In re Estate of Plovetsky

30 Pa. D. & C.4th 457, 1996 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 318
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria County
DecidedMarch 7, 1996
Docketno. 11-95-432
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Pa. D. & C.4th 457 (In re Estate of Plovetsky) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Cambria 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 Plovetsky, 30 Pa. D. & C.4th 457, 1996 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 318 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1996).

Opinion

SWOPE, J.,

— This matter involves a dispute between the intestate heirs of the decedent, Paul Plovetsky. Currently before the court are exceptions to the first and final accounting of the administrator of the estate. The exceptants herein are two of the decedent’s nieces, Mary E. Petro and Irene Toth. The respondent is Paul V. Freck, the decedent’s nephew and the administrator of his estate. All the parties are intestate heirs.

At issue is whether the decedent completed an inter vivos gift of $64,000 to Paul Freck, or whether that money should pass through the estate to the intestate heirs. As will be explained, the court finds that under the law of this Commonwealth, the decedent did not make an inter vivos gift or a gift causa mortis. The court will therefore grant the exceptions to the accounting.

I. THE FACTS

The court has weighed the credibility of the witnesses in this matter,1 and finds that the following facts are established by clear and convincing evidence: Paul Plovetsky lived in Portage, Pennsylvania all his life. [460]*460Paul Plovetsky lived with his brother Bill until Bill died in 1988. The exceptants, Mary Petro and Irene Toth, reside in California. The administrator, Paul Freck, resides in Twinsburg, Ohio.

Paul Freck and his wife Marjorie began regular visits with Paul Plovetsky 30 years ago, shortly after they married. The visits increased in frequency and duration as Paul Plovetsky grew older. Mary Petro also visited with her uncle over the years in Pennsylvania and in California, but the visits virtually ceased in the last five years before Plovetsky’s death.

During the last 10 years of his life, Plovetsky began giving Paul Freck and his wife Maijorie envelopes containing cash after their visits with him. The first such gift took place in 1985. During that visit the Frecks came to Pennsylvania to take care of Paul Plovetsky’s household while his brother Bill was in the hospital. As the Frecks were leaving to return to Ohio, Plovetsky opened his safe and gave Freck an envelope containing cash. Plovetsky then told Freck there was cash in the safe, and said, “I want you to have it when the time comes.” He said that in the safe there were envelopes designated by name for certain persons. He then told Freck that all the envelopes of cash in the safe that were not specifically designated as belonging to someone else belonged to Freck.2 Plovetsky gave Freck the combination to the safe as the Frecks were leaving to return to Ohio. Paul Freck did not open the safe or remove any cash from it.

Between 1985 and 1991 Plovetsky gave Freck cash from the safe on various other occasions when the Frecks visited. When Bill Plovetsky died in 1988 the Frecks again visited. After the funeral, Paul Plovetsky came [461]*461to the Frecks and said that the cash in the safe was theirs “when the time comes.”3 Again, Paul Freck did not open the safe and remove cash from it.

Paul Plovetsky bought a second safe in approximately 1990. One year later he also gave its combination to Freck. Meanwhile, he changed the combination to the old safe and gave Freck the new combination. These actions of Paul Plovetsky made Freck the only person other than himself to know the combination to the two safes. Plovetsky told Freck that he took these steps because he did not want his niece Mary Toth to have the combination to the safes.

By May of 1994, Plovetsky was 86 years old. During the Frecks’ visit at that time, Plovetsky again opened the safe that held the cash, and showed its contents to Paul Freck. He told Freck that the cash inside was his. As usual, however, Freck did not open the safe himself or take any cash out of it. Freck instead thanked Plovetsky but insisted that Plovetsky might outlive him and therefore might need it more than he did. At the time, Plovetsky was alert and healthy. At age 86 he was still making repairs to the roof of his house.

Approximately two months later, on July 6, 1994, the Frecks were visiting Plovetsky when Plovetsky again told Paul Freck the cash in the safes was his. He also gave Freck some cash in a plastic bag that day when he left for Ohio. Paul Freck accepted the bag, containing one or two thousand dollars, but once again he neither opened the safe nor removed anything from it. This was to be Paul Freck’s last visit with his uncle; Paul Plovetsky suffered a major stroke on July 9, 1994.

The day after he learned of his uncle’s stroke, Freck came to Portage. The Frecks, continuing their role as [462]*462their uncle’s primary caregivers, decided to take Plovetsky to a hospital in Ohio where they could better care for him. In anticipation of the trip to Ohio, the Frecks went to Plovetsky’s house to put his uncle’s affairs in order. Because the ambulance would begin transporting Plovetsky to Ohio in less than two hours, and because the Frecks had to be in Ohio to receive Plovetsky, they had only an hour and a half to clean out Plovetsky’s house and safeguard his possessions.

For the first time, Paul Freck opened the two safes. One was about one and one-half square feet in size, and the other was slightly larger. Freck emptied the safes’ contents into a bag without taking any inventory. In the first safe he found bonds, certificates of deposit, and cash. In the second safe he found papers such as an army discharge certificate, birth certificates of Plovetsky’s nephews, the deed for Plovetsky’s house and some more cash. The cash in both safes was in various kinds of new and used envelopes. Some envelopes had names written on them, some did not.

Shortly afterward, the Frecks, Paul Plovetsky, and Mary Petro all arrived in Ohio. On October 17, 1994, Paul Freck applied to be guardian of his uncle.4 Freck did not inventory the assets from the safes until he filed the guardianship application. When he went to the bank to open the guardianship account, he and the bank manager counted the money and inventoried the other assets. The cash in undesignated envelopes amounted to $64,000, and was placed in the guardianship account. The guardianship account was a joint account with right of survivorship in the names of both [463]*463Paul Freck and Paul Plovetsky. The social security number which Paul Freck assigned to the account was Paul Plovetsky’s.

On February 11, 1995, Paul Plovetsky passed away. After Plovetsky died, Freck removed Plovetsky’s name from the account, leaving only his own name. Freck kept the $64,000 in the bank and did not credit it as an asset of Plovetsky’s probate estate. All parties in this matter, however, had actual notice of the purported gift.

II. LEGAL DISCUSSION

This testimony does not establish a legally valid transfer of the money to Paul Freck. Neither the elements of an inter vivos gift nor gift causa mortis have been established. The legal analysis is set forth below.

To prove an inter vivos gift, the following elements must be established: (1) that the donor intended to make an immediate gift; (2) that there was such actual or constructive delivery of the gift to the donee as would divest the donor of dominion and control over the gift, and (3) that the donee accepted of the gift. Hengst v. Hengst, 491 Pa. 120, 420 A.2d 370 (1980).

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Bluebook (online)
30 Pa. D. & C.4th 457, 1996 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-plovetsky-pactcomplcambri-1996.