Morse v. O'Grady ( 2018 )


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  • Morse v. O’Grady, 134-3-17 Wncv (Teachout, J., Apr. 13, 2018).
    [The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the
    accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.]
    STATE OF VERMONT
    SUPERIOR COURT                                                                                          CIVIL DIVISION
    Washington Unit                                                                                         Docket No. 134-3-17 Wncv
    BARBARA MORSE, et al.
    Plaintiffs
    v.
    THOMAS E. O’GRADY
    Defendant
    Rulings on Pending Motions
    and
    DECISION: Objections to the Commissioners’ Report
    Plaintiffs Barbara Morse, George O’Grady, and Kathleen Bradley and Defendant Thomas
    O’Grady are siblings who came to own Turkey Hill Farm, the farmhouse and surrounding
    property where they grew up, as tenants in common upon the death of their mother, who had
    retained a life estate in the property. The parties were unable to amicably resolve their disparate
    interests in the property and Plaintiffs eventually filed this partition action. Commissioners were
    appointed, and an order of reference was issued on July 17, 2017. 12 V.S.A. § 5169; V.R.C.P.
    53(b). The Commissioners’ Report was returned on February 16, 2018. All parties have filed
    objections to the report. Plaintiffs are presented by L. Brooke Dingledine, Esq. Mr. Thomas
    O’Grady is pro se.
    The Vermont Supreme Court has described the court’s role upon the return of a partition
    report by commissioners as follows.
    As we have previously noted, V.R.C.P. 53 establishes the procedure to be
    followed once the court has appointed commissioners to help effect a partition.
    Furthermore, the order of reference controls the proceedings before the
    commissioners. Once a report is made to the superior court pursuant to V.R.C.P.
    53 and the order of reference, the superior court reviews findings made in the
    report in the capacity of an appellate court. In aid of this review, V.R.C.P.
    53(e)(1) requires that the report be accompanied by the evidence relied upon,
    including a transcript of the proceedings and any exhibits. Thus, as a threshold
    matter, the court merely must determine whether the report’s findings were
    clearly erroneous. If it determines that they are its options are somewhat broader
    than a traditional appellate court. It may “modify [the report] or may reject it in
    whole or in part or may receive further evidence or may recommit it with
    instructions.”
    Lindquist v. Adams, 
    174 Vt. 179
    , 182 (2002) (citations omitted).
    According to their Report, the Commissioners conducted a hearing on January 3, 2018 at
    which they heard testimony and presumably received other evidence. There is no way to reliably
    know the content of the testimony or what other evidence may have been because no record of
    the hearing evidently was made and no exhibits that may have been presented accompanied the
    Report.1
    In the Report, the Commissioners arrived at valuations for different portions of the
    otherwise undivided property with little explanation. They noted that both Kathleen Bradley and
    Thomas O’Grady wanted an assignment of the same 7-acre portion. They gave it to Ms. Bradley
    without explanation. Even though they calculated that it was worth substantially less than her
    one-quarter share, they gave her no right to the proceeds of the sale of the remainder and made
    her responsible for one-quarter of all costs of administration. They held without explanation that
    the property could not be subdivided further without unreasonably diminishing the value of the
    totality. They then ordered without explanation that Plaintiffs Morse and Bradley must be
    compensated $34,518.58 for having maintained the property up to that point. Thomas O’Grady
    has maintained that these funds came from their mother’s IRA and should not be compensable.
    Otherwise, they ordered the property sold, after conveying the 7-acre parcel to Ms. Bradly, with
    the three other siblings splitting the proceeds equally and all siblings sharing expenses equally.
    Ms. Bradley does not object to receiving an apparently less than an equal share of the
    value of the property. She does object to paying additional administrative costs once the 7-acre
    parcel is subdivided and conveyed to her. Ms. Morse and George O’Grady appear to join in Ms.
