In Re Conservatorship of David P Vanpoppelen

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 24, 2022
Docket353319
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re Conservatorship of David P Vanpoppelen (In Re Conservatorship of David P Vanpoppelen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Conservatorship of David P Vanpoppelen, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re GUARDIANSHIP OF DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN.

DENNIS J. VANPOPPELEN, UNPUBLISHED February 24, 2022 Petitioner,

and

IVY S. VANPOPPELEN,

Appellant,

v No. 353319 Macomb Probate Court SHANE CHILDERS, Successor Guardian for LC No. 2017-223825-GA DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN,

Appellee.

-1- In re CONSERVATORSHIP OF DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN.

VINCENT W. VANPOPPELEN,

Petitioner,

v No. 353320 Macomb Probate Court SHANE CHILDERS, Successor Conservator for LC No. 2017-223826-CA DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN,

In re CONSERVATORSHIP OF DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN.

v No. 356664 Macomb Probate Court SHANE CHILDERS, Successor Conservator for LC No. 2017-223826-CA DAVID P. VANPOPPELEN, WYATT R. VANPOPPELEN, and JUNE VANPOPPELEN,

Appellees.

-2- Before: GADOLA, P.J., and MARKEY and MURRAY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

In case nos. 353319 and 353320, appellant, Ivy S. VanPoppelen, appeals as of right the orders of the probate court appointing Shane Childers as successor guardian and successor conservator of appellant’s father, David P. VanPoppelen. In case no. 356664, appellant claims an appeal of the probate court’s March 1, 2021 order denying appellant’s motion for restitution and awarding David’s former guardian and conservator, Martin Brosnan, attorney fees and costs in the amount of $2,670 as a sanction for appellant filing a frivolous motion. We affirm in part and remand for further proceedings.

I. FACTS

These consolidated appeals arise from the probate court’s appointment of a guardian and conservator of David P. VanPoppelen. Appellant, her brother Wyatt VanPoppelen, and their mother June VanPoppelen (the VanPoppelen family) oppose the appointment of the guardian and conservator, and contend that if appointment of a guardian and conservator is necessary, appellant and Wyatt are entitled to be appointed to those roles.

Appellant and Wyatt are the adult children of David and June. David and June divorced in 2014, after which June remained in the marital home. In 2016, David began to show signs of early onset dementia. He moved back to the marital home with June, who became his caregiver. June helped David apply for disability benefits and manage his medical treatment, and David granted June power of attorney.

In 2017, two of David’s brothers, Dennis and Vincent VanPoppelen, petitioned in the probate court for appointment as David’s guardian and conservator, respectively. In response, June and appellant filed petitions seeking appointment as David’s guardian, and Wyatt filed a petition seeking appointment as David’s conservator. Following an evidentiary hearing, the probate court appointed Martin J. Brosnan, a public administrator, as David’s guardian and conservator. Although appellant and Wyatt had statutory priority for appointment, the probate court found that appellant and Wyatt were not suitable as fiduciaries because they were young (June then age 19, Wyatt then age 26), inexperienced, and susceptible to June’s influence. The probate court also nullified June’s power of attorney, finding that David had lacked the mental capacity to grant it.

Appellant appealed to this Court challenging the probate court’s order appointing Brosnan. This Court vacated the probate court’s order, concluding that the probate court record was insufficient to support the finding that appellant’s and Wyatt’s youth and inexperience rendered them unsuitable for appointment as David’s guardian and conservator. This Court remanded the matter to the probate court for further consideration of the children’s suitability to serve as guardian and conservator of their father. In re VanPoppelen, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued December 4, 2018 (Docket Nos. 340224, 340226), p 8-9. This Court also concluded that the probate court did not err by finding that David had lacked the mental capacity to validly grant power of attorney to June. Id. at 6-7.

-3- On remand, the probate court issued expanded findings of fact, again concluded that appellant and Wyatt were unsuitable to serve as guardian and conservator, and again appointed Brosnan as David’s guardian and conservator. Appellant and Wyatt appealed the probate court’s order. This Court affirmed the order appointing Brosnan as David’s guardian and conservator, finding that the record supported the probate court’s expanded findings that appellant and Wyatt were not suitable to serve as guardian and conservator. In re VanPoppelen, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued May 14, 2020 (Docket Nos. 347977, 347978).

Meanwhile, in March 2019, Brosnan petitioned the probate court for authorization to partition real property that David and Vincent jointly owned in Pentland Township, Luce County. The property consisted of six contiguous parcels with a total size of 110 acres; the petition sought to divide the 110 acres with David and Vincent each receiving approximately 55 acres. The probate court granted the petition. Brosnan and Vincent executed quitclaim deeds to divide the property, and the deeds were filed with the Luce County Register of Deeds.

Thereafter, Brosnan submitted to the probate court an account of David’s assets for the period of August 25, 2018 to August 24, 2019. The VanPoppelen family filed objections to the account, challenging various aspects of the report including the balance of an investment account, the amounts paid to paralegals and bookkeepers, and the amounts received from the sale of two parcels of real property in Canada that David co-owned with Vincent. By order dated March 9, 2020, the probate court allowed the account.

In February and March, 2020, Brosnan filed petitions to modify the guardianship and conservatorship, requesting to be released from the appointments on the basis that his relationship with appellant, Wyatt, and June had broken down. Brosnan asserted that difficulties with the VanPoppelen family, including the family’s objections to the accounting, prevented him from effectively performing his duties. The VanPoppelen family responded by challenging Brosnan’s performance as a fiduciary and alleging various inaccuracies in the reporting of David’s assets. The VanPoppelen family requested that the probate court dissolve the guardianship and conservatorship or appoint appellant and Wyatt to those roles. The probate court granted Brosnan’s petitions and permitted him to resign, and appointed attorney Shane Childers as David’s successor guardian and conservator. Appellant appealed the orders of the probate court appointing Shane Childers as David’s successor guardian and conservator (case nos. 353319 and 353320).

Brosnan filed an account of David’s assets for the period of August 25, 2019 to March 9, 2020, and another account for the period of March 10, 2020 to July 15, 2020.1 The VanPoppelen family filed objections to the accountings challenging the accuracy of the amounts represented. The probate court entered orders allowing the accounts.

The VanPoppelen family thereafter moved for an order of restitution to be imposed against Brosnan, asserting that Brosnan caused David’s investment accounts to lose value in the amount of $129,456.97. The VanPoppelen family argued that David’s assets should have been placed in investments protected from stock market volatility, and that losses to David’s account when the

1 Childers asserts that the COVID-19 stay-at-home mandates prevented Brosnan from transferring responsibility for David’s assets to Childers until July 15, 2020.

-4- stock market declined sharply in March 2020 were due to Brosnan’s negligent management.

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Bluebook (online)
In Re Conservatorship of David P Vanpoppelen, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-conservatorship-of-david-p-vanpoppelen-michctapp-2022.