GROVER L. LARKINS, JR. v. SERGIO L. MENDEZ, etc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMay 17, 2023
Docket21-2039
StatusPublished

This text of GROVER L. LARKINS, JR. v. SERGIO L. MENDEZ, etc. (GROVER L. LARKINS, JR. v. SERGIO L. MENDEZ, etc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
GROVER L. LARKINS, JR. v. SERGIO L. MENDEZ, etc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Third District Court of Appeal State of Florida

Opinion filed May 17, 2023. Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.

________________

Nos. 3D21-2039 & 3D22-484 Lower Tribunal No. 16-1123 ________________

Grover L. Larkins, Jr., Appellant,

vs.

Sergio L. Mendez, etc., et al., Appellees.

Appeals from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Milton Hirsch, Judge.

Scott J. Edwards, P.A., and Scott J. Edwards (Boca Raton), for appellant.

Law Offices of Mendez & Mendez, P.A., and Sergio L. Mendez and Daniel J. Mendez, for appellee Sergio L. Mendez; Markowitz, Ringel, Trusty & Hartog, P.A., and Carly S. Weiss; Kula & Associates, P.A., and Elliot B. Kula, for appellee Eric Larkins.

Before EMAS, SCALES and LINDSEY, JJ.

SCALES, J. In this probate case, appellant Grover L. Larkins, Jr. (“Larkins, Jr.”), the

oldest son of the decedent, Grover Larkins, Sr. (“Decedent”), appeals an

August 2, 2021 probate court order determining that a bank account shared

by Decedent and Larkins, Jr., was a convenience account, such that, upon

Decedent’s death, the balance of the account became an estate asset (the

“account order”) (Case No. 3D21-2039). Larkins, Jr. also appeals a related

order finding Larkins, Jr. in civil contempt of court for his failure to return to

the estate the funds from the subject bank account that Larkins, Jr. withdrew

shortly following Decedent’s death (the “contempt order”) (Case No. 3D22-

484). The appellee is the personal representative of Decedent’s estate,

Sergio L. Mendez (“Mendez”).

We consolidated the appeals, and we affirm the account order

because the probate court’s findings are supported by competent,

substantial evidence. We reverse the contempt order because it was not the

product of independent judicial thought, as required by Perlow v. Berg-

Perlow, 875 So. 2d 383 (Fla. 2004), and its progeny.

I. Relevant Background

A. The Bank Account and the Dispute

Decedent died intestate in January 2016, his wife having pre-deceased

him in 2003. His three sons were the estate’s beneficiaries. Among

2 Decedent’s assets was a BB&T bank account that Decedent and his wife

opened in 1997. In 2006, Decedent added Larkins, Jr., his only son who lived

locally, to this bank account. Decedent updated the signature card by

checking the box marked “multiple-party account with right of survivorship.”

Both Decedent and Larkins, Jr. signed the signature card.

During administration of Decedent’s estate, a disagreement arose as

to whether the BB&T bank account was an estate asset – specifically a

convenience account 1 – subject to distribution among the three brothers.

While there was a place on the signature card for the account to be

designated as a “convenience account,” the “convenience account”

designation box was not selected. Larkins, Jr. contended that, immediately

upon Decedent’s death, the proceeds in the account passed directly to him,

rather than to the estate, because the bank account was maintained as a

joint tenancy with right of survivorship. After his father’s death, Larkins, Jr.

spent essentially all of the money in the account.

Given the estate disputes, the probate court appointed Mendez as the

personal representative. Mendez sought declaratory relief as to the estate’s

1 A convenience account is a bank account owned by one person, the principal, who authorizes a second person to make deposits and withdrawals on behalf of the account owner. While operating like a joint account, a convenience account is for the benefit of the principal and does not contain a right of survivorship in the agent. See § 655.80(1), Fla. Stat. (2021).

3 rights to the bank account and for the imposition of a constructive trust over

the account funds. 2

The probate court conducted a four-day bench trial, and received, inter

alia, the following evidence: (i) Decedent’s son Eric Larkins testified that his

father told him the bank account would be split three ways, and that Larkins,

Jr. was added to the account only to help his father pay bills and manage

finances in his elder years; (ii) Larkins, Jr. testified that he used the bank

account funds for his father’s care, that the funds in the bank account came

from his father, and that he did not withdraw any funds for his personal use

during his father’s lifetime, depleting the account only after his father died;

(iii) Decedent’s neighbor testified that he visited Decedent prior to his death,

that they discussed the bank account, that Decedent told him that he

intended for the account to be split among his three sons after his death, and

that the neighbor took contemporaneous notes of this conversation, which

were admitted into evidence, and which expressly stated that, as to the

account, Larkins, Jr.’s name was “put on for convenience;” and (iv) records

of the bank account that showed Larkins, Jr.’s several large withdrawals from

the bank account after his father passed away.

2 The case below involved other disputes among the parties, but only the probate court’s resolution of the nature of the bank account (and the attendant contempt order) is on appeal.

4 After the trial, the probate court entered a comprehensive August 3,

2021 order, finding that, notwithstanding the bank signature card ostensibly

establishing the account as a joint account with a right of survivorship, the

bank account was a convenience account and, therefore, an asset of the

estate. Larkins, Jr. timely moved for rehearing, which the probate court

denied on September 13, 2021.

B. The Civil Contempt Ruling

The probate court’s ruling that the account was a convenience account

– and therefore an estate asset – obligated Larkins, Jr. to return the funds to

the estate, which Larkins, Jr. did not do. Hence, Eric Larkins filed a motion

for an order requiring Larkins, Jr. to return the funds. In granting this motion,

the probate court, on September 24, 2021, ordered Larkins, Jr. to identify the

location of the funds. Larkins, Jr. responded to this order by: (i) explaining in

detail that he had expended all of the funds from the disputed account; and

(ii) essentially saying that, given his anticipated inheritance from Decedent,

there was no need for the order (suggesting that the amount of the funds he

withdrew from the convenience account simply could be deducted from his

distribution at a later time).

Eric Larkins responded by filing a motion for entry of a money judgment

against his brother. On December 15, 2021, the probate court entered an

5 order on this motion providing that, unless Larkins, Jr. returned the sum of

$314,168.14 (i.e., the amount the probate court found Larkins, Jr. to have

withdrawn from the account after Decedent’s death) to the personal

representative by January 6, 2022, it would set an evidentiary hearing at

which Larkins, Jr. would be required to show cause as to why he should not

be held in contempt of court. Larkins, Jr. did not submit the funds to the

personal representative, so the probate court conducted a show cause

hearing on January 19, 2022.

At this hearing, Larkins, Jr. testified as to his assets, his attempts to

comply with the probate court order of December 15, 2021, his inquiries into

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Related

In Re Standard Jury Instructions in Civil Cases—Report No. 09-01
35 So. 3d 666 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2010)
Perlow v. Berg-Perlow
875 So. 2d 383 (Supreme Court of Florida, 2004)
Blair Alexandria Edwards v. State of Florida
257 So. 3d 586 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2018)
Creative Choice Homes, II, Ltd. v. Keystone Guard Services, Inc.
137 So. 3d 1144 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2014)
Reid v. Estate of Sonder
63 So. 3d 7 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2011)
Caputo v. Nouskhajian
871 So. 2d 266 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 2004)

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