In the Estate of ROSETTA F. KEEN, LOUIE R. KEEN v. AMBER J. WOLFE, individually and as Personal Representative of the Estate of Rosetta F. Keen, and CYNTHIA A. KEEN, Respondents-Respondents.
In the Estate of )
ROSETTA F. KEEN, deceased, )
)
LOUIE R. KEEN, )
)
Petitioner-Appellant, )
)
v. ) SD33801
)
AMBER J. WOLFE, individually and ) Filed: Apr. 11, 2016
as Personal Representative of the Estate )
of Rosetta F. Keen, and CYNTHIA A. )
KEEN, )
)
Respondents-Respondents. )
APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF BARRY COUNTY
Honorable Carr Woods, Senior Judge
AFFIRMED
Louie R. Keen appeals the February 2015 “FINAL SETTLEMENT APPROVED
FINDING AND ORDER OF DISTRIBUTION” (“the final distribution”) entered in the
probate estate of his deceased mother, Rosetta F. Keen, pursuant to section 472.160(14).1
Louie presents nine points that collectively assert trial court errors in overruling his
objections to the final distribution and denying his motion invoking “no-contest” provisions
1
Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to RSMo 2000. For purposes of clarity and simplicity,
we will refer to family members by their first names; no disrespect or familiarity is intended. Rosetta’s
property subject to administration in the instant probate court case will be referred to as “the Estate,” and we
refer to the case itself as “the Estate case.”
1
from both Rosetta’s will and a trust she had created. For ease of analysis, we have
organized the points around four basic contentions distilled from Louie’s points: (1) Louie’s
sister and personal representative of the Estate, Amber J. Wolfe, and another sister, Cynthia
A. Keen, violated no-contest clauses in Rosetta’s will and/or trust;2 (2) Amber’s inventory of
the Estate incorrectly omitted a particular bank account owned or possessed by Rosetta at
her death; (3) Amber’s claim against the Estate totaling $46,288.72 for various expenses was
invalid because the expenses were either not owed by Rosetta at her death or the trial court
did not approve them in advance; and (4) attorney fees totaling $22,041.14 incurred by
Amber in connection with a previous appeal by Louie in the Estate case should not have
been allowed because the fees did not benefit the Estate.3
Finding no merit in Louie’s points, we affirm.
Applicable Principles of Review and Governing Law
“The trial court’s final decree of distribution will be upheld unless there is no
substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, it erroneously
declares the law, or it erroneously applies the law.” In re Estate of Ellis, 187 S.W.3d 344,
2
In his notice of appeal, Louie listed attorney Donald Cupps, and the law firm of Ellis, Cupps & Cole, P.C., as
respondents. He likewise listed Mr. Cupps and the firm as respondents in his objections to the final
distribution. Mr. Cupps formerly represented Rosetta, and he later represented Amber and Cynthia. Neither
Mr. Cupps nor his firm has filed a brief in this appeal. Amber and Cynthia’s motion for an order dropping Mr.
Cupps and his firm as respondents in this appeal was taken with the case. Louie did not respond to the motion,
and he has failed to identify any trial court order adding Mr. Cupps or the law firm as a party. To become a
party, a person must either be named in the initial pleadings or added later by order of the trial court. See In re
Estate of Miller, 9 S.W.3d 760, 765 (Mo. App. S.D. 2000); Rule 52.11. And “[a]bsent a suggestion of death or
the like, this [appellate] court has no authority under the statutes, the rules or the case law to permit addition or
substitution of parties.” Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Litteer, 621 S.W.2d 376, 379 (Mo. App. W.D. 1981). The
motion to drop Mr. Cupps and the firm as respondents is granted, and our references to “Respondents” are
solely to Amber and Cynthia. All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2015).
3
The prior notice of appeal in the Estate case, assigned case no. SD32809 (“the first Estate appeal”),
challenged a May 2013 amended judgment discussed, infra (“the amended judgment”). We dismissed that
appeal because we found the notice of appeal to be “untimely and ineffective[.]” The record in the instant
appeal includes the record transferred from SD32809, the contents of which consist of a legal file, a
supplemental legal file, and a transcript. The legal files from the first Estate appeal also include docket entries
and some pleadings associated with two separate cases involving Rosetta’s trust. We will discuss those cases
more fully, infra, and refer to them as “the first trust case” and “the second trust case.”
2
348 (Mo. App. S.D. 2006). The same is true for “review of a trial court’s decision to allow a
claim against an estate[.]” In re Estate of Miller, 264 S.W.3d 664, 666 (Mo. App. E.D.
2008). We presume that the trial court’s judgment is correct, and the appellant bears the
burden of proving it erroneous. Humphreys v. Wooldridge, 408 S.W.3d 261, 264 (Mo.
App. S.D. 2013). When no request for specific findings and conclusions was made, we
presume that the trial court made findings consistent with the judgment entered, and we will
affirm the judgment under any reasonable theory supported by the evidence. In re Estate of
Hock, 322 S.W.3d 574, 579 (Mo. App. S.D. 2010).
“[W]e defer to the trial court’s findings of fact, given the trial court’s superior ability
to judge the credibility of witnesses.” In re Estate of Moore, 136 S.W.3d 163, 164 (Mo.
App. S.D. 2004). “The [trial] court is free to believe all, part, or none of the testimony of
any witness[,]” and “we accept as true the evidence and permissible inferences, which may
be drawn favorable to the prevailing party, and disregard the contradictory testimony.” In
re Estate of Markley, 922 S.W.2d 87, 95 (Mo. App. W.D. 1996).
Factual and Procedural Background
Rosetta’s husband (the parties’ father), Gary Keen, predeceased Rosetta in 2005.
After Gary’s death, Rosetta operated “4-K Farms” as a sole proprietorship. Louie testified
that Rosetta “continue[d] to run the income and expenses of the farm out of her personal
account[.]”
In March 2011, Rosetta entered the hospital, and she had Amber retrieve a particular
checkbook from Rosetta’s home that Amber had not previously possessed. Thereafter,
Amber began paying Rosetta’s bills using that checkbook. The checking account’s
“SIGNATURE CARD” (dated in 2006): (1) identified “[Rosetta] DBA 4-K Farms” as the
3
account owner; (2) indicated that the account was a “BUSINESS ACCOUNT” for a “Sole
Proprietorship”; (3) listed Amber as “Signer Only”; and (4) designated Amber as the
“Payable on Death (POD)” beneficiary (“the POD account”). Amber understood that the
money in the POD account belonged to Rosetta and had been generated by Rosetta. There
was no indication on the signature card that Amber was identified in anything other than her
individual capacity. The POD account had originally been held by Rosetta and Gary, and
Amber was added between 2000 and 2004 “[j]ust as a cosigner.” The POD account was the
account from which “all of the farm expenses were paid[.]”
