In re the Guardianship/Conservatorship of: Lorraine Helen Schmidt. ( 2016 )


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  •                           This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A15-1796
    In re the Guardianship/Conservatorship of:
    Lorraine Helen Schmidt
    Filed August 29, 2016
    Affirmed
    Bratvold, Judge
    Cass County District Court
    File No. 11-PR-11-1011
    Edward R. Shaw, Edward Shaw Law Office, Brainerd, Minnesota (for appellant)
    John E. Valen, Valen Law, Walker, Minnesota (for respondent George Arts)
    Christine M. Lennartson, Cannon Falls, Minnesota (pro se respondent)
    William W. Schmidt, South St. Paul, Minnesota (pro se respondent)
    Considered and decided by Bratvold, Presiding Judge; Schellhas, Judge; and
    Reyes, Judge.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    BRATVOLD, Judge
    Appellant Rebecca Anderson appeals from the denial of a new-trial motion in her
    mother’s guardianship case, arguing that the district court abused its discretion by allowing
    the parties to litigate issues not raised by the pleadings or tried by consent. Because we
    conclude that the issues were litigated with proper notice and by consent, we affirm the
    district court’s denial of Anderson’s new-trial motion.
    FACTS
    This case involves the guardianship/conservatorship of Lorraine Schmidt. Schmidt
    was married to Wallace Louis Schmidt. Lorraine and Wallace have six children: Rebecca
    Anderson, Linda Johnson, Christine Lennartson, Kay Ann Schmidt, Wallace William
    Schmidt, and Susan Schmidt.1 Before the district court appointed a guardian, Rebecca held
    the power of attorney for Lorraine and lived with and cared for her parents before 2012.
    Lorraine has dementia. In May 2011, Wallace William Schmidt, Lorraine’s son,
    filed the underlying petition for appointment of a guardian/conservator. The district court
    granted William’s petition on July 5, 2011, and George Arts accepted an appointment as
    Lorraine’s guardian/conservator.2 In an addendum to its order granting guardianship, the
    district court found that Rebecca had been “coercive, controlling, and very overbearing.”
    The district court also found that Lorraine, who suffers from severe anxiety and depression,
    “feels over-powered and helpless when dealing with Rebecca.” Additionally, the district
    court found that Rebecca “has unduly influenced” Lorraine, that she has “isolated [her]
    from her other children,” and that she “used her power of attorney to take control of
    [Lorraine’s] assets and divert [Lorraine’s] assets to her own use.” Specifically, the district
    court found that Rebecca convinced Lorraine “to sign documents stating [that] all the
    1
    In this case, multiple people have the last name “Schmidt.” To avoid confusion, this
    opinion will refer to all family members by their first names. Wallace William Schmidt
    will be referred to as “William.”
    2
    Arts was also the guardian for Wallace Louis Schmidt, until he died in March 2014.
    2
    money she has diverted for her own use was gifted to her” and convinced Lorraine to sign
    a new will “that she did not participate in creating” by telling her that her “will was old and
    no good anymore.” The district court also found that
    [Rebecca] had [Lorraine] and [Lorraine]’s husband sign over
    the deed to their only homestead when they were not of sound
    mind, and after a period of approximately ten years, she came
    upon the deed and filed it. This was done secretly and
    unbeknownst to [Lorraine] and her husband or to any of her
    siblings.
    No party appealed from the district court’s decision.
    Lorraine moved into a nursing home in 2012. Wallace died in March 2014.
    In October 2014, Arts wrote Rebecca a letter in his capacity as Lorraine’s
    conservator. Arts’s letter stated that the home owned by Lorraine and her late husband now
    belonged to Rebecca and notified Rebecca that he would be removing all of Lorraine’s
    personal property from the home. Arts asked Rebecca “not [to] remove any further personal
    property from inside or outside” the home. Arts also stated that he was “offering a chance
    for you to return property that was removed without my consent.” He specifically listed
    “[i]tems of concern” as, “but not limited to, the Shirley Temple Doll, the Blue Willow
    dishes, Wally’s guns, [and] hunting and fishing equipment.” Arts stated that Lorraine asked
    him to obtain some of her jewelry, and Arts informed Rebecca that he would collect her
    “parents’ vehicle, boat, motor, snow blower, four-wheeler, shore station, ice auger, and
    other items that are now considered owned by Lorraine.” Arts asked Rebecca to select dates
    for him to visit the home accompanied by the sheriff’s office. Rebecca did not respond to
    Arts.
