Wies v. Brandt

293 N.W. 773, 294 Mich. 240, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 743
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1940
DocketDocket No. 85, Calendar No. 41,079.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 N.W. 773 (Wies v. Brandt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wies v. Brandt, 293 N.W. 773, 294 Mich. 240, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 743 (Mich. 1940).

Opinions

Chandler, J.

Plaintiff, Pauline E. Wies, a maiden lady, at the time of the filing of her bill of complaint on May 17,1939, was approximately 68 years of age. During her adult life, she had followed the vocation of teaching and was so engaged up to and including the year 1937. She had acquired, either by inheritance or through her own endeavors, or by both, considerable property of the value of about $60,000, consisting of stocks, bonds, mortgages and real estate, including the home in which she resided in Highland *242 Park. To add to her income as a teacher and from her investments, she took roomers who at times were also boarders in her home. The only relatives she had at the time of the institution of this suit were the defendants, other than August Brandt, and who were the children of her uncle, Paul Schmogrow, who died a short time prior to the filing of the bill of complaint. This uncle resided in or hear Cincinnati, Ohio, and his children, defendants herein, were not residents of the State of Michigan, being, as far as the record shows, very infrequent visitors of Miss Wies. In fact, it is doubtful if any of them had visited her, or she them, during a period of many years prior to 1937. Up until that year, she had had sole charge and management of her property.

In November or December of 1937, plaintiff suffered a light paralytic stroke from which she made considerable recovery. On February 28, 1938, she experienced a severe stroke which was described by her physician as a cerebral hemorrhage, as a result of which she was physically paralyzed on the right side of her body, resulting in much interference and confusion in mind and speech. The following day, one of plaintiff’s roomers, Mr. Keel, notified plaintiff’s uncle at Cincinnati that she had suffered a paralytic stroke, and in two weeks three of the defendants, Edith P. Miller, Florence Schmogrow, and Emma Erke, arrived at plaintiff’s home. Defendant Florence Schmogrow remained but a short time. Soon defendant Fred Schmogrow arrived. Mrs. Erke stayed until about the middle of May, 1938; Mrs. Miller, the middle of July, and defendant Fred Schmogrow, the middle of January, 1939.

In March, 1938, shortly after the arrival of the above-mentioned defendants, they were informed by Mr. Keel that Miss Wies had made a will, and soon thereafter Mr. Keel was requested by Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Erke to leave plaintiff’s house.

*243 On March 19, 1938, defendant Emma Erke petitioned the probate court of Wayne county for the appointment of a special guardian for Miss Wies as a mentally incompetent person, and also for the appointment of a general guardian. On March 22, 1938, defendant Brandt, an attorney, was appointed and qualified as special guardian, and on April 22, 1938, he was appointed and qualified as general guardian, and continued as such until January 19, 1939, when the guardianship was terminated as it was made to appear to the court that plaintiff had recovered her competency.

On January 5, 1939, while plaintiff was still under guardianship as a mentally incompetent, defendant Brandt, still her guardian, secured from her what is called in the record a deed of trust, a document consisting of 12 pages of the printed record, by the terms of which plaintiff turned over to defendant Brandt all of her estate which he was to manage, and which trust should only terminate at the option of the grantor after a period of three years from the date thereof, and then only if said grantor should give said trustee a written notice of her intention to terminate it fully six months prior to the date of such termination. The beneficiaries .of the trust in case of the death of plaintiff, providing her uncle Paul Gr. Sehmogrow did not survive her, were the legal heirs of said Paul or the lawful issue of such heirs, each to have a one-seventh part, excepting defendant Florence Sehmogrow who was to have a two-sevenths part. The income from the trust estate was to be used by the trustee to pay all charges and expenses necessary and requisite for the proper care and management of the trust estate, and if sufficient income was not available, the payment of such expenses might be made from the principal. Said trust further provided that the trustee should expend for the grantor or her comfort all or such part of such *244 income in his possession or thereafter accruing as in his absolute and uncontrolled discretion he deemed wise so long as the grantor should live, and thereafter should pay to the uncle of the grantor, if he survived her, such part or parts of the income in his possession, or accruing, as the trustee in his discretion deemed wise so long as said uncle should live. The grantor by the terms of the instrument reserved the right to distribute by last will and testament the sum of $10,000 of her estate. By the terms of said trust, the trustee had full power to dispose of the assets or any part thereof; to invest and reinvest in his discretion without regard to any statutory limitations or restrictions as to the investment of trust funds now in force or which might be enacted in the State of Michigan or any other State in which any of the trust property might be located, and without regard to any legal decisions governing investments by trustees. We think no useful purpose would be served by any further comment upon this instrument. More than a page thereof is devoted to recitals by the grantor that she had been mentally and physically incompetent to manage her estate, but that she had fully regained her mental competency and had so convinced her guardian and the witnesses who subscribed the instrument; that she realized that she might never again fully recover physical ability to manage her estate; that she was in fear that an instrument purporting to be her last will and testament might be used to defeat her desire as to the lawful disposition of her estate; and that she was fully convinced and satisfied that her estate had been competently managed by her guardian and desired his management to continue in such a way as to permit him to use fully his judgment in the investment and conservation of her estate. By the terms of said instrument, she expressly provided that the trustee should not be required to give bond or other security *245 for the performance of his duties as trustee, and authorized him to retain from her property in his hands compensation for his services and for the care and management of the trust reposed in him. Another page of the instrument is devoted to a statement by the witnesses thereto, showing* the thoroughness of the means they had taken to determine for themselves the competency of the grantor at the time of the execution of the instrument. In fact, the instrument itself shows with what meticulous care it had been drafted and executed so as to provide that no loop-hole might remain that would enable plaintiff, or any beneficiaries in any will that she had executed or might thereafter execute, to avoid the inevitable conclusion that she was in full possession of her mental faculties at the time of the execution of such instrument, and that any will theretofore executed by her should be revoked thereby, and the execution of any other valid will prevented, excepting* as to the right she reserved to dispose of $10,000 of her estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 N.W. 773, 294 Mich. 240, 1940 Mich. LEXIS 743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wies-v-brandt-mich-1940.