In Re ESTATE OF William B. ROSS

131 A.3d 158, 2016 R.I. LEXIS 16
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedFebruary 1, 2016
Docket2014-355-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 131 A.3d 158 (In Re ESTATE OF William B. ROSS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island 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 William B. ROSS, 131 A.3d 158, 2016 R.I. LEXIS 16 (R.I. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY,

for the Court.

.This case is before the Court on appeal by the children of William B. Ross: namely, William B. Ross, Jr., 1 Glen E. Ross, and James C.' Ross (collectively, plaintiffs). In appealing the probate of their father’s estate, they challenge the fifth and final accounting of the decedent’s guardian and sister, Nancy D. Howard. 2 Lois E. Sanford, another sister of the decedent, was also named a defendant to the probate appeal because she was the co-executrix of-William’s estate along with Howard. Before this Court, the plaintiffs assert that the trial judge erred in her assessment of the law and the evidence, and they advance several arguments that Howard breached her fiduciary duty, failed to correct a conflict of interest, and violated G.L.1956 § 33-17-1 and G.L.1956 § 33-18-27 in failing to obtain approval for the fifth and final accounting of decedent’s estate. This case came before the Supreme Court on November 3, 2015, pursuant to an. order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. We conclude that cause has not been shown and that the appeal may be decided at this time. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court in all respects.

Facts and Travel

In 1958 William B. Ross, decedent, was a member of the United States Army stationed in Greece, where he lived with his wife, Emily Ross, and their three young *160 sons, James, William, Jr., and Glen. 3 At some time during that year, William suffered a massive cerebral hemorrhage; he subsequently underwent two brain surgeries, including a frontal lobectomy, and he was eventually transferred to a facility in Brockton, Massachusetts. As a result of the brain trauma and surgeries, William experienced a substantial loss to his short-term memory. In 1959, his wife was appointed as the guardian of his person and estate. While he resided at the facility in Brockton, his doctors determined that William was incompetent and severely mentally impaired, with a prognosis that there was a reasonable likelihood that he would remain severely impaired and would not regain the ability to function in society in a reasonable manner.

William’s sons testified that, during his stay at the facility, they visited their father in Brockton approximately once each month, but that William was unable to engage in any sort of conversation with them and that he did not even recognize them. Around 1965, however, William experienced a remarkable improvement in his functionality. James testified that he remembered visiting the Brockton facility one day when suddenly his father recognized them all, knew they were coming to visit, and was conversing with them. William was reevaluated by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), which determined that William was functioning at a sufficient level to be released to live with his parents.

In 1964 Emily resigned as William’s guardian, and, around that same time, the couple divorced. Soon after, Citizens Trust Company was appointed guardian of the decedent’s estate and attorney Jeremiah Jeremiah 4 was appointed as the guardian of his person; the decedent was rated as 100 percent disabled by the VA. However, in 1971, William was again evaluated by the VA and determined by Dr. Robert Hyde to be competent. Both Citizens and Jeremiah were discharged as William’s guardians.

Between 1971 and 1992, William maintained his competency designation and remained without a guardian. Between 1980 and 1991, William purchased several annuities and opened a number of investment accounts, designating various beneficiaries among his three sons, the plaintiffs, and his two sisters, defendants Nancy Howard and Lois Sanford. William also executed a Last Will and Testament. Until the mid-1980s, William’s parents had been providing for his welfare and assisting him with financial investments, but, around 1985, Howard testified, her father suffered an abdominal aneurism and about a year or two later her mother was stricken with a heart attack. At that time, Howard, in an unofficial capacity, stepped in to care both for her parents and her brother.

In 1992 William was again determined to be incompetent by the VA, and his sister, Howard, was appointed by the VA to be his “legal custodian.” As legal custodian, Howard had control of William’s finances, investments, and estate. In 1994, at the suggestion of the VA, she petitioned the probate court to appoint her as William’s guardian. The petition was granted, and, pursuant to that appointment, she was required to file yearly accountings of all *161 William’s investments. William died on May 31,1999. 5

Howard testified that she initially was appointed to be William’s legal custodian at the request of the VA, due to the growing size of his estate. Howard prepared an accounting of her brother’s assets at the time of her appointment. At that time, the estate was valued at approximately $416,000. Each year after that, Howard prepared a yearly inventory of her brother’s investments and accounts, providing a total accounting of his estate to both, the VA and the East Greenwich Probate' Court. The fifth and final accounting was submitted in 1999, shortly after William passed away, at which point the estate contained .approximately $920,000. William’s three sons filed an objection to the final accounting in the probate court, but on December 21, 2000, the probate judge entered a consent order allowing the guardian’s accounting without prejudice to the contestants’ right to appeal to the Superior Court.

Plaintiffs filed a notice of probate appeal in Kent County Superior Court on January 5, 2001, listing as reasons for appeal that the guardian, Howard, had violated her fiduciary duty to the decedent, had committed fraud, and had a conflict of interest in making the determination of what assets to include in the decedent’s estate.

■ A nonjury trial was held before a trial justice in the Kent County Superior Court. William’s three sons and two sisters each testified at the trial. The parties also presented the testimony of Thomas F. Flynn, the Ross family’s financial advisor, and Dr. Andrew Rosenzweig, a geriatric psychiatrist. The deposition of another psychiatrist, Dr. William B. Land, was admitted as a full exhibit by agreement of the parties.

William, Jr. testified that, from the time his father moved in with his grandparents, his father’s condition was improved but he remained confused, experienced memory loss, and acted like a person with Alzheimer’s disease and “as if he was the best disciplined eight-year-old boy.” He testified that he got along very well with his aunts, but he explained that, prior to 1994, he had no knowledge of his father’s assets or whether he had any interest in those assets, nor that his father had been under a guardianship at any point.

. James, William’s oldest son, testified that he clearly remembered visiting his father in Brockton and the day that his father’s condition drastically transformed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
131 A.3d 158, 2016 R.I. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-estate-of-william-b-ross-ri-2016.