    3
    On February 5, 2015, Arts filed a notice of motion and motion “[d]irecting” Rebecca
    “to turn over possession [of] personal [property] belonging to Wallace and Lorraine
    Schmidt to George H. Arts, conservator of Lorraine Schmidt.” Arts attached an affidavit
    describing some of the property, and the affidavit stated that the description was “without
    limitation.” The list included: “Motor vehicle, boat, motor, snow blower, four-wheeler,
    shore station, ice auger, Shirley Temple Doll, Blue Willow dishes, Wallace’s guns, hunting
    and fishing equipment, and many other items of personal property.”
    The motion hearing was rescheduled twice, at Rebecca’s request. At the May
    hearing, Arts, who was represented, submitted a full list of the inventory sought by the
    estate, which was marked as Exhibit 1. The list included items that did not appear in the
    affidavit attached to the original motion, including $17,000 cash that Arts alleged was
    missing from Wallace and Lorraine’s safe-deposit box. The district court received the
    exhibit without objection from Rebecca, who represented herself. Arts supported his
    motion with witness testimony. Rebecca cross-examined Arts’s witnesses and called two
    witnesses, but did not offer her own testimony.
    Most of the testimony concerned various items of personal property. William, son
    of Wallace and Lorraine, testified about the cash in the safe-deposit box, as did daughter
    Linda. Summarized together, their evidence established that Linda accompanied Wallace
    to the bank, at his request. While there, Wallace told Linda that he had $17,000 in a safe-
    deposit box, opened the box, and showed the cash to her. Linda testified:
    So we got, he got the box open and he held up this
    money. And he said to me, “Linda, here’s seventeen thousand
    dollars, you know, in the box.” And he said, “You know,
    4
    you’re the only one that knows. You’re the only one that knows
    about it are me, you and your mom.”
    Linda testified that her father replaced the cash and locked the box. Also, Linda testified
    that she did not have the key to the safe-deposit box, she never visited that bank again, and
    she did not know where the money was. William also testified that, to his knowledge, the
    money was never found. Arts testified that Rebecca was the last person to access the safe-
    deposit box, apparently relying on information he received from the bank. Arts testified
    that he “asked the bank, and they gave [him] a date that [Rebecca] was in the account.”
    After Arts rested, Rebecca called two witnesses, each of whom testified about
    Lorraine and Wallace’s personal property. In her case-in-chief, Rebecca offered no
    evidence about the $17,000 cash. She did, however, cross-examine William regarding the
    $17,000 cash during Arts’s case-in-chief. 3
    In closing arguments, Arts characterized his motion as a replevin action. Arts noted
    that the $17,000 cash had not been included in the original motion, but argued “[t]hat matter
    has essentially been litigated” without an objection from Rebecca. Arts asked the district
    court to amend his motion to include the $17,000 cash. He also noted that Exhibit 3, a
    medical assistance application signed by Rebecca, identified “virtually all of the [personal]
    property that we’re talking about including the automobile, the Arctic Cat, a fourteen-foot
    fishing boat with an eight horsepower motor” as property of Wallace and Lorraine in March
    3
    On appeal, Arts states that Rebecca asked her sister, Christine, about the money in the
    safe-deposit box. Although the record is a little unclear, this appears incorrect. At the point
    cited by Arts, William is testifying and, for reasons that are not clear from the record,
    Christine interjected an answer. Arts attributes the testimony to Christine, but she was
    never called as a witness.
    5
    2011. Arts argued that the evidence “shows that [Rebecca] was in a position to take
    possession of [the personal property].” In closing, Rebecca discussed her parents’ will and
    their intent to leave their personal property with her, but she did not discuss the $17,000
    cash.
    On June 17, 2015, the district court issued an order granting Arts’s motion, ordering
    Rebecca to return the personal property as well as the $17,000 cash. The district court did
    not expressly address Arts’s motion to amend but implicitly granted it by including in its
    findings and order the additional items of personal property and $17,000 cash that were
    identified in Exhibit 1.
    On July 16, 2015, Rebecca, through counsel, filed a motion for a new trial, attaching
    an affidavit in which she averred that she “underst[ood] now that representing [herself] was
    a mistake.” She explained that she did not understand how to present evidence or that she
    should have testified. She attested that she had met with an attorney to discuss Arts’s
    motion in February. Rebecca further attested that if she “had known the full extent of the
    materials [Arts] was seeking [she] would have had an attorney represent [her] at the
    hearing” and that she “did not know to object at the start of the hearing when Mr. Arts
    presented to the court a list [she] had never seen before that contained items not referred to
    in his motion.”
