Beeton v. Beeton

559 S.E.2d 663, 263 Va. 329, 2002 Va. LEXIS 26
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 1, 2002
DocketRecord 011225
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 559 S.E.2d 663 (Beeton v. Beeton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beeton v. Beeton, 559 S.E.2d 663, 263 Va. 329, 2002 Va. LEXIS 26 (Va. 2002).

Opinion

JUSTICE KEENAN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we consider whether the chancellor erred in his determination of the ownership of certain intangible personal property.

Paul G. Beeton, Dennis J. Beeton, and Mary E. Watson are three of the four children of Margaret R. Beeton (Mrs. Beeton), who died in January 1998. In 1985, Mrs. Beeton had executed a will directing that her property be divided into three equal shares and distributed to Paul, Dennis, and Mary. In her will, Mrs. Beeton also expressly disinherited her fourth child and appointed Paul, Dennis, and Mary as co-executors of her estate.

The property at issue in this appeal includes two United States Treasury Bills, in the amounts of $250,000 and $1,000,000, formerly owned by Mrs. Beeton. On the date of her death, Paul was the desig *332 nated “payable on death” (P.O.D.) beneficiary of both Treasury Bills. Also at issue in this appeal is the ownership of a certificate of deposit in the approximate amount of $200,000, which Mrs. Beeton purchased in 1996 at Community National Bank (the Community National CD). At the time of this purchase, Mrs. Beeton designated Paul as the P.O.D. beneficiary. However, in March 1997, Paul had the Community National CD reissued payable to “Margaret S. Beeton or Paul S. Beeton W/S,” which purported to establish them as joint owners with right of survivorship.

After Mrs. Beeton’s death, Dennis and Mary (collectively, the executors) filed a bill of complaint asking that Paul be required to return to the estate certain assets, including the Community National CD and the $250,000 and $1,000,000 Treasury Bills. In their bill of complaint, the executors alleged that Mrs. Beeton “lacked the mental capacity to understand and appreciate” the transactions that designated Paul as the P.O.D. beneficiary on the two Treasury Bills and as joint owner of the Community National CD. The executors further alleged that the disputed transactions were void based on Paul’s fraud and the undue influence he exerted over Mrs. Beeton.

At trial, the chancellor heard evidence that in 1988, Paul resigned from his employment as a schoolteacher, and began residing with Mrs. Beeton and depending on her for financial support. During this time, Paul performed various tasks for his mother, including maintaining her home and raising tobacco on her farm.

In 1994, Paul and Mrs. Beeton became estranged due to Paul’s violent behavior caused by his abuse of alcohol. Paul and Mrs. Beeton reconciled about one year later and Mrs. Beeton purchased a residence for Paul near her home. After their reconciliation and until her death, Paul continued to maintain his mother’s home and to assist her with her personal needs.

Mrs. Beeton had two accounts in which she held Treasury Bills. One account contained three Treasury Bills, each in the amount of $250,000, which were payable on her death to Paul, Dennis, and Mary, respectively. In a second account (the separate account), Mrs. Beeton held three other Treasury Bills, one in the amount of $200,000, and the Treasury Bills of $250,000 and $1,000,000 at issue in this appeal. The Treasury Bills in the separate account were held solely in Mrs. Beeton’s name and originally had no P.O.D. designations.

In December 1997, Mrs. Beeton, then 80 years old, began to rely on Paul as her primary caretaker because her health was failing. *333 Until that time, Mrs. Beeton had administered her financial accounts without assistance from Paul. However, when the three $250,000 Treasury Bills bearing the P.O.D. designations and the $200,000 Treasury Bill in the separate account were due for renewal, Mrs. Beeton requested Paul’s help in renewing them. The Treasury Bills of $250,000 and $1,000,000 in the separate account were not due for renewal at this time.

Paul testified that at his mother’s direction, he completed by telephone an automated renewal procedure for the Treasury Bills that were due to expire. Paul also stated that he and Mrs. Beeton “ran across a bill that did not have a POD on it. She told me that she would like to place a POD on it.” Mrs. Beeton asked Paul to obtain a Transaction Request Form for this purpose from the United States Department of the Treasury.

Paul stated that he thought that his mother was referring only to the $200,000 Treasury Bill in the separate account, and that he was unaware that there was more than one Treasury Bill in that account. Paul completed the Transaction Request Form at Mrs. Beeton’s direction, writing in the account number and Mrs. Beeton’s name, and designating the account in the name of “Margaret S. Beeton POD Paul G. Beeton.”

After Mrs. Beeton signed the completed form in Paul’s presence, he took the form to an officer of Crestar Bank in South Boston who guaranteed Mrs. Beeton’s signature. According to Paul, only after Mrs. Beeton’s death did he learn that the form designated him as the P.O.D. beneficiary of an account that contained three Treasury Bills.

When questioned further about his conversation with his mother concerning the addition of a P.O.D. designation, Paul testified, “At that time she indicated that she wanted to put a POD on the account.” However, when questioned why Mrs. Beeton wanted to make the P.O.D. designation, Paul also stated, “From her conversation she just indicated to me considering the way things are going I would like to place a POD on that bill.”

Paul also testified that when Mrs. Beeton instructed him to list himself as the P.O.D. beneficiary on the Transaction Request Form, she commented to Paul, “[T]hat’s a lot of responsibility.” Paul stated that his mother’s comment did not have any meaning to him at the time because he thought that she was referring only to the Treasury Bill of $200,000. Paul described himself as “flabbergasted and shocked” when he discovered that he was also the P.O.D. beneficiary of the two additional Treasury Bills in the separate account.

*334 In the final decree, the chancellor found that Mrs. Beeton was competent at the time of the disputed transactions, and that “such transactions were not the product of the fraudulent actions or undue influence of Paul upon [Mrs. Beeton].” However, the chancellor awarded judgment in favor of the executors on the $250,000 and $1,000,000 Treasury Bills.

The decree stated that there was no evidence showing that Mrs. Beeton intended to make Paul the beneficiary of the $250,000 and $1,000,000 Treasury Bills. The chancellor held that the evidence regarding the separate account showed that Mrs. Beeton only intended to make Paul the P.O.D. beneficiary of the $200,000 Treasury Bill in that account. Citing Massie v. Firmstone, 134 Va. 450, 114 S.E. 652 (1922), the chancellor ruled that Paul was bound by his testimony that before his mother’s death, he thought that her intent was to have the added P.O.D. designation apply only to the $200,000 Treasury Bill.

The chancellor also held that Paul was the owner of the Community National CD. The decree stated that the 1997 certificate executed by Paul was null and void because, at that time, Paul lacked any ownership interest in the certificate purchased by Mrs. Beeton in 1996. The decree further provided that the 1996 certificate designating Paul as the P.O.D.

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559 S.E.2d 663, 263 Va. 329, 2002 Va. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beeton-v-beeton-va-2002.