In Re: Est. of T.G., Appeal of: J.E.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 27, 2023
Docket616 EDA 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re: Est. of T.G., Appeal of: J.E. (In Re: Est. of T.G., Appeal of: J.E.) 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
In Re: Est. of T.G., Appeal of: J.E., (Pa. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

J-A24037-22

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

IN RE: ESTATE OF TERRI GARBUTT, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF DECEASED : PENNSYLVANIA : : APPEAL OF: JACOB ENDERES : : : : : No. 616 EDA 2022

Appeal from the Order Entered January 31, 2022 In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Orphans’ Court Division at No(s): 1519-2354

BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., BENDER, P.J.E., and SULLIVAN, J.

MEMORANDUM BY SULLIVAN, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 27, 2023

Jacob Enderes (“Enderes”), Executor of the Estate of Terri Garbutt,

Deceased (“the Estate”), appeals from the order denying his petition to strike

the spousal election filed by the guardians of the decedent’s surviving spouse,

Herbert Grant Garbutt, Jr. (“Mr. Garbutt”). We affirm.

The orphans’ court summarized the relevant factual and procedural

history as follows:

. . . Terri Garbutt [(“Decedent”)] died testate on October 13, 2019. [In her will, Decedent designated her brother, Enderes, as her sole beneficiary.] On November 25, 2019[,] letters testamentary were awarded to [Enderes] to administer [the] Estate. . . . [Mr. Garbutt] . . . was declared incapacitated [in] 2016 . . .. Decedent had served as Mr. Garbutt’s guardian until her date of death, upon which time Glenn Garbutt and Joan Garbutt were appointed as emergency co-guardians of Mr. Garbutt’s estate and person.

On December 19, 2019, the co-guardian[s’] counsel[, John F. McKenna, Esquire,] sent an e-mail to then[-]counsel for the J-A24037-22

Estate . . . , one Jim Ruggiero, Esq., advising [him] that [Mr. Garbutt] would be claiming his elective share of [the] Estate once approval from the court was obtained and a special needs trust established. On January 20, 2020, . . . [Attorney] McKenna, sent an e-mail to Douglas Kaune, Esq., the new attorney handling the Estate . . . , informing [Attorney] Kaune that there was a supplemental needs trust created for the surviving spouse that did not qualify for the Medicaid exclusion and that the co-guardian[s] needed to find out what assets were available for the transfer to the special needs trust. On January 23, 2020, [Attorney] McKenna sent [Attorney] Kaune another e-mail letting him know that Glenn and Joan Garbutt were appointed co-guardians of [Mr. Garbutt’s] person and estate, that they needed certain account information in order to be able to pay [Mr. Garbutt’s] residential service provider, and seeking the value of . . . Decedent’s probate assets in order to determine with certainty that the co-guardians would seek to elect against the will on [Mr. Garbutt’s] behalf. . . ..

On February 20, 2020, [Attorney] McKenna filed with the orphans’ court a petition for approval of [a] special needs trust. This petition represented to the court and the respondent that [Enderes] was still identifying the Estate’s assets and obtaining the date of death valuations.

The [orphans’] court approved the creation of a special needs trust on March 11, 2020. However, the co-guardians still needed the approval of the Pennsylvania Department of Human Services [(“DHS”)], which was pending. On March 11, 2020, [Attorney] McKenna e-mailed [Attorney] Kaune[,] advising him of the court order and that once the approval of the special needs trust was received from the Pennsylvania [DHS], the co-guardians would be filing an election on behalf of [Mr. Garbutt] to take against Decedent’s will.

A series of further e-mails between the parties in a vein similar to that discussed above were exchanged over the ensuing months, including one sent on May 12, 2020[,] after the Estate’s attorney had provided to [Attorney] McKenna a spreadsheet with the probate assets, expenses and income set forth, in which [Attorney] McKenna advised that the co-guardians intended to transfer the funds in the supplemental needs trust to the special needs trust and asked that, as co-guardian Glenn Garbutt was the alternative trustee for the supplemental needs trust, that

-2- J-A24037-22

petitioner would renounce his trusteeship with regard to same. These e-mails continued until the [spousal] election was filed [by Attorney McKenna] on June 15, 2020.

Between the date of probate and the filing of the [spousal] election, the Covid-19 pandemic struck and shut down all but the most essential services in the Commonwealth. [On March 18, 2020, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court issued an emergency order in response to the Covid-19 pandemic which, among other things, ordered the statewide closure of all courts to the public and the suspension of all filing deadlines. The statewide judicial emergency and suspension of filing deadlines was extended to and ended on June 1, 2020. See In re General Statewide Judicial Emergency, 229 A.3d 229 (Pa. 2020); In re General Statewide Judicial Emergency, 230 A.3d 1015 (Pa. 2020); In re General Statewide Judicial Emergency, 234 A.3d 408 (Pa. 2020)]. [Attorney] McKenna’s law offices closed; they had no staff to type or to file documents [until his law firm partially reopened in early June 2020]. The [orphans’] court was largely shut down for all but the most essential functions.

As . . . stated above, [Attorney] McKenna filed the spousal election on June 15, 2020. Eleven (11) months later, [Enderes] filed his petition to strike the election. [The orphans’ court] held an evidentiary hearing on October 21, 2021. At the hearing, [Enderes] withdrew all of his challenges to the election except for the challenge to its timeliness. On January 28, 2022, [the orphans’ court] issued an order denying [Enderes’s] petition, finding that the unprecedented conditions imposed by the Covid- 19 pandemic warranted equitable tolling of the filing deadline, particularly where no harm to the Estate occurred, as all parties were aware throughout all of the stages of the litigation that the co-guardians of the incapacitated surviving spouse intended to file an election to take against the Decedent’s will.

Orphans’ Court Opinion, 4/12/22, at 1-4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted,

paragraphs reordered and reformatted for clarity).

Enderes filed a timely notice of appeal and both he and the orphans’

court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

Enderes raises the following issue for our review:

-3- J-A24037-22

Whether the orphans’ court erred, abused its discretion, and issued a decision unsupported by the evidence in holding that the six-month limitation period of 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 2210(b) applicable to the spousal election was equitably tolled by the Covid-19 pandemic and that gross injustice would result without such tolling?

Enderes’s Brief at 8 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).

Our standard of review of the findings of an orphans’ court is as follows:

When reviewing a decree entered by the orphans’ court, this Court must determine whether the record is free from legal error and the court’s factual findings are supported by the evidence. Because the orphans’ court sits as the fact-finder, it determines the credibility of the witnesses and, on review, we will not reverse its credibility determinations absent an abuse of that discretion.

However, we are not constrained to give the same deference to any resulting legal conclusions.

In re Estate of Harrison, 745 A.2d 676, 678-79 (Pa. Super. 2000) (internal

citations, quotation marks, and unnecessary capitalization omitted). An

orphans’ court decision will not be reversed unless there has been an abuse

of discretion or a fundamental error in applying the correct principles of law.

See In re Estate of Luongo, 823 A.2d 942, 951 (Pa. Super. 2003).

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In Re: Est. of T.G., Appeal of: J.E., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-est-of-tg-appeal-of-je-pasuperct-2023.