    In her affidavit, Rebecca denied taking the $17,000 cash from the safe-deposit box
    that she described as “shared” with her parents. Rebecca explained that she kept her
    6
    emergency cash in the safe-deposit box, along with her father’s money. Rebecca’s affidavit
    identified and attached “the access records” for the safe-deposit box.4
    Rebecca argued at the district court that a new trial was appropriate under six
    subdivisions of the new-trial rule. She argued that an “irregularity occurred” under rule
    59.01(a) because “Arts provided notice concerning a very modest list of property, then
    added $17,000.00 in cash and a considerable amount of valuable property at the hearing
    with no notice to [her] or any other party.” Among other things, Rebecca argued that the
    same action constitutes party misconduct under rule 59.01(b). Rebecca also argued that if
    all items had been listed properly in the pleadings, she would have hired an attorney because
    it would have been clear that the stakes were higher than they appeared in the original
    pleadings.
    On August 31, 2015, the district court heard Rebecca’s motion and later denied it in
    a written order. The district court noted that issues not raised by the pleadings can be tried
    by express or implied consent and that pro se litigants are generally held to the same
    standard as attorneys. The district court found that Rebecca had notice that Arts sought the
    return of Lorraine’s personal property from the notice of motion, motion, and affidavit,
    which specifically identified many items. Additional items were identified at the hearing.
    The district court also found that Rebecca did not express surprise at the additional items or
    4
    The bank record indicated that Wallace last accessed the safe-deposit box on May 25,
    2010, Rebecca accessed the box on November 23, 2010 and February 23, 2011, and the
    conservator “drilled” into the box on December 9, 2012 and it was “empty.” Rebecca’s
    affidavit averred that “[w]hen [she] accessed the box for the last time, “[she] took out [her]
    property and [her] father’s” and “[she] did not see any cash” in [her] father’s “material.”
    7
    request a continuance or opportunity to consult with an attorney. Finally, the district court
    found that Rebecca “made a calculated assessment that based on the pleadings she did not
    need to hire an attorney,” and that she “relied on her self-representation and clearly
    articulated to the Court [that] she thought her cross examination was enough to prove her
    case.” Rebecca appeals.
    DECISION
    Trial courts should grant motions for a new trial cautiously, sparingly, and “only in
    the furtherance of substantial justice.” Leuba v. Bailey, 
    251 Minn. 193
    , 193, 
    88 N.W.2d 73
    ,
    74 (1957). Rule 59.01 provides seven grounds for a new-trial motion, including
    “(a) [i]rregularity in the proceedings of the court, . . . or prevailing party, or any order or
    abuse of discretion, whereby the moving party was deprived of a fair trial; (b) [m]isconduct
    of the jury or prevailing party;” and “(g) [t]he verdict, decision, or report is not justified by
    the evidence, or is contrary to law.” Minn. R. Civ. P. 59.01. It is not enough for a moving
    party to establish that one of the grounds for a new trial exists; she must also demonstrate
    that she was prejudiced by the district court’s ruling. Torchwood Properties, LLC v.
    McKinnon, 
    784 N.W.2d 416
    , 419 (Minn. App. 2010). Prejudice is “[t]he primary
    consideration in determining whether to grant a new trial.” Wild v. Rarig, 
    302 Minn. 419
    ,
    433, 
    234 N.W.2d 775
    , 786 (1975). “An error is prejudicial if it might reasonably have
    changed the result.” Torchwood Properties, 
    784 N.W.2d at 419
     (quotation omitted). We
    review the denial of a motion for a new trial for abuse of discretion. Frazier v. Burlington
    N. Santa Fe Corp., 
    811 N.W.2d 618
    , 629 (Minn. 2012).
    8
    Rebecca argues that the district court abused its discretion by denying her motion
    for a new trial.5 Rebecca argues that she “was not given adequate notice of issues
    considered by the trial court that were not raised in Respondent Arts’s motion.”6 Rebecca
    specifically challenges the order directing her to return $17,000 in cash as well as some
    additional items of personal property. Because she does not specify which items of personal
    property she is challenging, we will address the items added via Exhibit 1 on the day of
    trial. In sum, Rebecca makes three arguments in support of her position: (1) Arts failed to
    give her proper notice that he would litigate return of the $17,000 cash and the additional
    personal-property items added in Exhibit 1, (2) Rebecca did not litigate these items by
    consent, and (3) the district court failed to reasonably accommodate her to ensure fair
    proceedings while she appeared pro se. We will discuss each argument in turn.