On April 4, 2011, Rosetta met with Mr. Cupps in her hospital room to revise her
estate plan. The resulting “LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF ROSETTA KEEN”
(“the Will”) nominated Amber as the personal representative of the Estate. The Will
provides that apart from “tangible personal property[,]” the remainder of the Estate is
bequeathed “to the Trustee of the Rosetta Keen Revocable Trust Dated August 2, 2006, as
restated.” In the absence of another list,4 the tangible personal property was to be divided
equally among Louie, Cynthia, and Amber. Article V of the Will (“the Will’s no-contest
clause”) states: “If any of my children contest any provision of this Last Will and Testament
or my Revocable Trust as restated this date, they shall receive nothing.”
The “APRIL 4, 2011 RESTATEMENT OF REVOCABLE TRUST
AGREEMENT OF ROSETTA KEEN” (“the Trust“) references the trust Rosetta first
created on August 2, 2006, and it names Amber as “Successor Trustees [sic]” to Rosetta.
The Trust provides for the conveyance of a tract of particularly described real property to
Louie and another to Amber. The Trust directs the trustee “to retain all other real estate,
4
No party alleges the existence of any list that might require a different distribution of the tangible personal
property.
4
livestock and farm equipment, and to operate the same as a farming operation” for 12 years.
Net income, apart from the trustee’s fee generated from the farming operation, is to be split
equally between Louie, Cynthia, and Amber, along with any property remaining at the end
of that 12-year period. Part “EIGHTH” of the Trust provides: “The Trustee shall have all
powers conferred upon Trustees by Chapter 456 of the Revised Statutes of the State of
Missouri. Specifically the Trustee is directed to retain real estate, cattle and farm equipment
which may not be acceptable investments for fiduciaries.”
Part “SECOND” of the Trust, paragraph B.2(b) (“the B.2(b) clause”), states: “The
Trustee is directed to distribute to [Amber] the 40 acres more or less owned by the Trust
and/or owned by [Rosetta] and located in Section 1, Township 22, Range 28, Barry County,
Missouri.”
Part “FIFTEENTH” of the Trust (“the Trust’s no-contest clause”5) states:
If any beneficiary of this trust or any other person contests the validity of this
trust or any provision of this trust or files any action or makes any claim
seeking distribution to him or her of an amount larger than what is provided
for herein, then the Trustees [sic] are directed to distribute nothing to said
contesting or claiming beneficiary and that person shall receive nothing from
this trust or trusts created herein nor anything from [Rosetta]’s estates.
Rosetta died on May 10, 2011, and the Will was presented to the probate division of
the circuit court of Barry County a few days later. The judge or clerk of the probate division
examined the Will, “admitted [it] to probate as the Last Will and Testament of [Rosetta],”
and issued Letters Testamentary (Supervised Administration) appointing Amber personal
representative. No money was added to the POD account after Rosetta’s death. Amber used
the POD account to pay Rosetta’s bills from the date of Rosetta’s death until May 22, 2011.
5
We will refer collectively to the Will’s no-contest clause and the Trust’s no-contest clause as “the no-contest
clauses.”
5
In June 2011, Amber filed a claim against the Estate for “$46,288.72 for
reimbursement of personal funds paid by [Amber] for [Rosetta]’s last illness, funeral costs,
and household/farm expenses” between May 10-22, 2011 (“the expense reimbursement
claim”). The trial court appointed an administrator ad litem, and the trial court approved the
expense reimbursement claim on March 21, 2012. We will summarize additional
information about the expense reimbursement claim in our discussion of Point VIII, infra.
The balance of the POD account remaining after Amber had paid the bills identified in the
expense reimbursement claim was $31,268.42 (“the POD balance”). Amber withdrew that
remaining balance in her personal capacity in June 2011. Amber eventually established a
bank account for the Trust, and she began using that account to pay for expenses involving
the cattle and real estate.
In November 2011, Amber, as successor trustee, filed case no. 11BR-PR00133 -- the
first trust case -- seeking a judicial declaration “as to whether she is entitled to sell” “a small
tract of real estate” (“the small tract”) specifically described in the amended petition. The
amended petition alleged that Rosetta had listed the small tract for sale before her death and
it was “not economical to farm due to its location, terrain and composition”; that it was “not
prudent” to keep it; and that selling it would be in the best interest of the beneficiaries. The
amended petition cited the Trust provision requiring the payment of net profits of the
farming operation using “‘GAAP’” principles6 and alleged “[t]hat the accountant for the
Estate and Trust recommends that income be calculated according to ‘Other Comprehensive
Basis of Accounting’ rather than ‘GAAP’ because it allows income to be calculated on the
same basis as taxes.”
6
The amended petition defined “GAAP” as “Generally Accepting [sic] Accounting Principles[.]”
6
Louie’s counsel entered an appearance in the first trust case, but the docket entries do
not indicate that he filed an answer or other responsive pleading.7 Cynthia appeared pro se,
and she “agree[d] to the entry of a Judgment granting the relief sought.” In December 2011,
the trial court entered an order8 modifying the Trust such that the trustee was “authorized
and empowered to sell real estate which is not economical to the farm due to its location,
terrain, and composition.” The trustee was also directed “to use other comprehensive basis
[sic] of accounting rather than ‘GAAP’ as an accounting method.”
In February 2012, Respondents initiated case no. 12BR-PR00014, the second trust
case. Count I of the first amended petition sought a judicial declaration that an action to
reform the Trust “based upon scrivener’s error and/or mutual mistake does not violate the”
Trust’s no-contest clause. Count II of the first amended petition sought an order reforming
the B.2(b) clause as to the land’s section number and acreage and to add a reference to the
property as having been Rosetta’s home. So reformed, the clause would read as follows:
“The Trustee is directed to distribute to [Amber] [Rosetta’s] home and 46 acres more or less
owned by the Trust and/or owned by [Rosetta] and located in Section 6, Township 22, Range
27, Barry County, Missouri.” The first amended petition asserted that Rosetta intended “that
the family home and approximately 46 acres surrounding the family home would be
distributed to [Amber]”; the “family home” “is located in Section 6”; but “because of a
scrivener’s error the Trust mistakenly described the property to be transferred to [Amber] as
being in Section 1”; and “the error in description was a mutual mistake of the parties.”
7
Louie has different counsel in the instant appeal.
8
The order is not denominated “judgment” or “decree,” see Rule 74.01(a), and no action has been taken in the
first trust case since November 2013, when Louie’s current attorney requested copies of certain documents in
the file that he intended to include in a supplemental legal file to be submitted in the instant appeal.
7
Louie filed an answer in the second trust case, alleging, inter alia, that the amended
petition “invoked the [Trust’s] no-contest clause[,]” and the B.2(b) clause “is unambiguous
. . . and should not . . . be modified.” Louie’s answer also included a counterclaim that
quoted both no-contest clauses and alleged that both clauses had been violated by:
Respondents’ initial filing of the second trust case, Amber’s filing of the first trust case, and
Cynthia’s consent to judgment in the first trust case. Amber moved to dismiss Louie’s
counterclaim.
