Brackett v. Larrivee

Decision Date07 July 1989
Citation562 A.2d 138
PartiesAlton BRACKETT, Jr. v. Olive LARRIVEE.
CourtMaine Supreme Court

Joyce A. Wheeler, Peter Evans, Student Atty., Lawrence Freeman, Student Atty. (orally), Cumberland Legal Aid Clinic, University of Maine Law School, Portland, for plaintiff.

Frederick McGonagle (orally), Gorham, for defendant.

Before McKUSICK, C.J., and WATHEN, GLASSMAN, CLIFFORD, HORNBY and COLLINS, JJ.

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

The parties to this appeal are brother and sister. When their father died intestate in 1975, they inherited as tenants in common some 70 acres of farmland together with farm buildings in the Gag Corner area of Gorham. It was not until 1986, however, that the sister first learned she was a half owner of the real estate. On this appeal the brother challenges only the factual finding of the Superior Court (Sagadahoc County, 1 Brodrick, J.) that when the brother paid all the taxes on the property from 1976 through 1987, he intended to make a gift to his sister of her half of those taxes. Concluding that the record evidence and the inferences that the Superior Court reasonably could draw therefrom support the court's finding, we affirm the judgment.

The brother, Alton Brackett, Jr., at the time of his father's death in 1975, was living with and caring for him at the family homestead on Route 237 on the property now owned by the parties as tenants in common. He has lived there nearly all his life. His sister, Olive Larrivee, lives around the corner on Winslow Road on land given to her by their father years earlier. The brother, with the aid of an attorney, became the administrator of his father's estate and paid all the bills. He continued to occupy the family homestead, treating all the property as his own. Over the years the parties have had a close relationship, with the brother visiting at his sister's house almost daily. Early in 1986 the sister suggested that the brother give her married son Gary Larrivee a house lot from the farmland, a suggestion that the brother rejected. At some point thereafter the sister checked with the lawyer who had assisted the brother in settling their father's estate and, for the first time, discovered that by intestate succession she had become the owner of an undivided half interest in her father's real estate. On May 22, 1986, the brother and sister executed and delivered a deed conveying a 60,000 square foot house lot to Gary Larrivee.

In April 1987 the brother commenced the present action against his sister, claiming that the sister had orally agreed to convey to him her entire interest in the inherited real estate in return for the conveyance of the house lot to Gary Larrivee. In the nonjury trial held in October 1988, the Superior Court found for the sister because the brother had failed to carry his burden of proof on the alleged oral contract. The brother does not appeal that ruling. The sole issue on appeal arises from the brother's claim for reimbursement for half of the property taxes he paid in the twelve years 1976-1987, that half amounting to $3,029.91. The brother asserted this claim for reimbursement for the first time in May 1988 by filing an amended complaint in this action against his sister, some 13 months after he had filed his original complaint and 13 years after the brother and sister had inherited the real estate as tenants in common. The Superior Court found as a fact that until he filed the amended complaint the brother had never asked the sister to pay any part of the property taxes. On the reimbursement claim, the Superior Court held for the sister on the ground that the brother had made a completed gift to the sister of her half of the taxes. The brother made no post-judgment motions for additional findings or for modification of the judgment, but did take a timely appeal to this court.

It is hornbook law that an effective inter vivos gift requires three elements: (1) donative intent; (2) delivery with intent to surrender all present and future dominion over the property; and (3) acceptance by the donee. See Rose v. Osborne, 133 Me. 497, 500-01, 180 A. 315, 317 (1935); Restatement (Second) of Property § 31.1 (Tent. Draft No. 11, 1988). 2 Of the three elements, only donative intent is put in issue here. While we recognize that another factfinder could have arrived at a conclusion different from that of the Superior Court, the court's finding that the brother did have such donative intent is fully supported by the evidence. See Smith v. Tonge, 377 A.2d 109, 111 (Me.1977).

As the Superior Court found, the brother was "proud" and "unbending" in his view of the real estate as being his own and in acting in all ways accordingly, despite the fact that he must have known the true state of the title after having been assisted by counsel in administering his father's estate. He purposely did not make his sister aware of the tax bills, and by his conduct steadily evidenced his intention to relieve her of any burden for the taxes or other expenses on the property. At the same time, his sister did not know of her...

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7 cases
  • Gleichman v. Scarcelli
    • United States
    • Maine Superior Court
    • March 2, 2018
    ...delivery with intent to surrender all present and future dominion over the property; and (3) acceptance by the donee. Brackett v. Larrivee, 562 A.2d 138, 139 (Me. 1989). An inter vivos gift is irrevocable and "[a] change of mind by the donor . . . cannot undo th[e] completed gift." Id. at 1......
  • Szelenyi v. Miller
    • United States
    • Maine Supreme Court
    • October 4, 1989
    ...account. 1 See Commissioner of Human Servs. v. Levesque, 528 A.2d 456 (Me.1987); 18-A M.R.S.A. § 6-103 comment. Cf. Brackett v. Larrivee, 562 A.2d 138, 139 & n. 2 (Me.1989) (burden of proof on donee of intervivos gift). Mrs. Szelenyi failed to carry her burden, and the record does not at al......
  • Polli v. Warren
    • United States
    • Maine Superior Court
    • May 12, 2008
    ...requirements must be met: donative intent, delivery and acceptance. Restatement (Second) of Property § 31.1 (1992); Brackett v. Larrivee, 562 A.2d 138, 139 (Me. 1989). While there is some question about whether Vasile had requisite donative intent, the Court need not attempt to answer this ......
  • Bradford v. Dumond
    • United States
    • Maine Supreme Court
    • April 29, 1996
    ...dominion over the property, and (3) acceptance by the donee." Bennett v. Bennett, 587 A.2d 463, 464 (Me.1991), citing Brackett v. Larrivee, 562 A.2d 138, 139 (Me.1989). "A change of mind by the donor ... cannot undo th[e] completed gift." Brackett, 562 A.2d at 140. Despite the confusion in ......
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