Estate of Eric S. Waite

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 20, 2022
Docket1396 WDA 2021
StatusUnpublished

This text of Estate of Eric S. Waite (Estate of Eric S. Waite) 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 Eric S. Waite, (Pa. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

J-A15010-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

IN RE: THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF OF ERIC S. WAITE : PENNSYLVANIA : : : APPEAL OF: LISA D. WAITE : : No. 1396 WDA 2021

Appeal from the Order Entered November 4, 2021 In the Court of Common Pleas of Jefferson County Civil Division at No(s): OC 68-2021

BEFORE: BOWES, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and SULLIVAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.: FILED: SEPTEMBER 20, 2022

Lisa D. Waite (“Appellant”) appeals from the order that granted the

petition for settlement and distribution of funds filed by Appellees Whitney L.

Basinger (“Whitney”) and James S. Waite (“James”) and directed Appellant to

pay into the estate of Eric S. Waite (“the decedent”) the lesser of $510,000 or

the amount of the growth realized in the decedent’s credit union accounts

during the date she became the accounts’ beneficiary. We affirm.

Whitney and James are the children of the decedent, who had owned a

working farm. In February 2014, while Appellant was married to James, the

decedent signed a power of attorney (“POA”) making Appellant his agent.

That same day, the decedent made Appellant the beneficiary of his credit

union checking and savings accounts pursuant to the Multiple-Party Accounts

Act (“MPAA”), 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6306. Shortly thereafter, the decedent

became a resident at a personal care home and decided to sell his farm and J-A15010-22

equipment. The proceeds of more than $160,000 were placed in the credit

union savings account at the decedent’s direction. Appellant and James

divorced in October 2016. Although Appellant did not inform the decedent of

the divorce, she continued to serve as his POA. Meanwhile, the credit union

accounts continued to grow through the addition of the decedent’s pension

and other deposits, as most of his expenses were covered by insurance.

The decedent died on February 7, 2018. Appellant promptly submitted

to probate the decedent’s January 2014 will and November 2014 codicil, which

named Appellant as executor, and she received letters testamentary.

Pursuant to the will, nominal bequests were to go to several individuals, but

the residue of the estate was to be distributed in equal shares to Whitney,

James, and Appellant. After James inquired of Appellant in February 2018

about the value of the decedent’s estate, he learned for the first time that

Appellant, rather than the estate, was the sole beneficiary of the credit union

accounts, and that Appellant was claiming the more than $560,000 in balances

thereof for herself.1

Whitney and James filed a petition seeking, inter alia, that the court

rescind Appellant’s designation as a beneficiary of the credit union accounts

and require her to remit all funds from the accounts to the estate based upon

alleged undue influence and violation of her duties pursuant to the POA.

____________________________________________

1 Appellant’s September 24, 2018 accounting indicated that the net value of the estate, sans the credit union accounts, was just over $7,000.

-2- J-A15010-22

Following a hearing, the orphans’ court found that Appellant did not exert

undue influence over the decedent, but that she had violated her POA duties.

Specifically, the orphans’ court determined that, since the money in the credit

union accounts was in effect her money, Appellant de facto co-mingled her

assets with those of the decedent. Further, although Appellant knew that the

decedent’s estate plan was to distribute his assets equally among Whitney,

James, and Appellant, Appellant never objected to the decedent’s instructions

to place funds, including the proceeds of the sale of the farm, into the credit

union accounts. Nor did she inform Whitney or James, who was then still her

husband, that she was the accounts’ beneficiary. Moreover, once Appellant

and James divorced, a fact that she never shared with the decedent, Appellant

effectively ensured that James would realize no benefit from the decedent’s

estate. See Orphans’ Court Opinion, 1/11/19, at 7-8.

Accordingly, the orphans’ court entered an order that provided in

pertinent part as follows:

2. Whereas [Appellant] abused her power and authority as the decedent’s [POA], . . . she shall, within the next fifteen days, take whatever steps are necessary to restore the decedent’s checking and savings accounts to his estate for distribution.

3. [Appellant] shall, within the next thirty days, submit a full accounting with respect to the decedent’s deposit accounts from the date she became his [POA].

4. If [Whitney and James] do not file objections to that accounting within ten days of receipt, [Appellant] shall prepare an amended First and Final Account. . . .

Order, 1/11/19 (cleaned up).

-3- J-A15010-22

Appellant appealed the order to this Court in 2019, claiming, inter alia,

that the orphans’ court erred in: (1) finding that Appellant violated her POA

duties such that Decedent’s designation of her as beneficiary was invalid; and

(2) not finding that Appellant was the owner of the credit union accounts.2

This Court construed these arguments to be that: (1) Appellant faithfully

performed her duties as POA and, even if she did not, “the proper remedy was

a surcharge and not the rescission of the beneficiary designation of the

accounts,” In re Matter of Estate of Waite (“Waite I”), 157 WDA 2019

(Pa.Super. Feb. 24, 2020) (nonprecedential decision at 16); and (2) Appellant

had a statutory right of survivorship in the credit union accounts pursuant to

the MPAA since there was no clear and convincing evidence that Decedent had

a contrary intent. Id. (nonprecedential decision at 23).

This Court found no merit in either argument. As to the first issue, we

concluded that the certified record supported the determination of the

orphans’ court that Appellant breached her duties under the POA by operating

under a conflict of interest, and that a surcharge is an appropriate remedy for

such a breach. Id. (nonprecedential decision at 20) (“Surcharge is the penalty

2 Appellant also contended that the orphans’ court erred in granting relief on a theory not raised in the petition filed by Whitney and James. We rejected that as a basis for disturbing the ruling of the orphans’ court, finding that “even if Whitney and James failed to plead that Appellant breached the POA based on a conflict of interest or commingling assets, the trial court was entitled to consider the evidence and theories raised by Whitney and James at trial.” In re Matter of Estate of Waite (“Waite I”), 157 WDA 2019 (Pa.Super. Feb. 24, 2020) (nonprecedential decision at 14-15).

-4- J-A15010-22

for failure to exercise common prudence, common skill and common caution

in the performance of the fiduciary’s duty and is imposed to compensate

beneficiaries for loss caused by the fiduciary’s want of due care.” (cleaned

up)). Accordingly, this Court held:

Following our review, we conclude that the record supports the trial court’s finding that Appellant acted in a manner as to create a conflict of interest under 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601.3(b)(2).[3] Furthermore, we find no abuse of discretion or legal error in the trial court’s determination that Appellant ultimately placed her own self-interests ahead of those of the decedent.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Koch v. Harshaw
655 A.2d 1011 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1995)
Trust Under Deed of Ott, W., Appeal of: PNC Bank
2021 Pa. Super. 203 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2021)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Estate of Eric S. Waite, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-eric-s-waite-pasuperct-2022.