    First, we consider whether the district court correctly determined that Rebecca had
    notice of and consented to litigate the additional items of personal property. Parties are
    5
    The parties and the district court appear to assume that the August 31 motion hearing
    was a trial to which rule 59.02 applies. Because the question of whether that hearing did,
    in fact, constitute a trial was not briefed by either party, it is not properly before this court
    and we decline to address it. See Dep’t of Labor & Indus. v. Wintz Parcel Drivers, Inc.,
    
    558 N.W.2d 480
    , 480 (Minn. 1997) (declining to address an inadequately-briefed issue);
    Brodsky v. Brodsky, 
    733 N.W.2d 471
    , 479 (Minn. App. 2007) (applying Wintz). We note
    that generally, if a trial has not occurred, then a motion for a new trial is not appropriate
    and a new trial cannot be authorized. See Parson v. Argue, 
    344 N.W.2d 431
    , 432 (Minn.
    App. 1984) (noting that, if a trial did not occur, “a motion for a new trial is an anomaly”
    and the denial of a motion for a new trial is not appealable).
    6
    Although Rebecca does not specify on appeal the grounds on which she relies, she argued
    at the district court that a new trial was appropriate under six subdivisions of the new-trial
    rule. All six, however, are based on a combination of Arts’s failure to list the $17,000 in
    cash in his initial motion.
    9
    required to give reasonable notice of issues to be litigated. Folk v. Home Mut. Ins. Co., 
    336 N.W.2d 265
    , 267 (Minn. 1983). In this case, the issue was return of Lorraine’s personal
    property to the conservator; Rebecca had full notice of this general issue from Arts’s
    original notice of motion and motion. While it is not clear that adding specific personal-
    property items added new issues, we will procced on that assumption, without deciding
    how narrowly “new issue” is construed.
    When issues not contained in the original pleadings are actually tried with the
    express or implied consent of both parties, rule 15.02 provides that the new issues “shall
    be treated in all respects as if they had been raised in the pleadings.” Minn. R. Civ. P. 15.02.
    “Such amendment of the pleadings as may be necessary to cause them to conform to the
    evidence and to raise these issues may be made upon motion of any party at any time, even
    after judgment.” 
    Id.
     Rule 15.02 also provides that the district court “may allow the
    pleadings to be amended and shall do so freely” when the standards of the rule are met. 
    Id.
    Notably, when issues are tried by consent, rule 15.02 provides that failure to amend “does
    not affect the result.” 
    Id.
    In this case, whether the district court clearly erred in determining that Rebecca
    consented is the primary issue on appeal. Specifically, the focus is on Rebecca’s implied
    consent because she did not expressly consent. The considerations relevant to determining
    implied consent are discussed in Roberge v. Cambridge Coop. Creamery Co., 
    243 Minn. 230
    , 235, 
    67 N.W.2d 400
    , 404 (1954). “Consent is commonly implied either where the
    party fails to object to evidence outside the issues raised by the pleadings or where he puts
    10
    in his own evidence relating to such issues.” Id. at 234, 67 N.W.2d at 403. Consent must
    be determined based on the specific facts of each case. Id.
    “Consent is not implied by mere failure to claim surprise or request a continuance.”
    Folk, 336 N.W.2d at 267–68. “Litigation by consent is not to be applied artificially, but
    rather is to be implied where the novelty of the issues sought to be raised is reasonably
    apparent and the intent to try these issues is clearly indicated by failure to object or
    otherwise.” Roberge, 
    243 Minn. at 235
    , 67 N.W.2d at 404. Fair notice “remains essential,
    and pleadings will not be deemed amended to conform to the evidence because of a
    supposed ‘implied consent’ where the circumstances were such that the other party was not
    put on notice that a new issue was being raised.” Hohenstein v. Goergen, 
    287 Minn. 512
    ,
    514, 
    176 N.W.2d 749
    , 751–52 (1970) (quotation omitted). A district court’s determination
    that consent exists is generally a factual finding, which is reviewed for clear error. See
    Hopper v. Rech, 
    375 N.W.2d 538
    , 543 (Minn. App. 1985) (reviewing consent finding for
    clear error), review denied (Minn. Dec. 30, 1985).
