1.] This is a creditor's action against an estate.  Probate proceedings were commenced before the effective date of the Uniform Probate Code (UPC), but this action was brought after the code’s effective date.  The question is which law applies.  We affirm the trial court's conclusion that the plain language of SDCL 29A-8-101 requires that this action be governed by the UPC. 

A.

[¶2.] Ramsey Marlowe Foster died on August 6, 1993.  His sons, Thomas and Rodney Foster, were appointed co-executors.  In August 1995, while probate proceedings were still open, Rodney placed an order for concrete with Watertown Concrete Products, Inc.  He told the company's bookkeeper to bill him for the concrete and deliver it to his girlfriend's property.[1]   Rodney placed another order at Watertown Concrete in September 1995.  Seven concrete deliveries were made to a parcel of property held by the estate.  Rodney was feeding cattle on that parcel.  The concrete was used to create a driveway leading to the feed bunks.  He had the concrete billed to the Ramsey Marlowe Foster Estate at his home address.  Thomas, Rodney’s brother and co-executor, later admitted that he knew concrete was being delivered to the property, but denied knowing that it was being billed to the estate.

[¶3.] The Watertown Concrete employee who took the September order testified that Rodney described the property as “his place.”  Rodney did not own it, but he anticipated that he would eventually receive it as his inheritance.  He failed to explain that he was a co-executor and that another executor had to concur with his order.  Although the company employee had never taken a concrete order from an estate before, she did not require any written proof of authority.  She simply followed her boss’s instructions to “handle every customer the same.” 

[¶4.] In February 1996, Rodney filed for bankruptcy.  Because Watertown Concrete had not received payment for the concrete it had delivered, it submitted two separate proofs of claim in bankruptcy court.  One claim related to the August order delivered to the property owned by Rodney’s girlfriend, the other, to the September order delivered to the estate property.  Attached to the September proof of claim was the following explanation:

Concrete for which this claim is being made was all ordered by Rodney Foster, co-personal representative of the estate of R. [Marlowe] Foster.  The claimant, Watertown Concrete Products, Inc., has been unable to determine whether or not the R. [Marlowe] Foster Estate will accept responsibility for payment of the outstanding . . . bill, thus the reason for the protective filing.

The bankruptcy trustee objected to both claims, asserting that the September order was the responsibility of the estate and the August order was for a site not owned by Rodney.

[¶5.] At the same time, the estate maintained that it was not liable because Rodney was only a co-executor and he had incurred estate debts without Thomas’s authority.  The estate also contended that the concrete served no estate business purpose.  After negotiations with the trustee, Watertown Concrete withdrew its claim for the September deliveries.  In its order, the bankruptcy court noted that Watertown Concrete had agreed that the claim for the September deliveries was “a claim against the R. [Marlowe] Foster estate.”  On August 6, 1996, Watertown Concrete brought this collection proceeding against the estate, seeking its unpaid bill for the September deliveries.  After a bench trial, the circuit court found against the estate and entered judgment for $4,592.64 plus interest.[2]   The estate appeals.

B.

[¶6.] The estate contends that SDCL 30-8-15 (now repealed) prohibited an executor from binding an estate on obligations made without the written concurrence of the co-executor.  Conversely, Watertown Concrete argues that SDCL 30-8-15 is inapplicable because the provisions of South Dakota's UPC govern this dispute.  See SDCL 29A-1-101.  The transitional rules governing the application of UPC provisions to particular proceedings are set out in SDCL 29A-8-101.  The determination of which law applies presents a question of statutory interpretation reviewable de novo on appeal.  Maryott v. First National Bank of Eden, 2001 SD 43, ¶17, 624 NW2d 96, 102 (citations omitted); Faircloth v. Raven Industries, Inc., 2000 SD 158, ¶4, 620 NW2d 198, 200 (citations omitted).

[¶7.

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2001 SD 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watertown-concrete-v-foster-sd-2001.