In Re Gumpher

840 A.2d 318, 2003 Pa. Super. 493, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4535
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 840 A.2d 318 (In Re Gumpher) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Gumpher, 840 A.2d 318, 2003 Pa. Super. 493, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4535 (Pa. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JOHNSON, J.:

¶ 1 Kathleen R. Gumpher (Mother) appeals the trial court’s order that she reimburse Amanda Gumpher (Daughter) for the full value of an account Mother opened for Daughter under the Pennsylvania Uniform Transfer to Minors Act (PUTMA), 20 Pa.C.S. § 5301, et seq. Mother argues that she acted within her rights in liquidating the account and retaining the proceeds, because the prior expenditures that the proceeds were intended to offset were for the direct use or benefit of Daughter. We find no error in the trial court’s Opinion and Order. Thus, we affirm.

¶ 2 The facts underlying this controversy are largely undisputed. Daughter was born to Mother and David W. Gumpher (Father) on October 15, 1981. In 1989, Mother and Father divorced, and Mother gained primary custody of Daughter. According to their Post-Nuptial Agreement, Mother and Father were each to pay one half of medical expenses not covered by insurance; each was to contribute to Daughter’s college education to the best of his or her abilities.

¶ 3 In 1993, Mother opened a PUTMA account for Daughter with an initial capital contribution of $1570. Mother added to the account with deposits totaling $185 in 1996, $150 in 1997, and $50 in 1998. Thus, the capital contribution Mother made to the PUTMA account totaled $1955. *320 Thanks to a dividend reinvestment plan and appreciation of the underlying investments, the account had a value of $5601.37, as of December 5, 2000, when Mother closed the account.

¶ 4 In the fall semester of 2000, Daughter matriculated at Ithaca College. She withdrew, however, within weeks of the beginning of the semester. When she returned home, Daughter found that Mother no longer would have her, so Daughter went to live with Father.

¶5 Soon thereafter, Mother liquidated the PUTMA account. Rather than turn the proceeds of the liquidation over to Daughter, however, Mother retained the funds. She claims that she was entitled to the funds

as reimbursement for various expenses incurred for the benefit of [Daughter], including braces, a car, a high school class trip to France, and college application and orientation fees. [Daughter] had her braces prior to entering high school. Over the course of a pre-ar-ranged payment schedule, Mother paid $3,480.00 for the braces, the last payment having been made in or about June 1999. The cost of the braces was paid entirely from Mother’s own funds.
In or about August 1998, Mother purchased a 1990 Geo Prism. She financed $2,500.00 (one-half of the purchase price) on the belief that Father would pay the other half. According to Mother’s testimony, the car was to be for [Daughter’s] benefit, but it was titled in Mother’s name. [Daughter] testified that the car was simply a second vehicle for the family’s use. [Daughter] contributed, even if sporadically, to the car payments until Mother told her that she no longer needed to contribute. The car loan was paid off in February 2000. Mother transferred title to the car to [Daughter] in the Fall of 2000, prior to [Daughter’s] going to college.
In April 2000, [Daughter] took a class trip to France. The cost of the trip was $2,090.00, which Mother paid. Apparently payments were complete by the end of February 2000. [Daughter] testified that Mother paid for this trip as a graduation gift.
Mother also claimed reimbursement for a $55.00 application fee and a $189.00 orientation fee for Ithaca College.

Trial Court Opinion (T.C.O.), 1/23/03, at 2 (footnotes omitted). Mother testified that she did not pay these expenses from the PUTMA account as they occurred for fear of penalties arising from the withdrawals. Moreover, because the expenses enumerated above exceeded the value of the account, Mother claimed that Daughter owed her additional reimbursement exceeding $3600. In support of her claim, Mother cited expenses such as “glasses and contacts, groceries, transportation, and various other ordinary expenses typically incurred in the support of a child,” and “$750, which Mother paid to retain her attorney to prepare the requested accounting, which accounting reflects the $750.00 as an expense incurred and paid by the PUTMA account.” T.C.O, 1/23/02, at 3.

¶ 6 Daughter did not learn of the existence of the PUTMA account until after the liquidation, when Mother sent Daughter a tax form pertaining to the account closure, which indicated that Daughter was liable for taxes on an account she had not known existed. Subsequently, on September 12, 2002, Daughter filed a Petition for Accounting, Removal of Custodian, and Delivery of Funds Previously Held Under the Pennsylvania Uniform Transfer to Minors Act. Pursuant to the consequent order of the Berks County Orphan’s Court, Mother filed a First Intermediate Account and Answer with New Matter to the Peti *321 tion. The trial court heard the parties in January 2003, and issued an order a little over a week later, requiring Mother to remit to Daughter the full value of the PUTMA account at liquidation— $5601.37 — plus interest calculated from December 5, 2000, the date of liquidation.

¶ 7 Mother challenges the trial court’s order, raising the following questions for our review.

A. Whether the Trial Court erred as a matter of law by not permitting the custodian to expend funds for the use and benefit of a minor pursuant to the Pennsylvania Uniform Transferís] to Minors Act?
B. Whether the Trial Court erred as a matter of law by not permitting the custodian to expend funds for the use and benefit of the minor regardless of custodian’s duty or ability to personally support the minor pursuant to the Pennsylvania Uniform Transferís] to Minors Act?
C. Whether the Trial Court erred as a matter of law by not permitting a divorced parent to establish, after the date of separation, a Pennsylvania Uniform Transferís] to Minors Act account and expend the same for the use and benefit of a child?

Brief for Appellant at 4.

As an appellate court we can modify an Orphans’ Court decree only if the findings upon which the decree rests are unsupported by competent or adequate evidence or if there has been an error of law, an abuse of discretion or a capricious disbelief of competent evidence. The test to be applied is not whether we, the reviewing court, would have reached the same result, but whether a judicial mind, after considering the evidence as a whole, could reasonably have reached the same conclusion.

Appeal of Gannon, 428 Pa.Super. 349, 631 A.2d 176, 182 (1993) (internal quotations and citations omitted). Moreover, because PUTMA is part of a uniform statutory scheme, where Pennsylvania law fails to answer a question arising under PUTMA, we may look to other jurisdictions’ resolutions of the question to inform our own, thus encouraging cross-jurisdictional uniformity. See 1 Pa.C.S. § 1927 (“Statutes uniform with those of other states shall be interpreted and construed to effect their general purpose to make uniform the laws of those states which enact them.”); see Burke v. Valley Lines, Inc., 421 Pa.Super.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
840 A.2d 318, 2003 Pa. Super. 493, 2003 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4535, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-gumpher-pasuperct-2003.