On April 19, 2012, Louie filed a motion in the Estate case asking the trial court to set
aside its award of Amber’s expense reimbursement claim on the basis that any individual
“expenses for maintenance of livestock and real property” were not valid claims because the
Estate owned neither, and everything in Amber’s expense reimbursement claim “appear[ed]
to be paid from a joint account [Rosetta] had established for the express purpose of paying
expenses.”
Later that month, Louie filed a “MOTION TO INVOKE NO CONTEST
PROVISION IN WILL” in the Estate case (“the no-contest motion”) that alleged Amber had
violated both no-contest clauses by seeking in the first trust case to “to sell real property”
and modify the accounting method required by the Trust, filing the expense reimbursement
claim in the Estate case, and seeking in the second trust case to reform the real property
distribution so that she would be awarded a different tract of land that was worth more
money than the land described in the Trust. The no-contest motion alleged that Cynthia had
violated both no-contest clauses by consenting to judgment in the first trust case and by
participating with Amber in the second trust case.
8
In January 2013, the trial court held a combined hearing in the Estate case and the
second trust case (“the combined hearing”).9 The matters at issue included both counts of
the pending petition in the second trust case, Louie’s counterclaim in the second trust case,
the no-contest motion in the Estate case, and the expense reimbursement claim.
A “JUDGMENT” entered in the second trust case on March 20, 2013 declared
Amber’s request to reform the Trust “based upon scrivener’s error and/or mutual mistake
did not violate the” Trust’s no-contest clause and the judgment reformed the B.2(b) clause to
provide that “[t]he Trustee is directed to distribute to [Amber] [Rosetta’s] home and 46 acres
more or less owned by the Trust and/or owned by [Rosetta] and located in Section 6,
Township 22, Range 27, Barry County, Missouri.” The second Trust case judgment also
denied Louie’s counterclaim.10 This court later denied Louie’s motion for leave to file a late
notice of appeal in the second trust case.
On May 26, 2013, the trial court entered an “amended judgment”11 in the Estate case
that denied Louie’s motion to set aside Amber’s expense reimbursement claim. The trial
court also denied the no-contest motion, specifically finding that “none of the alleged
actions of [Amber and Cynthia] as set forth in the [no-contest motion] constitute a violation
of [the Will’s no-contest clause].”
In August 2014, Amber sought an order in the Estate case allowing her to pay
$20,621.25 to Mr. Cupps and $1,420.16 to Respondents’ current counsel for “legal services
and incurred expenses in handling the [a]ppeal matters filed against the [E]state[.]” The
request incorporated itemized fee statements from both attorneys. Louie filed suggestions in
9
The same judge that presided over the combined hearing also presided over subsequent hearings in the Estate
case, including the hearing on the final distribution.
10
The judgment also declared that Louie’s request that the trial court remove Amber as trustee of the Trust did
not constitute a violation of the Trust’s no-contest clause.
11
The “amended judgment” was not actually a judgment as it did not dispose of all claims in the Estate case.
9
opposition, and in August 2014, the trial court entered an order allowing the appellate
attorney fees to be paid from the Estate (“the appellate attorney fees order”). Additional
information concerning this order will be addressed in our analysis of Point IX, infra.
In October 2014, Amber filed the final settlement for the Estate, which included
bank statements, copies of checks, and a proposed order approving the final settlement and
distributing the remaining assets (“the proposed order”). Based upon the figures contained
in the final settlement, the proposed order divided the proceeds of an auction of household
goods and furnishings in equal shares between Amber, Cynthia, and Louie, then distributed
to Amber, as the trustee of the Trust, the remaining assets that consisted of a tract of real
estate,12 corporate stock, dividends, and cash. That same month, Louie filed objections to
the final settlement (“final settlement objections”), but he did not contend that Amber had
violated the Trust’s no-contest clause by “seeking distribution” of the POD balance.
On two dates in January 2015, the trial court held a hearing on the final settlement
objections. At Louie’s request, the trial court took judicial notice of the legal file,
supplemental legal file, and the briefs from the first Estate appeal; exhibits from the
combined hearing; the petition and order concerning the appellate attorney fees; and the
annual and final settlement in the Estate case. Included in the legal file from the first Estate
appeal were Amber’s first amended petition and Louie’s counterclaim from the second trust
case, along with the judgment entered in the second trust case. The signature card and bank
statements from the POD account were also admitted into evidence.
12
Counsel for the parties subsequently stipulated that Rosetta had transferred her real estate to the Trust “with
the exception of 40 acres which was left off.”
10
During the hearing, Amber’s attorney objected to Louie’s cross examination of
Amber about Cynthia’s reading and signing of the first petition in the second trust case,
stating:
Your Honor, this is beyond the final settlement. This is [sic] – [Louie’s
counsel] apparently wants to relitigate the prior judgment concerning the
reformation and the no-contest clause. I don’t believe that that’s appropriate
in the final settlement. I think the objections to the final settlement deal with
the expenditures that [Amber, as] personal representative has made or assets
– or accounting for assets.
Louie’s counsel replied that the purpose of the hearing was to permit the trial court an
“opportunity to correct errors it made[,]” and Amber’s counsel pointed out that “that
judgment” was a “judgment in a separate case altogether[.]” The trial court sustained the
objection. We presume that references to “the prior judgment” and “that judgment” were to
the second trust case judgment because it is the only judgment in the record that both
reformed the Trust and made a final ruling on the no-contest issues.
In February 2015, the trial court overruled Louie’s final settlement objections after
having “carefully consider[ed] the pleadings, testimony and credibility of witnesses, the
hearing exhibits and the applicable statutes and case law,” and it entered the final
distribution Louie now timely appeals.
Analysis
Points I-VI ‒ The No-Contest Clauses
Louie’s first six points contend the trial court erred in denying the no-contest motion
and overruling his final settlement objections for the following reasons:
Point I: The Will’s no-contest clause was violated when Amber sought in the first
trust case to modify provisions in the Trust that directed the trustee to
“retain real estate” as part of a farming operation for 12 years and apply
“GAAP” principles in calculating income.
11
Point II: The Will’s no-contest clause was violated when Respondents sought to
reform clause B.2(b) of the Trust in the second trust case.
Point III: The Trust’s no-contest clause was violated when Respondents sought to
reform clause B.2(b) of the Trust in the second trust case.
Point IV: The Trust’s no-contest clause was violated when Amber sought “an
amount larger than what the Trust provided for her” by “making said
reformation claim” in the second trust case.
Point V: The Trust’s no-contest clause was violated when Amber sought “an
amount $46,288.72 larger than what the Trust provided for her” by filing
the expense reimbursement claim in the Estate case.
Point VI: The Trust’s no-contest clause was violated when Amber sought “an
amount $31,268.42 larger than what the Trust provided for her” by
making a “claim” for the POD balance.
