Estate of: Davis, M. Appeal of: Treadway, S.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 11, 2015
Docket2551 EDA 2014
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of: Davis, M. Appeal of: Treadway, S. (Estate of: Davis, M. Appeal of: Treadway, S.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of: Davis, M. Appeal of: Treadway, S., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J-A09038-15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

ESTATE OF: MARY G. H. DAVIS, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF DECEASED PENNSYLVANIA

v.

APPEAL OF: SUSAN P. TREADWAY, BETSEY W. DAVIS, MARY G. COOKE AND JAMES C. TREADWAY

No. 2551 EDA 2014

Appeal from the Decree dated July 18, 2014 In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Orphans' Court at No: 1990-X1644

BEFORE: BOWES, DONOHUE, and STABILE, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 11, 2015

This appeal involves a dispute over the estate of Mary G. H. Davis

(“Decedent”). In this regard, her daughters Betsey W. Davis, Mary G. Cooke

and Susan P. Treadway, and her son-in-law and Susan’s husband James C.

Treadway (individually “Betsey,” “Mary,” “Susan,” and “James,” and

collectively “Appellants”) appeal from the July 18, 2014 decree entered by

the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, Orphans’ Court Division

(“orphans’ court”). The orphans’ court, inter alia, granted Decedent’s son’s,

E. Morris Davis, IV (“Appellee” or “Morris”), summary judgment motion titled

“Motion for Return of Property No Longer in Dispute,” and dismissed

Appellants’ objections to accounting. Upon review, we affirm. J-A09038-15

The orphans’ court summarized the facts and procedural history of this

case as follows.

[Decedent] died on May 26, 1990, leaving a will dated September 14, 1989, in which she appointed her son, [Morris], and her son-in-law, [James], as co-executors. Letters testamentary were granted by the Montgomery County Register of Wills on June 1, 1990. The [e]xecutors filed an [i]nventory dated June 19, 1990 and filed a Pennsylvania [i]nheritance tax return, as well as a copy of the [f]ederal [e]state [t]ax return in 1991. The [i]nventory incorporated an appraisal of tangible personal property that was located in Decedent’s residence at her death. The Pennsylvania [i]nheritance tax return and [f]ederal [e]state tax return also included an appraisal of [D]ecedent’s tangible personal property. Apart from a significant parcel of real estate, the majority of the estate assets were distributed during the first few years of the administration of the estate.

Following the 1990 and 1991 tax filings, no activity occurred in the Register of Wills’ office or in the Clerk of the Orphans’ Court division until October 12, 2000, at which time an agreement entitled “Receipt, Release, Waiver and Agreement of Indemnity” was filed, which had been signed by Mary[.] This document in paragraph 4 represents that “the only asset remaining in the estate is the Lafayette Road property.” This refers to the real property that was the home of [Decedent]. Apparently, complications arose regarding the subdivision of the real property and the distribution of the property in shares to the three daughters of [D]ecedent], resulting in lengthy delay of final distribution under the [w]ill. [Mary] acknowledged in this [r]eceipt and [r]elease [d]ocument that “the co-executors have made distribution to her of all of the balance of the proceeds of the estate” and have “delivered to her the amount distributable to her”. See Receipt, Release, Waiver and Indemnity Agreement dated October 12, 2000.

Although there were no proceedings in the [o]rphans’ [c]ourt during the first ten years following the death of [Decedent], there was a dispute litigated in the Civil Division of the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County among the [e]state and Decedent’s daughters, as plaintiffs, and [Morris] and his wife as defendants. This matter was resolved by stipulation in open court on February 19, 1991, followed by a written stipulation signed by the parties’ attorneys.

Civil litigation was again commenced in 2010 among [Morris] and his sister, Susan [], and his brother-in-law, James [], concerning certain disputed articles of personal property and certain real estate. The estate of [Decedent] is not party to this civil dispute.

-2- J-A09038-15

The dispute in the Civil Division of the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas arose in 2010 and concerns a home in which [Morris] and his wife, Bridgitta had been living. Susan and James [] changed the locks on the home and took possession of certain items of tangible personal property that was then within the home. The parties commenced two civil disputes in which they advanced claims and counterclaims regarding possession and use of the real estate, a claim for rent for the real estate, and a vigorous dispute over the ownership of the items of tangible personal property (hereinafter, collectively, the “Disputed Items”). Upon consideration of preliminary objections in this civil action, the claims regarding the tangible personal property were transferred to the Orphans’ Court division for disposition.[FN1] See Order dated July 7, 2011, Docket #2010-15013.

[FN1:] While the Petition to compel the filing of an Account was pending but before the Account had been filed, the Honorable William Carpenter issued an order dated July 7, 2011 in the civil matter listed at docket no. 2010-15013, captioned E. Morris Davis, IV v. Susan P. Treadway. This order granted preliminary objections to certain counts in that civil matter, (Count I (Conversion), Count II (Fraud), Count V (Accounting), Count VI (Injunctive Relief) and Count VII (Replevin) of the Amended Complaint of E. Morris Davis), and transferred jurisdiction over the disputes regarding ownership of certain items of tangible personal property to the Orphans’ Court division to be raised in conjunction with the proceedings in the Estate of Mary G. H. David, docket no. 1990-X1644.

There are several categories of Disputed Items of tangible personal property. The parties do not dispute that the Disputed Items originally belonged to [Decedent] and her husband during their lives. Nor is there any dispute most of that [sic] the Disputed Items were in the possession of [Morris] as of March of 2010. However, there are certain items that [Morris] claims that he never possessed and certain other items that [Morris] received but sold. [Morris] claims that the remaining Disputed Items belong to him and were received by him as gifts from his mother during her lifetime. With respect to most of the Disputed Items, [Morris] claims that he received them as gifts from his mother decades before her death. [Appellants] claim that the Disputed Items belonged to [Decedent] and were property of her estate at the time of her death, although they acknowledge that many of the Disputed Items were in the possession of [Morris] at the time of their mother’s death.

More than two decades after the death of Decedent, following the commencement of the civil litigation, Susan [], Betsey [], Mary [] and James [] . . . filed on March 8, 2011, a [p]etition for citation to show cause why an [a]ccount should not

-3- J-A09038-15

be filed, seeking to compel [Morris], one of the two co-executors to account for the Disputed Items of tangible property that they allege he held in his capacity as [e]xecutor of the [e]state of [Decedent]. No [a]ccount had previously been filed by the [e]xecutors. [Appellants] assert that in 2010 they discovered that [Morris] had in his possession certain items of tangible personal property that “they recognized as having been in [D]ecedent’s possession at or shortly before the time of her death.” See Petition for Citation dated March 8, 2011. [Morris] asserts in his [a]nswer that the Disputed Items of personal property at issue “were not owned at the time of [D]ecedent’s death.” To the contrary, [Morris] asserts that most of the items of personal property had been given to him by his mother decades before her death.

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