In re Estate of Hydock

80 Pa. D. & C.4th 78
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedFebruary 22, 2006
DocketO.C. no. 42 DE of 1992
StatusPublished

This text of 80 Pa. D. & C.4th 78 (In re Estate of Hydock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County 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 Hydock, 80 Pa. D. & C.4th 78 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2006).

Opinion

HERRON, J,

INTRODUCTION

This opinion addresses the factual question of whether a disclaimer of interest executed by the sole heir should be set aside for alleged fraud committed by the adminis[80]*80tratrix and/or whether the disclaimer should be set aside on legal grounds for failure to issue the notice of beneficial interest required by Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court Rule 5.6. The parties were given an opportunity to present testimony and evidence on these issues at a hearing. For reasons which follow hereinafter, this court grants the petitioner’s request to set aside the disclaimer on the grounds of fraud and the related failure to issue the required notice of beneficial interest. In addition, further equitable relief is mandated to address the substantial concerns that further wrongdoing may occur.

HISTORY OF THE CASE

On June 14, 2002, Joseph Edward Hydock III (decedent) died in a motor vehicle accident. At the time, he was a resident of Philadelphia County and had no will. He was survived, among others not relevant to this controversy, by his father, Joseph Edward Hydock Jr. (petitioner), his sister, Danielle Stauffer, as well as by Shirley Culp, a stepsister and Irving Culp, a stepbrother.1

Approximately one week following decedent’s death, a meeting was arranged by the law offices of Oscar Schermer, Esquire. Danielle Stauffer, Shirley and Irving Culp, Cecelia Baum, Mr. Schermer and his assistant all attended the meeting. Petitioner was not invited. As a [81]*81result of the meeting, it was agreed that petitioner was not capable of serving as administrator of decedent’s estate and Danielle Stauffer was capable of doing so.2 Cecelia Baum, a long-time neighbor and friend of petitioner, was provided with a form renunciation document and thereafter approached petitioner to request that he sign and renounce his interest in administering the estate in favor of his daughter, Danielle Stauffer.3

Mr. Hydock lives with his mother Mary Hydock, who is the grandmother of Danielle and the decedent.4 When Cecelia Baum brought the renunciation form to Hydock, both she and his mother read it to him because, she testified, he could not read and she had been in the habit of reading documents to him in the past. After Hydock signed the renunciation, they took him to a notary before whom he signed the renunciation. Afterwards, they returned the renunciation to Oscar Schermer.5

According to petitioner, he signed the renunciation because he trusted his daughter, Danielle, to administer his son’s estate.6 When he signed the renunciation, however, he did not know the value of his son’s estate nor the identity of its beneficiaries.7 The attorney who prepared the papers for the estate had no recollection of send[82]*82ing petitioner the notice of beneficial interest required by Pennsylvania Orphans’ Court Rule 5.6.8

On July 10,2002, Danielle Stauffer filed a petition for the grant of letters of administration.9 That petition listed petitioner and Edith Ann Baum as the sole heirs of the Joseph Edward Hydock III estate,10 but since Edith Baum (a/k/a Culp) had died in 1985,11 petitioner was the sole heir to the estate of his son.12

Petitioner, 54 years of age, has been examined by various psychological and psychiatric professionals and tested over the years with consistent findings classifying him as of borderline intelligence with an IQ of approximately 72, placing him at the three percent level among all those tested. He is classified at the first grade level in both reading and reading comprehension skills.13 [83]*83He relies upon trusted individuals to read and explain documents to him.14

In or about September 2002, petitioner telephoned Mr. Schermer. While the parties dispute the nature of the call and the substance of the conversation, there is no dispute that Mr. Schermer hung up on petitioner following a brief conversation.15 Petitioner claims he called to ask for his money from the estate.16 Mr. Schermer and his legal assistant who listened in to the telephone call on speaker phone both claim that petitioner indicated that he wanted his daughter to administer the estate (although she had been doing so since the renunciation was executed several months before), that he did not want any money from the estate, that he wanted his daughter to receive the money and that he had been a poor father.17 Given all the circumstances and the demeanor of the witnesses presenting testimony, this court is convinced that petitioner’s testimony is credible and that the testimony of Mr. Schermer and his assistant is not.

Thereafter, Danielle Stauffer appeared in Mr. Schermer’s office on December 5,2002 and signed an inventory indicating a gross estate valued at $533,993.78, which represented the proceeds from the wrongful death action. During this meeting, a two-page disclaimer was prepared for petitioner to sign renouncing his beneficial [84]*84interest in the estate not only in favor of his daughter, Danielle Stauffer, but also in favor of two others who were misidentified as his children: Shirley Culp and Irving Culp.18 In contrast to the renunciation, Cecelia Baum was not asked to present the disclaimer to Hydock.19

On December 7, 2002, Danielle Stauffer, accompanied by Virginia Nace and Barbara Foster, who are both sisters-in-law, drove to petitioner’s apartment. Ms. Stauffer exited the vehicle and went inside petitioner’s apartment where both petitioner and his mother resided.20 She did not present the disclaimer to petitioner for review21 but had him accompany her to the car and then proceeded to drive to a notary public. Because petitioner had no identification with him, they drove back to petitioner’s apartment, retrieved identification and then returned to the notary public where the disclaimer was signed by petitioner and witnessed by the others.22 At no time was the disclaimer read or its full legal implications23 explained to petitioner and at no time was peti[85]*85tioner given a copy of the disclaimer.24 Instead, Danielle Stauffer told the petitioner that it was necessary to sign the disclaimer so that the state would not receive the estate proceeds.25 Finally, on February 11,2003 a notice of beneficial interest in the estate of Joseph E. Hydock III was sent to Danielle Stauffer, Shirley Culp and Irvin Culp.26

DISCUSSION

1. The Disclaimer Should Be Set Aside Where Petitioner Presented Clear and Convincing Evidence That the Fiduciary of His Son s Estate Procured Petitioner s Disclaimer by Fraud and the Disclaimer Itself Was Inherently Fraudident in Its Designation of Certain Beneficiaries As Petitioner s Children

It is uncontested that Danielle Stauffer took the initiative to have herself named administratrix of her deceased [86]

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Bluebook (online)
80 Pa. D. & C.4th 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-hydock-pactcomplphilad-2006.