Respondents are correct in claiming that Louie cannot reassert the same issues
regarding the no-contest clauses that were previously adjudicated in the second trust case.
“Collateral estoppel, or issue preclusion, is used to preclude the relitigation of an issue that
already has been decided in a different cause of action.” Brown v. Carnahan, 370 S.W.3d
637, 658 (Mo. banc 2012). “This doctrine may be employed offensively or defensively.”
Id. at 659. “The doctrine requires that the issue was fully and fairly litigated, that the issue
was essential to the earlier judgment, and that the earlier judgment be final and binding on
the party against whom it is asserted.” Sexton v. Jenkins & Assocs., Inc., 152 S.W.3d 270,
273 (Mo. banc 2004).
Louie’s counterclaim in the second trust case alleged that Respondents had violated
both no-contest clauses (Trust and Will) in each of the trust cases by litigating whether
particular real estate could be sold from the Trust, the accounting method could be changed,
and the B.2(b) clause could be reformed. Points I through IV are all predicated on these
same failed challenges, and the rulings against Louie on them were essential to the denial of
12
his counterclaim. These rulings in the second trust case judgment became final and binding
on Louie when his appeal from that judgment was dismissed in case SD32790.
Louie argues in his reply brief that there has been no prior adjudication or
relitigation of the no-contest clauses because: (1) “[t]he administration of a decedent’s
estate is deemed one proceeding that is concluded by the entry of a decree of final
distribution” such that it is illogical for the second trust case to be considered a prior
adjudication; (2) the Estate case was filed first; and (3) “the essential facts regarding [the no-
contest clauses] claims were presented at the same time” at the combined hearing. Louie
cites In re Estate of Straszynski, 265 S.W.3d 394, 395 (Mo. App. S.D. 2008), for the
principle that the administration of a decedent’s estate is one proceeding, but Straszynski
does not address separate litigation over a trust agreement; it addresses the payment of
attorney fees in a decedent’s estate. That the second trust case was filed after the Estate case
was opened -- and that there was a combined hearing for both cases -- does not alter the fact
that the judgment in the second trust case (a separate proceeding with its own case number)
was entered before the final distribution was entered in the Estate case. Cf. In re Gould’s
Estate, 547 S.W.2d 863, 867-68, 869 (Mo. App. K.C.D. 1977) (the issue of whether attorney
“was guilty of misconduct or wrongful conduct as executor and attorney” in a decedent’s
estate was conclusively determined by a final judgment in a disciplinary proceeding that had
started after the attorney had applied for a distribution from the estate).
Louie also argues that “because Respondents did not plead collateral estoppel below,
they cannot now rely on collateral estoppel to bar this appeal.” He cites Heins Implement
Co. v. Mo. Highway & Transp. Comm’n, 859 S.W.2d 681, 684-85 (Mo. banc 1993),
abrogated on other grounds by Southers v. City of Farmington, 263 S.W.3d 603, 614 n.13
13
(Mo. banc 2008), which states that “[r]es judicata is a separate and distinct affirmative
defense that must be specifically pleaded,” and he cites Rules 55.08, 55.27, and 55.33
regarding pleadings and affirmative defenses.13 Louie also cites Consumer Fin. Corp. v.
Reams, 158 S.W.3d 792, 797-98 (Mo. App. W.D. 2005), in which the plaintiff was
prohibited from offensively asserting collateral estoppel because the plaintiff did not plead
the doctrine in its petition.
The defect in Louie’s argument is that, absent an order by the trial court, Rules
55.08, 55.27(a), and 55.33 are not applicable “to proceedings in the probate division of the
circuit court.” Rule 41.01(a)(2) and (b); see also In re Estate of Dodson, 878 S.W.2d 513,
518 (Mo. App. S.D. 1994) (personal representatives were not required to plead an
affirmative defense to a claim because the former version of Rule 41.01(b) excluded “Rule
55” from application to a probate claim). Louie does not claim that any such order was
entered here, and when Amber’s counsel objected at the hearing on the final settlement to
Louie’s attempt to relitigate the portions of the second trust case judgment “concerning the
reformation and the no-contest clause[,]” the trial court sustained that objection. The
argument made by Louie’s counsel was that a purpose of the hearing was to permit the court
an “opportunity to correct errors it made”; he did not object that Amber had waived any use
of the second trust case judgment as an affirmative defense. Cf. Stine v. Warford, 18
S.W.3d 601, 605 (Mo. App. W.D. 2000) (a failure to timely assert affirmative defenses of
collateral estoppel and res judicata was excused where the petitioner did not preserve an
objection to the use of these defenses).
13
Heins addressed res judicata as also being “referred to as claim preclusion.” Id. at 684 n.1. For a
comparison of claim preclusion and issue preclusion, see Sexton, 152 S.W.3d at 273 n.3.
14
However, the assertions in points V and VI that Amber’s expense reimbursement
claim and her “claim” for the POD balance violated the Trust’s no-contest clause were not
adjudicated in the second trust case.14 But Point VI’s claim that Amber violated the Trust’s
no-contest clause in “seeking distribution” of the POD balance is not preserved for review
because, as Respondents suggest, it was not raised in the final settlement objections.15
“Absent some constitutional imperative not present here . . . it simply is not the role of the
court of appeals or [the Supreme] Court [of Missouri] to grant relief on arguments that were
not presented to or decided by the trial court.” Barkley v. McKeever Enters., Inc., 456
S.W.3d 829, 839 (Mo. banc 2015).
14
The fifth and sixth points do not specifically assert error based upon violation of the Will’s no-contest
clause. Point V states:
The trial court erred in denying [Louie]’s Motion to Invoke the [Will’s no-contest clause]
regarding the $46,288.72 claim filed and made by [Amber] in [the Estate case] and thereafter
in overruling [Louie]’s related Objections to [the final distribution] because the filing and
making of said claim by [Amber] violated the Trust’s [no-contest clause] in that, the Trust’s
[no-contest clause], inter alia, provided that “[I]f any beneficiary of this Trust * * * files any
action or makes any claim seeking distribution to him or her of an amount larger than what is
provided for herein, then the Trustees are directed to distribute nothing to said * * * claiming
beneficiary and that person shall receive nothing from this Trust * * * nor anything from
[Rosetta]’s estates” and by filing and making said $46,288.72 claim, [Amber] was seeking
distribution to her of an amount $46,288.72 larger than what the Trust provided for her.
Point VI states:
The trial court erred in overruling [Louie]’s Objections to [the final distribution] seeking to
invoke the [Will’s no-contest clause] regarding the POD claim made by [Amber] for the
$31,268.42 balance of 4-K Farms account because by making said claim, [Amber] violated
the Trust’s [no-contest clause] in that, the Trust’s [no-contest clause], inter alia, provided
that “[I]f any beneficiary of this Trust * * * makes any claim seeking distribution to him or
her of an amount larger than what is provided for herein, then the Trustees are directed to
distribute nothing to said * * * claiming beneficiary and that person shall receive nothing
from this Trust * * * nor anything from [Rosetta]’s estates” and by making said $31,268.42
POD claim, [Amber] was seeking distribution to her of an amount $31,268.42 larger than
what the Trust provided for her.