    Bradley’s objection, and otherwise do not object to the Report.2
    Thomas O’Grady objects to the Report for numerous reasons, including at least the
    following: (1) there is no explanation for not assigning some of the property to him, even if not
    the 7-acre parcel; (2) there is no explanation for assigning the 7-acre parcel to Ms. Bradley rather
    than him; (3) the Report appears to suggest that listers were involved in the case but they were
    not; (4) the Northfield Land Schedule suggests that further subdivision of the property would
    increase its total value; (5) there were “mixed up” calculations of the value of the house and 47-
    acres parcel; (6) the Report ignored evidence of a ready buyer willing to pay a much higher
    amount than the Commissioners’ calculations and Plaintiffs’ earlier attempt to sell the property
    at a much higher valuation; (7) the Report improperly requires compensation to Ms. Morse and
    Ms. Bradley for administrative expenses actually paid with their mother’s funds; (8) those
    expenses include some for inappropriately attempting to sell the property prior to this lawsuit; (9)
    the plaintiffs and their counsel refused to cooperate with basic discovery requests; (10) the
    Report does not reflect any evaluation of Thomas O’Grady’s contributions to the property; (11)
    one of the commissioners, an attorney, exhibited express bias toward Mr. O’Grady, calling him a
    1
    The only exhibits accompanying the Report are the Commissioners’ invoices.
    2
    Ms. Bradley raises the issue of shared expenses as a point of “clarification” rather than objection. However, the
    Report is not ambiguous on this issue. There is nothing to clarify. She is raising an objection to the Report.
    Further, her objection reveals an apparent conflict of interests between her and the other plaintiffs, all of whom are
    represented by the same attorney. See Vt. R. Prof. Cond. 1.7(a)(1).
    2
    “fool”;3 and (12) the value assigned to the 7-acre parcel is not an approximation of fair market
    value.
    The court is unable to fairly evaluate the Report and the parties’ objections for two
    overarching reasons. There is no transcript of the hearing or evidentiary record of any kind that
    could permit the court to determine whether the Commissioners’ findings are erroneous or
    supported by the evidence. See Lindquist, 
    174 Vt. at 183
     (“given the complete lack of a record
    in this case, the court should have conducted a de novo hearing”). Additionally, the available
    findings are conclusory and wholly inadequate to support the outcome in the Report and the
    Commissioners’ reasoning is simply unclear. See Weyerhaeuser Co. v. Town of Hancock, 
    151 Vt. 279
    , 287 (1989) (“The Board must explain its reasoning with sufficient clarity and
    particularity to enable this Court to review the findings and conclusions fairly and thoroughly.”).
    There is no apparent evaluation of equitable considerations, and the findings are so summary that
    the court cannot understand how the Commissioners (1) arrived at the valuations, (2) determined
    to assign the 7-acre parcel to Ms. Bradley and no land to Thomas O’Grady, and (3) concluded
    that historical administrative costs should be reimbursed.
    The court vacates the Report in whole and declines to recommit the matter to the
    Commissioners. The court will conduct a status conference prior to a de novo hearing. The
    issue of the reasonableness of the Commissioners’ fees will also be addressed at the status
    conference.
    ORDER
    For the foregoing reasons,
    1. The Commissioner’s Report is vacated. This case will be set for a status conference for
    pretrial planning and to address the issue of Commissioners’ fees.
    2. Thomas O’Grady’s Motion for Extension of Time for Objections (MPR 2) is granted.
    All objections were considered.
    3. Plaintiffs’ Request for Clarification (MPR 3) is moot based on the Decision above.
    4. Plaintiffs’ Motion for Additional Expenses to be Reimbursed (MPR 4) is moot based on
    the Decision above.
    Dated at Montpelier, Vermont this ____ day of April 2018.
    _____________________________
    Mary Miles Teachout
    Superior Judge
    3
    According to Thomas O’Grady, that attorney–commissioner was the former counsel for Plaintiffs (apparently in
    negotiations among the parties related to the property at issue in this case) and a close friend of Ms. Morse’s
    husband. Mr. O’Grady was aware of these circumstances prior to the appointment of the commissioners and did not
    object to his appointment.
    3
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 134-3-17 Wncv

Filed Date: 4/13/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/31/2024