In Re Mahmoodzadeh

724 S.E.2d 797, 314 Ga. App. 383
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedFebruary 27, 2012
DocketA11A2314
StatusPublished

This text of 724 S.E.2d 797 (In Re Mahmoodzadeh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Mahmoodzadeh, 724 S.E.2d 797, 314 Ga. App. 383 (Ga. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Dillard, Judge.

Monica Mahmoodzadeh, the widow of Payam Mahmoodzadeh, filed a petition for year’s support in the Probate Court of Cobb *384 County, seeking to set aside real property and funds in various money-market accounts. In response to the petition, Renasant Bank and the parents of the decedent, Aghdad and Roohullah Mahmoodza-deh, filed caveats objecting to setting aside one of the accounts and the real property as year’s support, contending that these items were not part of the decedent’s estate. The probate court allowed these objections and subsequently denied any sum of year’s support to the widow on the basis that she had failed to prove the amount of year’s support necessary. This appeal by the widow follows, in which she contends that the trial court erred by (1) exceeding its subject matter jurisdiction, (2) allowing the bank and decedent’s parents to raise objections, (3) converting caveats challenging title into caveats as to the nature and amount of year’s support, and (4) improperly shifting the burden of proof to the widow. And because we agree that the probate court erred by allowing objections by the bank and decedent’s parents on the basis of adverse title, we reverse the court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

The record reflects that Payam and Monica Mahmoodzadeh were married without children, and that Payam died intestate on July 28, 2010. On August 16, 2010, the widow filed a petition for year’s support from the decedent’s estate, proposing to set aside the balance of four money-market accounts. In response to this petition, Renasant Bank filed a caveat on September 17, 2010, contending that one of the money-market accounts was not part of the decedent’s estate and, thus, that it could not be set aside as year’s support.

In November 2010, the widow amended the schedule of property requested for year’s support to include, in addition to the four money-market accounts previously requested, four pieces of real property. Thereafter, the decedent’s parents sought permission to file an out-of-time caveat to the petition for year’s support and filed same on April 12, 2011. The parents’ caveat contended that the four pieces of real property were “a continuing joint investment program between the decedent and . . . his parents.” The parents amended their caveat two times but continued to solely argue that the real property should not be set aside in an award of year’s support due to the parents’ ownership interest in the property. The widow sought to dismiss the parents’ caveat on the basis that they did not have an enforceable interest in the land and that they lacked standing to bring a caveat against the petition for year’s support.

At a hearing on the petition, caveats, and various motions, the widow’s attorney announced that the widow would not contest the bank and decedent’s parents “having a hearing on the merits if they want to make an adverse claim to the estate,” and further noted that *385 after speaking with counsel for both caveators, there was a stipulation that “they’re not challenging the amount or nature of the property sought in the petition or the amended petition except to the extent that they’re making adverse claims to the estate.” In response, the probate court explained that it did not have jurisdiction over the validity of any adverse-title claims. Nevertheless, counsel for the decedent’s parents then offered that the parents were present “to object to the setting aside of property that belongs to a partnership and doesn’t belong to the estate.” But the probate court again expressed that it did not have jurisdiction over claims of adverse title.

Thereafter, counsel for the widow again stated that the parties

all agreed to stipulate as to the amount and nature of the property, that [this] was proper and then they have claims that their two pieces of property — the bank’s one [money-market account] and [the parents’] four [pieces of contested property] [ — ]are not part of the estate. And [that is] the nature of their objection.

Counsel for the bank also noted that it was “not making an adverse claim on the estate” but was instead “filing a caveat to that part of the petition in which the petitioner asks that a certain money market account be set aside as year’s support” because “the money market account and those funds are not part of the estate and can’t be set aside as year’s support.”

After hearing the foregoing arguments, the court, yet again, explained that it did not have jurisdiction over title disputes and that it only had the power to grant or deny the petition for year’s support and, if granted, to determine the amount awarded. Specifically, the court instructed the bank and the decedent’s parents that “[y]ou are either objecting to this petition for year’s support or you’re not. And, if you’ve got a claim to that property, you have to go somewhere else.” The court also instructed the parties that “[m]aking an adverse claim to a line item of property is not contemplated in year’s support.”

Discussion of the matter continued, and the probate court once more reiterated that “[t]itle to property is not within my jurisdiction.” Counsel for the widow then replied:

I think that’s really the issue between us and I don’t think really anybody has contested the nature or whether she’s entitled to it or whether the amount is sufficient or excessive or etcetera. So, what I would propose ... is that the property be set aside subject to rights of any adverse *386 claimant to the property to litigate the issue of title to those properties.

But the court responded, “That’s not what’s before me. A contested petition for year’s support is before me. They have objected because their rights to the estate may be affected by the petition.” The court also explained that “[i]f the estate doesn’t own it, then it’s not a valid transfer,” but then the court, nevertheless, allowed the proceedings to continue by construing the objections by the parents and the bank to be based on the petition as a whole.

After the hearing, which included testimony by the widow as to the lifestyle she enjoyed with the decedent and testimony by the decedent’s parents as to the nature of their real-estate partnership with the decedent, the court declined to award the widow any amount of year’s support, holding that she had failed to meet the burden of proof as to the amount required for her support. This appeal by the widow follows, in which she argues that the probate court erred by (1) exceeding its subject-matter jurisdiction, (2) allowing the bank and decedent’s parents to raise objections, (3) converting caveats challenging title into caveats as to the nature and amount of year’s support, and (4) improperly shifting the burden of proof. 1 We agree with the widow that the trial court erred by placing upon her a burden of proof by allowing the bank and decedent’s parents to object when their objections were clearly limited to a matter outside the probate court’s jurisdiction.

At the outset, we note that “[t]he probate court’s determination of the amount awarded as year’s support will be upheld on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.” 2

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Bluebook (online)
724 S.E.2d 797, 314 Ga. App. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-mahmoodzadeh-gactapp-2012.