As a result, we do not consider whether the challenged rulings were erroneous based upon the Will’s no contest
clause. See Manzella v. Dir. of Revenue, 363 S.W.3d 393, 395 (Mo. App. E.D. 2012) (“[t]his court reviews
only those errors that are asserted in an appellant’s point relied on”).
15
Louie also failed to raise this claim in the no-contest motion, and his reply brief does not attempt to rebut
Respondents’ contention that Louie failed to preserve Point VI for our review.
15
Even assuming, arguendo, that the Trust’s no-contest clause is relevant to the
administration of the Will, the clause was not violated when Amber presented the expense
reimbursement claim -- the focus of Point V. A no-contest clause will “be enforced where it
is clear that the trustor (or testator) intended that the conduct in question should forfeit a
beneficiary’s interest under the indenture (or will).” Cox v. Fisher, 322 S.W.2d 910, 914
(Mo. 1959). But “Missouri courts strictly construe no-contest, or in terrorem, clauses in
wills and trusts[.]” Labantschnig v. Bohlmann, 439 S.W.3d 269, 273 (Mo. App. E.D.
2014). Cf. Chaney v. Cooper, 954 S.W.2d 510, 519 (Mo. App. W.D. 1997) (an objection to
the probate of a will based on the controlling effect of a second person’s will was not
expressly prohibited by an in terrorem clause’s language concerning a contest or attack
against the first person’s will).
Here, the Trust’s no-contest clause does not penalize anything other than a contest of
the Trust itself, its provisions, or an “action or . . . claim seeking distribution . . . of an
amount larger than what is provided for [in the Trust.]” The Trust’s no-contest clause gives
no indication that a distribution is anything other than a distribution from the Trust estate,
and Louie cites no provision of the Trust that defines “distribution” in a different way.
Rather, he argues in his reply brief that “the use of the phrase ‘files any action or makes any
claim seeking distribution of an amount larger than what is provided for herein’ means that
Rosetta intended [that] the beneficiaries receive only what her trust provided for them – and
nothing else – including ‘anything from [Rosetta]’s estates[.]’” He cites no authority for this
proposition, and he fails to square it with the Will’s separate bequest of “tangible personal
property[,]” which makes it clear that there would be a devise of property apart from what
was distributed from the Trust. Louie also cites no authority for the proposition that a
16
forfeiture of the POD account as a part of “[Rosetta]’s estates” was intended as a penalty for
enforcing the beneficiary designation of the POD account itself.
Amber’s “claims” to the POD account did not seek a “distribution.” A “pay-on-
death” account is a valid form of account permitting a bank to agree to pay the account to a
person other than the individual named on the account upon the death of the first person.
Section 362.471.1 and 5. “At the death of all of the first named persons [on the account],
the account shall become the property of the person or persons named as the ‘pay-on-death’
person or persons.” Section 362.471.2 (emphasis added). Thus, a pay-on-death account is
“a transfer of property taking effect upon the death of the owner, pursuant to a beneficiary
designation[,]” section 461.005(7) RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013; it is a nontestamentary,
nonprobate transfer of property. Id.; see also sections 362.471.5 and 461.001. In other
words, even if Amber had to prove to the bank that Rosetta had died, ownership of the POD
account passed from Rosetta to Amber by operation of law, and that transfer did not
constitute a distribution from the Trust or a challenge to the Trust’s no-contest clause. See
Cook v. Barnard, 100 S.W.3d 924, 928 (Mo. App. W.D. 2003) (bank accounts/certificates
of deposit that were jointly owned or payable on death passed to the joint owner/beneficiary
“by operation of law”).
Louie’s first six points are denied.
Point VII – Inventory of the POD Account
Louie contends in Point VII that the trial court erred in overruling his final settlement
objections based on section 473.233 because the POD “account was either the property
owned by [Rosetta] or property possessed by [Rosetta] at the time of her death and [Amber]
failed to inventory” it. Section 473.233 provides, inter alia:
17
1. Within thirty days after letters are granted, unless a longer time is granted
by the court, the personal representative shall make and return an inventory
and appraisement, in one written instrument, of all of the property of the
decedent, including exempt property, which comes to his possession or
knowledge, a statement of all encumbrances, liens, and other charges on
any item, and all other property possessed by decedent at the time of his
death.
This section further directs the personal representative to classify the property of the
decedent, and bank accounts are one of the designated classification types. Section
473.233(1) and (5). The final classification provision states: “All property possessed but
not owned by the decedent at his death shall be listed in the inventory, but separately from
other property, together with a statement as to the knowledge of the personal representative
as to its ownership.” Section 473.233(7).
Louie’s arguments ignore section 362.471.2, which as discussed in our analysis of
Point V, provides that “[a]t the death of” the person or persons first named on the bank
account, “the account shall become the property of the person or persons named as the ‘pay-
on-death’ person or persons.” Section 362.471.2. See also, Cook, 100 S.W.3d at 927-28
(reversing a personal representative’s removal under section 461.300, stating that the
personal representative’s “decision not to inventory the non-probate assets was not a
grounds for removal” and observing the non-probate assets were not the “decedent’s at his
death”).
Louie argues that the analysis of section 473.233.1 in Cook “is merely dicta”
because, as he reads the case, the issue in Cook “was whether the [personal representative]
had a duty under [section] 461.300 – not [section] 473.233 ‒ to inventory assets.” The
assets at issue were certificates of deposit jointly owned by the decedent and the personal
representative or were in the decedent’s name “with a payable-on-death designation in favor
18
of [the personal representative,]” along with real estate owned by these two men “as joint
tenants with rights of survivorship.” Id. at 926. The Cook opinion stated “[t]he sole issue
here is whether as a matter of law the language for removal under Section 473.140,
‘incapable or unsuitable to execute the trust reposed in him[,]’ is satisfied when the personal
representative declines to include jointly held non-probate assets in the inventory in order to
satisfy tort claims.” Id. at 927. The tort claimants argued that the failure to inventory the
real estate and non-probate assets made the personal representative “‘incapable or
unsuitable’ . . . supposedly, under Section 461.300(1)[.]” Id. The court in Cook found no
section 461.300 requirement to inventory non-probate assets, and it pointed out that section
473.233(1), “[t]he inventory statute[,]” also imposed no such requirement. Id. at 927, 928-
29. Because the Cook analysis of section 473.233 was necessary to determine whether
removal was appropriate under section 473.140, Louie is incorrect in characterizing it as
dicta.