    Here, Rebecca does not dispute that she had notice of the general issue for trial:
    return of Lorraine’s personal property. Arts filed a notice of motion, motion, and affidavit
    in support of his request to return Lorraine’s personal property, along with a list of items.
    At trial, Arts supported his claim for the original items and introduced evidence of $17,000
    cash and additional items of personal property that were not in the original motion and
    affidavit. The cash and the additional personal property items are itemized in Exhibit 1,
    which Arts offered during the trial and was received by the district court without any
    objection from Rebecca.
    11
    Turning first to the additional personal property items, the district court correctly
    concluded that the additional items of personal property listed in Exhibit 1 were tried with
    notice and by implied consent for three reasons. First, the original motion and affidavit put
    Rebecca on notice that Arts was asking her to return Lorraine’s personal property and
    described some items but did so “without limitation.” Second, the original motion and
    affidavit expressly stated that Arts sought “other items of personal property.” Third, Arts
    listed the additional items specifically in Exhibit 1, which was received with no objection
    from Rebecca, who then proceeded to cross-examine witnesses on the items and offer
    witness testimony of her own.
    Turning next to whether Rebecca had notice of and impliedly consented to litigate
    the return of $17,000 in cash, our analysis is largely the same as with the items of personal
    property. Arts listed the $17,000 cash on Exhibit 1, which was received with no objection
    by Rebecca. Additionally, the district court found that Rebecca’s conduct at trial implied
    her consent to litigate return of the cash because she did not object, raise any concerns
    during the hearing, express surprise, or ask for additional time. Moreover, Rebecca elicited
    testimony on cross-examination about the $17,000.
    In sum, the district court’s finding that Rebecca had notice and impliedly consented
    is fully supported by the trial transcript and is not clearly erroneous. We also note that,
    even though rule 15.02 does not require an amendment of the pleadings, Arts sought
    amendment during trial, which the district court implicitly granted after no objection by
    Rebecca. See, e.g., Tjernlund v. Kadric, 
    425 N.W.2d 292
    , 297 (Minn. App. 1988), review
    12
    denied (Minn. Aug. 24, 1988) (affirming district court’s decision to allow amendment of
    pleadings to include new issue raised for the first time on the second day of trial).
    Last, we turn to whether the district court failed to grant Rebecca appropriate
    accommodation as a pro se party. Rebecca anchors her argument on the duty of a trial court
    to “ensure fairness to a pro se litigant by allowing reasonable accommodation so long as
    there is no prejudice to the adverse party.” Kasson State Bank v. Haugen, 
    410 N.W.2d 392
    ,
    395 (Minn. App. 1987); see Black v. Rimmer, 
    700 N.W.2d 521
    , 527 (Minn. App. 2005)
    (noting that “some accommodations may be made for pro se litigants” (quotation omitted)).
    Under Minnesota caselaw, “pro se litigants are generally held to the same standards as
    attorneys and must comply with court rules.” Fitzgerald v. Fitzgerald, 
    629 N.W.2d 115
    ,
    119 (Minn. App. 2001).
    After a thorough review of the trial transcript, we conclude that the trial judge made
    significant efforts to accommodate Rebecca as a pro se party. Among other things, the
    judge directly asked Rebecca whether she wanted to proceed without counsel and informed
    her that the judge could not give her legal advice, yet the judge offered some procedural
    guidance, such as explaining that Rebecca’s questions to the witnesses were not testimony.
    The trial judge also overruled some of Arts’s objections to Rebecca’s questions and
    sustained at least one of Rebecca’s objections.
    In closing, we agree with the district court that Rebecca “relied on her self-
    representation and clearly articulated to the Court [that] she thought her cross examination
    was enough to prove her case.” At the end of the hearing, Rebecca declined to testify when
    13
    prompted by the district court, explaining that “I think that through my questions, I have
    created some sort of doubt into some of the things that [William] and [Linda] said.”
    Because Arts gave Rebecca notice that the issue for trial was the return of Lorraine’s
    personal property, Rebecca’s conduct during trial evidenced her consent to try additional
    items of personal property along with the $17,000 in cash, and Arts sought to amend his
    pleadings, which the district court implicitly granted, we conclude that the district court
    did not clearly err in finding that Rebecca had notice and impliedly consented to litigate
    the additional personal property items and the cash. Rebecca cannot establish any of the
    grounds justifying a new trial in rule 59.01, therefore, the district court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying Rebecca’s motion for a new trial.
    Affirmed.
    14