In re Estate of Cannon

2015 Ohio 390
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 30, 2015
DocketL-14-1069
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 Ohio 390 (In re Estate of Cannon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio 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 Estate of Cannon, 2015 Ohio 390 (Ohio Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

[Cite as In re Estate of Cannon, 2015-Ohio-390.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT LUCAS COUNTY

In re Estate of William J. Court of Appeals No. L-14-1069 Cannon, Deceased Trial Court No. 2011 ADV 894 Alvin C. Miller, et al.

Appellees

v.

Jeanette E. Jensen, etc., et al. DECISION AND JUDGMENT

Appellant Decided: January 30, 2015

*****

Kevin A. Heban, R. Kent Murphree and John P. Lewandowski, for appellees.

C. William Bair and Fan Zhang, for appellant.

YARBROUGH, P.J.

I. Introduction

{¶ 1} This is an appeal from a judgment of the Lucas County Court of Common

Pleas, Probate Division. The appeal challenges the trial court’s finding that the decedent,

William J. Cannon (“Bill”), was incompetent and subject to undue influence when he executed five inter vivos transfers to his children, and the trial court’s order that the

transferred assets be returned to the William Cannon estate. For the following reasons,

we affirm.

A. Facts and Procedural Background

{¶ 2} Bill and Joyce Cannon married in 1983. They had no children together, but

Bill had four children from a previous marriage: Charlene Fausze, William Cannon, Jr.,

Phillip Cannon, and Jeanette Jensen. During the course of their marriage, Bill and Joyce

executed several estate plans. Each of those plans provided that upon the death of one of

them, the entire estate would pass to the other. Upon the death of the survivor, the estate

would be distributed 50 percent to Joyce’s next-of-kin, and 50 percent to Bill’s next-of-

kin.

{¶ 3} Joyce died in December 2007. In January 2008, Bill executed a general

power of attorney naming Jeanette as his agent. Shortly thereafter, in February 2008,

Jeanette moved in with Bill. Jeanette continued to live with Bill until his death on

January 3, 2010. In the months before his death, beginning around March 2009, Bill

transferred approximately $760,000 in assets to his children. He transferred $144,000 to

Jeanette by naming her the payable on death beneficiary of his financial accounts. He

transferred $160,000 to Phillip, $160,000 to William, Jr., and $170,000 to Carl Fausze,

the son of Charlene, so that each of them could purchase real estate. Finally, he deeded

his marital home, valued at $128,000, to his four children. These transactions had the

effect of reducing the value of Bill’s estate to approximately $50,000.

2. {¶ 4} Following Bill’s death, appellees, Alvin Miller and Loretta Seward, Joyce’s

siblings, filed exceptions to the inventory regarding the transfers to Phillip, William, Jr.,

and Carl. There was some question as to whether those transfers were loans or gifts. At

the time of the transfer, Bill and his children executed a document that Jeanette had found

on the internet that described the transaction as a loan. However, the borrower was

required to make payments on the loan by depositing money into a bank account in his or

her own name. Further, according to the documents, upon the death of Bill, the

borrowers were required to pay $40,000 to each of Bill’s other children. No demand for

those payments has been made.

{¶ 5} The exceptions to the inventory ultimately led appellees to file a complaint

to set aside all of the inter vivos transfers on the grounds that Bill was incompetent and

subject to undue influence at the time of those transfers. The matter proceeded to a three-

day bench trial.

{¶ 6} As support for their case, appellees offered the expert medical testimony of

Drs. Glenn Dregansky and Thomas Sherman. Dregansky was Bill’s primary care

physician. He testified that by the beginning of 2006, Bill was diagnosed with multi-

stroke dementia. Dregansky’s records from April 2006 reveal that Joyce was concerned

that Bill’s memory was continuing to get worse. Following his examination of Bill,

Dregansky prescribed Aricept, which is a drug used to treat dementia. Thereafter, in

November 2006, Bill was injured when he stuck his hand under a lawn mower while it

was still running. Dregansky testified that people with intact cognitive functioning

3. generally do not stick their hands into lawn mowers, although he offered that he has seen

people with perfectly normal cognitive function do such things.

{¶ 7} In June 2007, Dregansky again saw Bill. He testified that at that exam he

noted that Bill was suffering from cognitive dysfunction. Dregansky explained that Bill

had difficulty with short-term memory. In December 2007, Dregansky noted that Bill

had stable dementia, which he stated meant that Bill’s dementia was not rapidly

progressing. Notably, the December 2007 visit preceded Joyce’s trip to the hospital to

have surgery to remove lung cancer. Dregansky and Joyce felt at the time that Bill could

not be by himself and that he needed someone to watch him while Joyce was recovering.

Joyce died unexpectedly as a result of complications during that surgery.

{¶ 8} Dregansky next saw Bill in June 2008, and following that, in December

2008. At the December 2008 visit, Dregansky noted that Bill’s mental status exam

revealed poor memory, poor judgment, and obvious cognitive impairment. In May 2009,

Dregansky again saw Bill, and noted that Bill was “pleasantly demented,” meaning that

he was demented, but was not surly or combative.

{¶ 9} Ultimately, Dregansky testified that, in his expert medical opinion, Bill

lacked the capacity during the last year of his life to make good judgments and that he did

not have the capacity to understand the scope and effect of gifting more than $700,000

worth of assets. Furthermore, Dregansky testified that, in his expert medical opinion, due

to Bill’s cognitive dysfunction, it would have been fairly easy to manipulate him.

4. {¶ 10} Sherman also testified as a medical expert, qualified in the fields of

psychiatry and forensic psychiatry. Sherman did not examine Bill, but performed a

“psychiatric autopsy” in which he reviewed Bill’s medical records from Dregansky,

Flower Hospital, St. Luke’s Hospital, and Toledo Hospital. Sherman also reviewed

Jeanette’s deposition testimony. In particular, Sherman noted that when Bill went to St.

Luke’s Hospital in 2008 with chest pains, the emergency room doctor recorded that Bill

was a “poor historian,” meaning he was unable to give an accurate medical history. In

addition, the dietician at the time noted that Bill was confused, so the dietician gave the

packet of information to Bill’s family members. Sherman found these recordings

relevant because it confirmed Dregansky’s report of dementia. Based on his review,

Sherman opined, to a reasonable degree of medical certainty, that Bill lacked the

competency to be able to conduct the financial transactions in 2009 that divested his

estate of over $700,000.

{¶ 11} In addition to Drs. Dregansky and Sherman, appellees offered their own

testimony, as well as the testimony of Joyce’s supervisor, Carol Jones, and the testimony

of Bill’s estate planning attorney, James Dettinger. Loretta testified that she used to

travel with Bill and Joyce frequently, and that they would spend all of the holidays

together. She then testified that the only time she saw Bill after Joyce’s funeral was in

June 2008, and at that time, Bill did not recognize her until after she gave him several

hints.

5.

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