Louie also maintains that Cook conflicts with In re Estate of Foster, 878 S.W.2d
896 (Mo. App. E.D. 1984). The Foster opinion addressed the need to inventory a one-third
interest in a partnership (found to be held separately by the decedent instead of with her
husband’s interest as “an undivided two-thirds interest in” the partnership), and it found that
the failure to inventory this separate personal property owned by the decedent was one
reason warranting removal of the personal representative. Id. at 898. Foster is not in
conflict with Cook. The two cases simply address different types of ownership interests that
pass in different ways, and the ownership interest here is more like the ownership of the
non-probate assets addressed in Cook. See 100 S.W.3d at 926.
19
Finally, Louie argues that “[a] decedent who exercises some dominion over property
is inferentially in possession thereof[,]” citing, only generally, In re Schell’s Estate, 390
S.W.2d 618 (Mo. App. Spfld.D. 1965). Schell’s Estate addressed whether particular real
estate was in the decedent’s possession at his death because he “physically occupied it and
exercised some dominion over it by” farming it and paying property taxes on it. Id. at 621.
The opinion does not discuss whether the existence of a joint tenant with right of
survivorship would have extinguished the decedent’s interest at his death. The finding by
the trial court was that the decedent had previously conveyed the property at issue by two
warranty deeds, but the deeds had not been delivered to the grantees and were not recorded
until after the decedent’s death. Id. at 619. The reviewing court found that “[t]his is at least
a species of possession” such that the realty should have been inventoried, but it also pointed
out that it did “not undertake to define precisely and for all purposes the meaning of the
word ‘possessed’ as it appears in subpar. (7) of par. 1 of Section 473.233[.]” Id. at 621.
Louie cites no case holding that a pay-on-death account is “property possessed but not
owned by the decedent at his death[,]” and none of his points challenge the validity of the
POD account’s designation of Amber as the owner at Rosetta’s death.
Amber was not obligated to inventory the POD account that passed to her by
operation of law at Rosetta’s death. Point VII is denied.
Point VIII – The Expense Reimbursement Claim
Louie contends in his eighth point that the trial court erred in overruling the final
settlement objections because:
(1) [the expense reimbursement claim was] not in existence at the time of
[Rosetta]’s death; (2) there was no agreement between [Amber] and [Rosetta]
that [Amber] would be reimbursed for [Rosetta]’s debts paid from the [POD
account]; (3) [t]he funeral bill was paid from the [POD account] which was
20
property of the Estate; (4) the household/farm expenses paid by [Amber] after
[Rosetta]’s death constituted the operation of [Rosetta]’s farm business
without a court order; and (5) [Amber] was seeking reimbursement for debts
of a [d]ecedent which she paid as a volunteer without following the claims
procedure of the probate code.[16]
“Claims” under the probate code17 “include liabilities of the decedent which survive
whether arising in contract, tort or otherwise, funeral expenses, the expense of a tombstone,
and costs and expenses of administration[.]” Section 472.010(3). A claim may be paid if it
is “duly filed and allowed by the court[,]” section 473.403.1, or, unless the claim is that of
the personal representative herself, “any claim may be paid by the personal representative,
without allowance thereof by the court, and credit may be had therefor in his settlement,
provided the same is either paid or filed within the time prescribed by section 473.360[.]”
Section 473.403.2.
A personal representative may file his own “claim against estate assets, [but] he may
not pass upon allowance and payment. Instead, the personal representative must file the
claim and either file the written consent to the claim by those adversely affected or secure
approval by an administrator ad litem.” Adams v. Braggs, 739 S.W.2d 744, 745 (Mo. App.
W.D. 1987); see also section 473.423. When a claim against an estate is challenged, the
“personal representative bears the burden ‘to prove that the estate was liable on the claim for
the amount so paid.’” In re Estate of Weddle, 84 S.W.3d 144, 146 (Mo. App. W.D. 2002)
(quoting section 473.403.2). When a person pays the liabilities of a decedent from her own
funds, that person “succeed[s] to the rights of” those who were paid; the person is then
“under the same obligations to perfect the claim as any other creditor.” Adams, 739 S.W.2d
16
Louie includes a footnote directing us to Point VI of his first Estate appeal, claiming that statutory provisions
regarding the administrator ad litem’s appearance and management of the expense reimbursement claim were
not followed. We decline review of any such issues because they are not presented in a point relied on in this
appeal. See Manzella, 363 S.W.3d at 395.
17
The “probate code” consists of chapters 472-475 of Missouri’s statutes. Section 472.010(5).
21
at 746. The trial court is to sustain exceptions to the claim insofar as it “determines that the
estate was not liable for any part of the amount paid[.]” Weddle, 84 S.W.3d at 146.
Here, the trial court took judicial notice of the expense reimbursement claim asserted
in the January 2013 and January 2015 hearings in the Estate case. Amber testified in the
January 2015 hearing that she believed the bills in her expense reimbursement claim to be
the “obligations of” Rosetta. The expense reimbursement claim incorporated photocopies of
checkbook register pages with handwritten entries, along with receipts, bills, and statements
from third parties (collectively “statements”) for some, but not all, of the checks, and
additional evidence was presented in subsequent hearings. The payees were a nursing care
facility, a health clinic, a funeral home, three people providing services as “hired hands” or
home help, a mowing service, utility providers, telephone/internet providers, veterinarians, a
gasoline vendor, a tire company, a hardware store, automotive vendors, farm vendors, and
“D-Carr Fastrip[.]”18
All but two of the statements identified the customer or subject as Rosetta, Gary, 4-K
Farms, or some other name that could be reasonably understood to mean one of these three
entities; the two exceptions listed no customer name at all. The Trust was not identified as
the customer or subject on any of the statements.19 Louie agreed in his testimony during the
January 2015 hearing that bills for Rosetta’s funeral, the nursing care facility, one farm
vendor, and two telephone/internet providers were for the care of Rosetta or obligations of
the Estate. Louie also acknowledged that bills from three utility companies, the tire vendor,
another veterinarian, the gas vendor, one automotive vendor and two other farm vendors
were for things provided before Rosetta’s death. Thus, the payments to the suppliers were
18
No documentation other than the checkbook register was included with the expense reimbursement claim
regarding payments to the three hired hands, home help, and the mowing service.
19
Statements from one veterinarian and one automotive vendor did not indicate a customer name.
22
linked to Rosetta based upon Amber’s testimony; some testimony from Louie; the dates or
services referenced on the statements or the check register; or a combination of these
sources.
Amber testified that at the time of Rosetta’s death, the Estate did not have sufficient
funds in its account to pay the bills included in the expense reimbursement claim. There
were, however, sufficient funds in the POD account to pay the bills, and Amber believed
that Rosetta would have wanted those bills paid as “[s]he was a stickler for paying bills on
time.” While Louie is correct that Amber paid the items comprising the expense
reimbursement claim after Rosetta’s death, the trial court could find that she did so in order
to pay obligations of Rosetta that could not be paid from the Estate at the time of Rosetta’s
death. Upon paying them, Amber succeeded to the rights of the vendors she paid. See
Adams, 739 S.W.2d at 746. We therefore reject Louie’s argument that the expense
reimbursement claim “arose” after Rosetta’s death insofar as it suggests that the items were
not Rosetta’s expenses.
