In Re: Koepfinger, J. Appeal of: Koepfinger, J.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 22, 2023
Docket20 WAP 2022
StatusPublished

This text of In Re: Koepfinger, J. Appeal of: Koepfinger, J. (In Re: Koepfinger, J. Appeal of: Koepfinger, J.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme 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: Koepfinger, J. Appeal of: Koepfinger, J., (Pa. 2023).

Opinion

[J-20-2023] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.

IN RE: JOSEPH L. KOEPFINGER, AN : No. 20 WAP 2022 INDIVIDUAL : : Appeal from the Order of the : Superior Court entered February 4, APPEAL OF: JOSEPH L. KOEPFINGER : 2021 at No. 123 WDA 2020, : reversing the Order of the Court of : Common Pleas of Allegheny County : entered January 24, 2020 at No. 02- : 18-03244, and remanding : : ARGUED: April 19, 2023

OPINION

JUSTICE DONOHUE DECIDED: AUGUST 22, 2023 This appeal requires the Court to consider whether a judicial determination that a

power of attorney was void ab initio invalidates an irrevocable trust created by the

purported agent under the void power of attorney. The orphans’ court answered this

question in the affirmative, but the Superior Court reversed. For the reasons that follow,

we hold that, when a court concludes that a power of attorney is a nullity, any action taken

under the auspices of the power of attorney is likewise a nullity. Consequently, we vacate

the Superior Court’s judgment and reinstate the orphans’ court’s order.

I. Procedural History

Appellant Joseph Koepfinger (“Father”) is a nonagenarian and father of several

adult children, including Appellee Margaret Koepfinger (“Daughter”). On September 6,

2016, which was shortly after the death of Father’s wife/Daughter’s mother, Father

executed a power of attorney (“POA”), naming Daughter as his agent. The POA gave Daughter the authority to, among other things, create an irrevocable trust for Father; it

further provided that Father could revoke the POA but only in writing.

Soon after the execution of the POA, tensions began to build between Father and

Daughter due to Father’s developing relationship with Madeline Masucci (“Masucci”). In

2017, Father allegedly orally informed Daughter that he revoked the POA and that he

executed a new power of attorney, naming his son/Daughter’s brother as his agent.

Daughter, however, claims that she was not informed of these events until May of 2018.

In the meantime, on April 27, 2018, acting as Father’s agent under the POA,

Daughter created an irrevocable trust for Father, placing a substantial amount of his

assets into that trust. Daughter named herself as trustee. After Daughter allegedly was

informed that Father revoked the POA, she filed a Petition for Declaratory Judgment

requesting, in relevant part, judicial declarations that: (1) the 2016 POA was not revoked

at the time that she created the trust; (2) the creation and funding of the trust was within

her scope of authority under the POA; and (3) the trust is valid. Petition for Declaratory

Judgment, 5/21/2018, at Wherefore Paragraph. Daughter named the following as

respondents: Father; Masucci; Zacharia & Brown, P.C., a law firm that had represented

Father in the past and that drafted the POA; and PNC Bank, N.A., and PNC Investments,

LLC, the entities that provided banking and investment services to Father.1 In her petition,

Daughter stated that she created the trust to protect Father from being financially

exploited by Masucci.

Daughter further contended in her petition that any harm that her actions as agent

and trustee may have caused Father’s financial affairs was the fault of: (1) Zacharia &

1 The orphans’ court’s docket and record reflect that: (1) Zacharia & Brown, P.C., did not participate in the orphans’ court proceedings; (2) Masucci only filed preliminary objections to Daughter’s Petition for Declaratory Judgment; and (3) the PNC entities merely filed a reply to that petition. None of these parties participated in the appeals to the Superior Court or this Court.

[J-20-2023] - 2 Brown, P.C. - as drafters of the 2016 and 2017 powers of attorney with full knowledge of

Masucci’s financial exploitation of Father; (2) Father - by failing to inform Daughter in

writing of his revocation of the POA; (3) Masucci - given her financial exploitation of

Father; and (4) PNC Bank, N.A. - insofar as it refused to abide by Daughter’s instructions

as agent and trustee.

In response, Father alleged, among other things, that the POA failed to comply

with Chapter 56 of the Probate, Estates and Fiduciaries Code (“Code”), 20 Pa.C.S.

§§ 5601-5614. Supplement to Motion to Dismiss Declaratory Judgment Action for Lack

of Standing, 8/29/2018, at ¶ 5. More specifically, Father argued that the POA was invalid

because it was not acknowledged before a notary public and was not witnessed properly,

both of which are required by Section 5601 of the Code.2 Id. at ¶¶ 6-8. Father contended

that the trust was invalid because it was created through an invalid POA. Id. at ¶¶ 10-11.

2 Subsection 5601(b)(3) of the Code states as follows:

(3) For a power of attorney executed on or after the effective date of this paragraph, the signature or mark of the principal, or the signature of another individual signing a power of attorney on behalf of and at the direction of the principal, shall be:

(i) Acknowledged before a notary public or other individual authorized by law to take acknowledgments. The notary public or other individual authorized by law to take acknowledgments shall not be the agent designated in the power of attorney.

(ii) Witnessed by two individuals, each of whom is 18 years of age or older. A witness shall not be the individual who signed the power of attorney on behalf of and at the direction of the principal, the agent designated in the power of attorney or the notary public or other person authorized by law to take acknowledgments before whom the power of attorney is acknowledged. Nothing in this section shall prohibit an acknowledgment of a power of attorney before a member of the bar of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in (continued…)

[J-20-2023] - 3 The case originally was assigned to the Honorable Kathleen Durkin, who held a

hearing on the matter on December 11, 2018. Focusing on Father’s defense that the

POA was never effective, in an order dated February 13, 2019, Judge Durkin made

findings of facts and conclusions of law. Relevant to this matter, Judge Durkin found as

follows.3

Father’s attorney, Thomas McCaffery, Esq. (“Attorney McCaffery”), who is “of

counsel” at Zacharia & Brown, P.C., prepared the 2016 POA. Orphans’ Court Order,

2/13/2019, ¶ 9. Attorney McCaffery sent the POA to Father by letter dated August 23,

2016, and the letter stated: “We will date, witness and notarize the document when you

return it to our office after all signatures have been signed.” Id. ¶ 10. Attorney McCaffery

did not review with Father the authority that the POA provided to Daughter to create an

irrevocable trust. Id. ¶ 11. Daughter made a note on the August 23rd letter, “mailed

9/17/16,” beside a paragraph that stated, “Once the Durable Power of Attorney is

completed as directed in No. 2 above, please return the original to me and I will have the

document notarized.” Id. ¶ 12.

According to Father’s testimony, the witnesses to the POA and the notary did not

meet at his residence, and he did not recall where or when he signed the POA. Id. ¶¶ 13

& 14. Daughter did not remember how or when Father signed the POA, and the notary

had no record in her logbook that she notarized the POA. Id. ¶¶ 15 & 16. In fact, none

the manner authorized by 42 Pa.C.S. § 327(a) (relating to oaths and acknowledgments) certified in the manner provided by 57 Pa.C.S.

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In Re: Koepfinger, J. Appeal of: Koepfinger, J., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-koepfinger-j-appeal-of-koepfinger-j-pa-2023.