In re: Estate of Bennie P. Farren, C.A. No. 8714-MA & McGlaughlin v. Farren, C.A. No. 9385-MA

131 A.3d 817, 2016 WL 211948, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6
CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 19, 2016
DocketCA 8714-MA & 9385-MA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 131 A.3d 817 (In re: Estate of Bennie P. Farren, C.A. No. 8714-MA & McGlaughlin v. Farren, C.A. No. 9385-MA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re: Estate of Bennie P. Farren, C.A. No. 8714-MA & McGlaughlin v. Farren, C.A. No. 9385-MA, 131 A.3d 817, 2016 WL 211948, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6 (Del. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

LASTER, Vice Chancellor.

Andrew P. Farren is the executor for the estate of,his father, Bennie P. Farren (the “Estate”). 1 Under Bennie’s will, after the payment of his funeral expenses and the other debts of his Estate, he bequeathed his former residence and other assets to a trust. The terms of the trust contemplated that Patricia A. McGlaughlin could live in Bennie’s former residence for the rest of her life.

Rebecca W. Courson is Andrew’s biological mother and Bennie’s ex-wife. She filed a claim against the Estate based on a child support order entered by a Florida court in 1986 and modified in 1987. The total amount of her claim was $228,459.47, consisting of $24,300 in missed payments plus compound interest on the amounts due.

Andrew accepted his mother’s claim as a valid debt of the Estate. His decision meant that the value of the Estate’s debts exceeded its liquid assets, so he filed a petition to sell Bennie’s former residence to raise additional funds. If his petition is granted, then McGlaughlin will not be able to continue living in Bennie’s former residence. At the age of 77, she would have to leave the place she has called home for nineteen years.

McGlaughlin objected to Andrew’s decision and opposes his petition. She contends that Courson first had to register the Florida court’s orders with the Delaware Family Court, then have the Family Court determine the amount of the arrear-age. Only then, she says, could Courson have made a claim against the Estate. In this case, because the deadline for filing claims against the'Estate has passed, Courson loses out. With her claim foreclosed, the Estate has sufficient liquid assets to pay its debts, and there is no need to sell the property.

In addition to opposing Andrew’s petition, McGlaughlin filed a petition of her own. She seeks to remove Andrew as executor, contending that by accepting his mother’s claim, Andrew breached the fiduciary duties that he owes to the Estate and its beneficiaries.

The parties cross-moved for summary judgment on their respective petitions. This decision grants Andrew’s motion in part, holding that the Florida orders constituted a final judgment entitled to full faith and credit under the United States Constitution. Although Courson had the *823 option to register the -orders with the Family Court and have that court calculate, the amount due under the orders, -she was not required to follow that course as a prerequisite to asserting a claim against the Estate. .

Otherwise, Andrew's motion is denied. Andrew has not provided' an affidavit calculating the amount of interest due on the arrearage in accordance with- Florida law. Until he does so, -this court cannot .determine the amount- of'the Estate’s debts. Moreover, a trial is necessary so that the court can hear .evidence, consider the equities involved in ordering a sale of a residence, and potentially craft a more tailored form of relief.

McGlaughlin’s motion for summary judgment is denied. There is evidence which might suggest that Andrew favored his mother by- accepting her claim and by requesting security, but the evidence is not sufficient to support judgment as a matter of law. A trial is necessary to weigh the evidence and evaluate Andrew’s credibility.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The facts are drawn from the affidavits and supporting documents that the parties submitted in connection with their motions for summary judgment! For Andrew’s motion, the factual record is evaluated in McGlaughlin’s favor. For McGlaughlin’s motions, the factual record is evaluated in Andrew’s favor.

A. Bennie’s Family History

Bennie and Courson were married, then separated in the late 1970s. During the marriage, they had two sons: Troy, born on August 5, -1969, and Andrew, born on July 23, 1974. After the separation, Bennie did not have any meaningful involvement in his sons’ lives. '

In the mid-1980s, Bennie developed a relationship with McGlaughlin. They never married, but they lived together for nearly thirty years., In 1997, they moved into a house at 161 Lakeside Drive in Laurel, Delaware (the “Residence”). Bennie bought the Residence, and held title in his own name. During his relationship with McGlaughlin, Bennie became close to her grandson, Jared Smith.

B. Bennie’s Child Support Obligations

By order dated July 29,1986, the Circuit Court of the Ninth Judicial Circuit in and for Osceola County, Florida (the “Florida Court”) required that Bennie pay Courson child support in the amount of $750 per month until Troy turned eighteen. The Florida Court required that from then on, Bennie pay Courson child support in the amount of $375 per month until Andrew turned eighteen. The first support payment was due on August 1, 1986. The order is titled “Final Order of Custody and Support” in o. 6 (the “Child Support Order”). The Child Support Order also directed Bennie to pay an award of legal fees to Dana H. Hankins, Courson’s attorney,. in the amount of $9,500.

By order dated January 29, 1987, the Florida Court modified the terms of the Child Support Order (the “Modification Order”). The Modification Order reduced Bennie’s on-going support obligation to $300 per month, effective-as of February 1, 1987, and continuing until further order of the Florida Court.

Bennie did not satisfy his obligations under the Child Support Order or the Modification Order. By order dated May 15, 1987, the Florida Court held Bennie in contempt for “willfully failing and refusing to obey” its orders and imposed a sanction of 364 days in jail. When the Florida Court issued its orders, Bennie lived in Delaware. McGlaughlin testified in depo *824 sition that Bennie knew about the orders, but that he never returned to Florida and did not serve any jail time.

In 1990, Bennie declared bankruptcy. As part of that proceeding, the amount Bennie owed Hankins was reduced to $4,254.13. The proceeding did not alter Bennie’s child support obligations.

Although Bennie did not comply fully with the Child Support Order, he did make some child support payments. McGlaugh-lin submitted a Florida Court document titled “Family Law Case History” and dated February 9, 2015. It provides a history of the child support payments that Bennie made and reflects (i) a payment of $3,300 on December 31, 1985, (ii) payments of $300 on January 9,1986, February 7,1986, March 11,1986, April 7,1986, June 3,1986, and June 13, 1986, (iii) a payment of $178 on November 12, 1986, and (iv) an “adjustment” of $178 on August 27, 2013. The Family Law Case History reflects total arrears of $24,122.

C. Bennie’s Death And The Administration Of The Estate

Bennie died on September 12, 2012. His last will and testament (the “Will”) named Ronald Farren, his brother, as his executor with Andrew named as the successor executor. For unknown reasons, Ronald declined to serve. Andrew took on the role, and the Sussex County Register of Wills granted him letters testamentary on October 3, 2012.

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131 A.3d 817, 2016 WL 211948, 2016 Del. Ch. LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-bennie-p-farren-ca-no-8714-ma-mcglaughlin-v-delch-2016.