We also reject his argument -- unsupported by legal authority -- that “Rosetta had no
‘liability *** [sic] arising in contract’ with Amber.” Louie maintains that Amber admitted
“that she did not have an agreement with [Rosetta] to be reimbursed for checks written out
of [the POD] account after [Rosetta] passed.” We fail to see the legal relevance of such
testimony. The trial court apparently credited Amber’s testimony that the bills she paid
comprising the expense reimbursement claim were Rosetta’s, and that testimony constituted
substantial evidence that Amber succeeded to the position of the creditors she paid. And for
the reasons stated in our analysis of points V and VII, we reject Louie’s assertion that the
POD account was the property of Rosetta for purposes of paying her funeral bill.
23
Louie’s contentions that the trial court erred in overruling the final settlement
objections because Amber operated Rosetta’s “farm business without a court order” and the
household and farm were assets of the Trust are also without merit. Again, the expense
reimbursement claim was for obligations Rosetta incurred while still alive; they did not arise
after her death, and none of the bills indicated that they were obligations incurred by the
Trust instead of by Rosetta in her personal capacity. Amber testified that all farm expenses
were paid out of the POD account, and Louie testified that his understanding was that
Rosetta “continue[d] to run the income and expenses of the farm out of her personal
account” after the Trust was created.20
The fifth sub-part of Point VIII, contending that Amber paid Rosetta’s debts “as a
volunteer without following the claims procedure of the probate code,” is not supported by
Louie’s general citations to “the function of the probate court . . . to adjudicate and allow
claims[,]” Hess v. Sandner, 198 S.W. 1125, 1126 (Mo. App. K.C.D. 1917), and the duty of
the probate court “to pass on any claim presented for allowance against a decedent’s
estate[.]” Calvin F. Feutz Funeral Home, Inc. v. Werner’s Estate, 417 S.W.2d 25, 27 (Mo.
App. St.L.D. 1967). Had there been money in the Estate’s account, Amber could have paid
the vendors represented in the expense reimbursement claim within the time permitted under
section 473.360 without allowance by the trial court in advance, although she would have
had to prove the Estate’s liability for the expense upon Louie’s exception to the final
distribution. Section 473.403.2. When Amber instead succeeded to the vendors’ positions
by paying the bills within a month of Rosetta’s death with her own money, then filing the
expense reimbursement claim within two months of the issuance of the letters testamentary
20
Given our finding that Louie has not demonstrated that the expense reimbursement claim was in support of
the Trust instead of Rosetta, we need not decide whether the “SECOND” part of the Trust would have
alternatively supported payment of the expense reimbursement claim from Trust property.
24
and presenting evidence supporting the claim at the hearing on the final settlement
objections, she followed the appropriate claims procedure. Point VIII is denied.
Point IX – The Appellate Attorney Fees Allowance
Finally, Louie insists that the trial court erred in entering the final distribution
because the appellate attorney fees allowance did not benefit the “Estate as a whole . . . in
that the appeal only involved a dispute between conflicting claimants to [Rosetta’s Estate]
and [the] Trust.” His brief alleges that “[t]he record in [the first Estate appeal] conclusively
establishes that [Amber] in her capacity as [p]ersonal [r]epresentative had no interest in the
outcome of [the first Estate appeal.]”
In the appellate attorney fees order, the trial court found that the attorneys had
“rendered legal services and incurred expenses in the Appeals [sic] filed against the [E]state
and should be compensated for such services.” The order did not restrict the payment of
attorney fees to those earned in representing any specific party over another, and it did not
cite a particular statute. The docket entry accompanying the order stated: “After carefully
reviewing the Personal Representative’s Petition For Payment of Atto[rn]eys’ Fees and
Billing Statements together with the Suggestions in opposition thereto as well as the
applicable case law, the Court approves the Petition and enters the order which has been
signed and filed herein.”
At the hearing on the final settlement objections, Louie testified that the first Estate
appeal involved his challenge to the Will’s no-contest clause and the expense reimbursement
claim. Following Louie’s offer of exhibits that included the “Petition & Order/Payment for
Attorney Fees” and “Appeal Briefs, Appendix, Order & Mandate” from the first Estate
appeal, the trial court took judicial notice of all these materials, including the itemization of
25
the appellate attorney fees incorporated into the petition. The final distribution is based
upon the figures contained in the final settlement, which included the appellate attorney fees
allowance as a debit.
Attorney fees may be awarded as an expense of administration in a probate matter.
Campbell v. Campbell, 929 S.W.2d 757, 760, 761 (Mo. App. W.D. 1996) (attorney fees
affirmed for an administrator ad litem), and “[t]he determination of appropriate expenses of
administration rests within the sound discretion of the [trial] court.” In re Estate of
Veselich v. Nw. Nat’l. Cas. Co., 760 S.W.2d 564, 570 (Mo. App. W.D. 1988). “The trial
court is considered an expert on attorney’s fees, including fees for services on appeal[.]”
Klinkerfuss v. Cronin, 289 S.W.3d 607, 613 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009).
“[T]he general rule for attorney fees is that they are recoverable only when
authorized by statute or contract, when a court of equity finds it necessary to award them in
order to balance benefits, or when they are incurred because of involvement in collateral
litigation.” In re Estate of Murray, 682 S.W.2d 857, 858 (Mo. App. W.D. 1984). Section
473.153.3 provides for the compensation of “[a]ttorneys performing services for the estate at
the instance of the personal representative” based upon a schedule provided in subsection 1
of the statute, but it also provides that “additional compensation” is allowable where
“reasonable compensation” exceeds what the schedule provides.
Awards of attorney fees on behalf of beneficiaries in probate matters have been
upheld under the equitable power of the trial court. See In re Estate of Chrisman, 723
S.W.2d 484, 486-87 (Mo. App. E.D. 1986) (the trial “court abused its discretion in denying
attorney fees and expenses to” a contingent remainderman under the “‘equitable balancing
of benefits’” principle because his action substantially benefitted the estate) (quoting
26
Murray, 682 S.W.2d at 858, where attorney fees were affirmed for a residuary heir based on
a successful effort to remove a personal representative). “As a general principle, the
allowance of attorney fees under the criteria of ‘equitable balancing of benefits’ is governed
by the rule in Dugger v. Welp, 646 S.W.2d 907, 909 (Mo.App.1983), that ‘very unusual
circumstances’ must be shown.” Murray, 682 S.W.2d at 858. “‘Very unusual
circumstances,’ as it relates to the reimbursement of attorney’s fees, has been interpreted to
mean an unusual type of case or unusually complicated litigation. ‘Balancing of benefits’
under ‘very unusual circumstances’ has been confined to very limited fact situations.” In re
Morrison, 987 S.W.2d 475, 478 (Mo. App. S.D. 1999) (citation omitted). “While there is
scant authority, Missouri seems to follow the rule that expenses incurred by a beneficiary of
an estate, rather than the personal representative, must be shown to be beneficial to the estate
as a whole rather than to just individuals interested therein.” Murray, 682 S.W.2d at 858.
