In Re Padezanin

937 A.2d 475, 2007 Pa. Super. 350, 2007 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3910
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 27, 2007
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 937 A.2d 475 (In Re Padezanin) 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 Padezanin, 937 A.2d 475, 2007 Pa. Super. 350, 2007 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3910 (Pa. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BOWES, J.:

¶ 1 This is an appeal from a final order directing the distribution of the estate of Daniel Padezanin. With the exception of an award of rental to the estate from Debra A. Florida a/k/a Debra Padezanin in the amount of $4,075 and a remand for calculation of a precise surcharge amount for her failure to file a fiduciary income tax return, we affirm the orphans’ court’s decisions in this matter.

¶ 2 Daniel Padezanin died on March 26, 2002, survived by a son, Daniel Padezanin Jr. (“Appellee”), as well as three daughters, Danielle P. Sweesy, Debra A. Florida a/k/a Debra Padezanin, and Dorothy A. Sklack (collectively “Appellants”). On May 1, 2002, the Register of Wills of Beaver County admitted a will dated February 27, 1998, to probate and letters testamentary on the estate were granted to Debra. Appellee filed an appeal from probate of the will. On June 19, 2003, the orphans’ court concluded that the February 27,1998 will was invalid due to the fact that after its execution, the name of an after-born heir was handwritten into its terms. Thus, the will’s admission to probate was vacated, and Debra was removed as executrix. Due to animosity among the intestate heirs, the court appointed a neutral personal representative, Layden C. Sadecky, Esquire.

*479 ¶ 3 In the meantime, on December 18, 2002, Debra, who was then still acting as the personal representative of the estate, filed an inventory. Appellee filed objections to that inventory claiming, among other things, that Debra had improperly omitted real estate that the decedent owned in Sewickley Township from her inventory of his assets. The orphans’ court deferred ruling on those objections until an accounting of the estate was prepared. Debra prepared a first and final account covering the period of her administration of the estate. Appellee renewed his objections to the omission of the real estate from her accounting of the estate assets.

¶ 4 After a hearing on January 4, 2005, the orphans’ court sustained Appellee’s objections and voided five deeds executed by the decedent on June 80, 1998. Those deeds purported to transfer the decedent’s real estate either to Danielle individually, Dorothy individually, or Danielle and Dorothy as joints tenants with right of surviv-orship. The five deeds had been recorded on August 19, 2002, four months after the death of Daniel Padezanin and over four years after they had been executed. Mr. Sadecky then prepared an accounting of his administration. Objections were filed both by Appellee and Appellants. This appeal followed resolution of the objections and entry of an order directing distribution of the estate assets.

¶ 5 The first issue that we resolve involves the orphans’ court’s conclusion that the decedent did not make a valid inter vivos gift of his real estate located in Sewickley. We note our standard of review.

Our standard of review of the findings of an orphans’ court is deferential.
When reviewing a decree entered by the Orphans’ Court, this Court must determine whether the record is free from legal error and the court’s factual findings are supported by the evidence. Because the Orphans’ Court sits as the fact-finder, it determines the credibility of the witnesses and, on review, we will not reverse its credibility determinations absent an abuse of that discretion.
In re Estate of Geniviva, 450 Pa.Super. 54, 675 A.2d 306, 310 (1996). However, “we are not constrained to give the same deference to any resulting legal conclusions.” Id. “Where the rules of law on which the court relied are palpably wrong or clearly inapplicable, we will reverse the court’s decree.”

In re Smith, 890 A.2d 1082, 1086 (Pa.Super.2006) (quoting In re Estate of Harrison, 745 A.2d 676, 678-79 (Pa.Super.2000)).

¶ 6 The relevant facts follow. The decedent owned twenty-three lots and a fifteen foot strip of land located in Sewickley Township, Beaver County. A one-story ranch home located on two of the lots has the address of 1315 Suzanne Street. Another two lots with the address of 1395 Harvey Run Road contain a building used by the decedent as a bar and restaurant. Located at 1325 Harvey Run Road are another two lots containing a building with retail space on the ground floor and an apartment on the second floor. The other lots are vacant. As previously noted, the five deeds in question conveyed all twenty-three lots from the decedent either to Dorothy individually, Danielle individually, or Dorothy and Danielle as joint tenants. The deeds were brought by the decedent to a paralegal working for a Pittsburgh law firm. At that time, the deeds already had been drafted, and there was no evidence presented as to who created those documents. The paralegal notarized them and returned them to the decedent. As described, the deeds were recorded four months after the decedent’s death, and *480 also after Appellee filed his appeal from the probate of the decedent’s will.

¶ 7 The orphans’ court’s factual findings regarding the deeds follow:

The evidence presented was that the decedent handed an envelope to David Sklack, husband of Dorothy Sklack, one of the appellants], and said “these deeds [are] for my girls, take them and put them someplace safe.” This occurred sometime in the summer of 1998. [Mr. Sklack] testified that he took them and put them in a desk in his business which was next door. He also said that his wife was not present when this occurred. His testimony was that the next time the deeds came to his attention was when he accidentally found them in the desk several months after the decedent’s death. The discovery occurred after the will contest was filed. The circumstances of how the deeds were discovered seems unusual, to say the least. David Sklack didn’t know when he found them and didn’t know what he was looking for.
Dorothy Sklack testified that she knew about the deeds, and knew where they were. This was in contradiction to prior testimony she had given before the Court. Her first testimony under oath was that she was not aware of the deeds until after her father’s death. The court found that her testimony was not reliable. The Court had to conclude that she did not know about the deeds nor did she know where they were, otherwise she would have produced them at the time of the decedent’s death.

Trial Court Opinion, 8/7/06, at 3.

¶ 8 Thus, Appellants’ own evidence established conclusively that the decedent gave absolutely no instructions to Mr. Sklack regarding delivery of the deeds to the two donees. The record supports the orphans’ court’s conclusion that neither of the two beneficiaries was aware of the existence of the deeds until after the decedent’s death, and we must accept that conclusion for purposes of this appeal. Furthermore, during his lifetime, the decedent retained complete control over the real estate, continuing to reside at the property located on 1315 Suzanne Street, to operate and collect profits from the two business properties, and to pay the expenses attendant to ownership of all twenty-three lots.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
937 A.2d 475, 2007 Pa. Super. 350, 2007 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-padezanin-pasuperct-2007.