Thus, simply because the attorney fees allowance may have benefited Respondents,
individually, in addition to Amber as personal representative, does not necessarily mean that
the trial court abused its discretion in allowing an award of such fees here. The appellate
attorney fees allowance was not limited expressly to an application of section 473.153.3.
Further, as Respondents point out, the cases Louie cites in support of Point IX are not
dispositive,21 and we are to affirm the final settlement order based upon any reasonable
theory that is supported by the evidence. See Hock, 322 S.W.3d at 579.
21
In re Estate of Broadhurst, 737 S.W.2d 504, 507 (Mo. App. S.D. 1987), involved a finding that a personal
representative was not shown aggrieved so as to properly appeal a widow’s application for exempt property
and election to take against the will. The opinion did not involve the allowance of attorney fees. In St. Louis
Union Trust Co. v. Conant, 499 S.W.2d 761, 769 (Mo. 1973), a trustee was denied the payment of attorney
fees from the trust for legal advice to the trustee regarding his own liability if the trust entered into a settlement
of a will contest suit and for the trustee’s filing of a declaratory judgment action related to the will contest suit.
As pointed out in another trust case, “[i]n Conant, the attorney’s services related solely to the trustee’s
potential liability in the event the trustee entered into and participated in a proposed plan to partially destroy
the trust.” Klinkerfuss, 199 S.W.3d at 845 (emphasis added). Respondents are correct that an opinion Louie
27
In terms of a basis in equity for the award, the trial court could have found that there
were very unusual circumstances complicating the administration of the Estate case. Louie
entered the first trust case, but he raised no argument that the order sought by Amber with
the agreement of Cynthia would have violated any part of the Trust or the no-contest
clauses. In the second trust case, Louie litigated his counterclaims that Respondents violated
both no-contest clauses in each of the trust cases, and Respondents prevailed. Louie also
litigated the no-contest clauses, along with the expense reimbursement claim, in the first
Estate case.
Respondents prevailed in the first Estate appeal, but Louie’s unsuccessful attempt to
bring an interlocutory appeal resulted in the accrual of attorney fees for the respondents in
that appeal. Louie named Amber in both her individual capacity and in her personal
quotes, Tracy v. Martin, 239 S.W.2d 567 (Mo. App. St.L.D. 1951) (reversing award of a guardian ad litem
fee), was superseded by Tracy v. Martin, 249 S.W.2d 321, 324 (Mo. banc 1952) (guardian ad litem fee
affirmed). But of greater significance here is that the analogy Louie cites from the former opinion for denying
attorney fees -- “the efforts of counsel are not for the benefit of the estate as a whole, but are exerted solely for
the selfish benefit of the party litigant” -- does not apply here. Tracy, 239 S.W.2d at 570 (emphasis added).
Finally, as Respondents suggest, Louie misses the heart of the following passage he quotes from In re
Thomasson’s Estate, 171 S.W.2d 553, 561, 564 (Mo. banc 1943) (affirming the circuit court’s award of
attorney fees for prior administratrices of an estate) (citations and footnote omitted, emphasis added):
With respect to the assets that come into his custody or control by virtue of his
office an executor or administrator is trustee for all parties interested, the deceased, the
beneficiaries, and creditors. So, likewise, the test as to the services rendered by the attorney
for such ‘trustee,’ is whether they are beneficial to the whole estate rather than some special
interest. This is true even where the attorney is directly employed by the administrator. On
this theory it is said the general rule is, that while no allowance may be made out of an estate
for legal services rendered for the sole benefit of particular heirs or beneficiaries, yet such
allowance may be made in so far as the attorney employed by such heirs is recognized as
attorney for the whole estate and his services are accepted and beneficial thereto.
This harmonizes with and is analogous to the doctrine . . . that when an
administrator employs an attorney to represent the estate, the contract has a double aspect.
The administrator is personally bound thereby, but the estate also is bound in so far as the
services rendered to it are necessary or beneficial and the charges reasonable . . . . [A]n
administrator’s attorney does not forfeit his right to compensation from the estate for
services rendered to it, merely because he also represented the administrator in presenting
the latter’s personal claim against the estate. So on this assignment we conclude the legal
services rendered by respondents to the Thomasson estate during the intestate administration
were not referable to the relatives’ contract [with 35 relatives executed before the estate was
opened], but to the administratrices’ contract[.]
28
representative roles, but he now argues that she was not a “stakeholder” as personal
representative. He does not explain why Amber was not under the general duty imposed by
section 473.270 to “defend all actions brought against [her,]” especially since this was not a
situation in which she was certain to lose or otherwise harm the Estate in defending against
Louie’s claims on appeal. Cf. Veselich, 760 S.W.2d at 569 (“[t]he personal representative is
not obligated by virtue of [section 473.270] to defend an action when in the reasonable
judgment of the personal representative and the court defense of the action is not in the best
interest of the estate”). “It has long been established that the personal representative serves
in a fiduciary capacity. It is the duty of the personal representative to look after the interests
of the estate and to act for and on behalf of all persons who have an interest in the estate.”
Id.
Now, Louie unsuccessfully presses the previously litigated issues yet again in the
form of his final settlement objections in this second appeal. Of course, successfully
defending a claim does not in itself establish very unusual circumstances equitably
warranting an award of attorney fees, but the repeated litigation and required defense of the
same issues in the same and in separate cases certainly complicated the resolution of the
Estate case.
In terms of balancing the benefits in this case, the “tangible personal property[,]”
including proceeds from an auction of some of this property, was divided equally between
Louie and Respondents, with the remainder of the Estate to be devised to the Trust. And to
the extent that the sum could be distributed from the Trust, Louie and Respondents are again
equal beneficiaries of the Trust, with the exception of a specified percentage to the trustee
for running the farm and two specific grants of real estate. The effect of the appellate
29
attorney fees allowance, then, is that Louie and Respondents each share the burden of the
appellate attorney fees in equal parts. Under the unique circumstances of this case, we
cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in effectively dividing the appellate
attorney fees among Louie and Respondents equally.22
Point IX is also denied, and the final distribution is affirmed.
DON E. BURRELL, P.J. - OPINION AUTHOR
NANCY STEFFEN RAHMEYER, J. - CONCURS
GARY W. LYNCH, J. - CONCURS
22
Respondents have not filed a motion with this court seeking attorney fees in connection with this appeal.
Louie filed a motion with this court seeking his attorney fees on appeal and it was taken with the case. The
motion cites this district’s Special Rule 14, which allows a party to seek appellate attorney fees based on
“contract, statute or otherwise[.]” Louie provides no further explanation of why such an award would be
appropriate here, and we deny the motion.
30