in Re Rebecca L Clemence Revocable Trust

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 31, 2017
Docket332099
StatusUnpublished

This text of in Re Rebecca L Clemence Revocable Trust (in Re Rebecca L Clemence Revocable Trust) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
in Re Rebecca L Clemence Revocable Trust, (Mich. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

In re Estate of REBECCA L. CLEMENCE REVOCABLE TRUST.

KIRK F. CLEMENCE, CAROL C. CONTE, and UNPUBLISHED MICHELLE M. BONZA, October 31, 2017

Petitioners-Appellants,

v No. 332099 Wayne Probate Court KATHERINE R. CLEMENCE, LC No. 14-798903-TV

Respondent-Appellee.

Before: FORT HOOD, P.J., and GLEICHER and SWARTZLE, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Rebecca Clemence had four children, but in 2005 amended her trust to give 70% of her estate to only one. Following her 2013 death, Rebecca’s other children filed a petition to challenge the validity of the trust, arguing that their mother suffered from dementia in 2005 and lacked testamentary capacity. After sending petitioners on a futile quest for medical records and without holding an evidentiary hearing or trial, the probate court ordered the disbursement of Rebecca’s estate as provided in the trust. The probate court improperly denied petitioners their day in court where respondent had not sought summary dismissal of their claims. We vacate the court’s order and remand for further proceedings.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

This appeal arises out of a dispute between Rebecca’s four children, Kirk, Lisa, Melissa and Katherine, regarding the distribution of Rebecca’s estate.1 Rebecca passed away on October 18, 2013. Eight years earlier, following the death of her husband, Rebecca updated her trust and will. The new estate plan gave Rebecca’s home to Katherine. Rebecca bequeathed 70% of her

1 Petitioner Carol Conte is referred to as Lisa throughout the record and Michelle Bonza as Melissa.

-1- remaining property to Katherine and 10% each to her other three children. Rebecca also named Katherine as her successor trustee and personal representative. Katherine knew of Rebecca’s new plans but elected not to tell her siblings. Petitioners claim that Rebecca also did not tell them and they did not learn of the new split until several months after Rebecca’s death.

On July 11, 2014, Kirk, Lisa and Melissa filed a petition in the probate court seeking to remove Katherine as trustee, accusing Katherine of violating her fiduciary duty as trustee, and challenging the validity of the trust based on Rebecca’s health at the time of amendment. Petitioners also sought an accounting. They contended that Rebecca “was[] exhibiting signs of dementia and memory loss” at the time of their father’s death and that Katherine isolated Rebecca from petitioners in order to convince her to change her estate plan.

In the months that followed, petitioners accused Katherine of withholding information about the estate’s assets and their mother’s medical condition. In relation to Rebecca’s health, on October 23, 2014, Katherine revealed the names of several of Rebecca’s doctors. Still petitioners believed that Katherine was withholding information. Katherine’s claims of ignorance regarding the names of Rebecca’s physicians or the reasons for her medical visits during her two-day deposition in the spring of 2015 supported petitioners’ concerns.

Katherine had lived with Rebecca since 2005 and was in the best position to know details of Rebecca’s health situation. Katherine admitted that she drove her mother to her doctor appointments. Yet Katherine expressed ignorance of the medications Rebecca had been prescribed—“I suspect she was taking medications . . . but I don’t know what they were.” Katherine claimed not to know whether Rebecca suffered from high blood pressure, high cholesterol, anxiety, or depression. Katherine described that Rebecca used a wheelchair after 2008 due to weakness in her legs, but asserted that Rebecca could have driven and walked if she chose to. Katherine acknowledged that Rebecca had fallen in the past due to the weakness in her legs and had once broken her pinky finger. But when asked if Rebecca had ever sustained facial bruises during a fall, Katherine claimed that she could not recall. Rebecca’s death certificate listed three causes of death: pulmonary embolism, “dementia greater than two years,” and malnutrition. Katherine vehemently denied that Rebecca had suffered from dementia for any extended period. Rebecca’s “memory was sharp” “even up through her final days,” according to Katherine.

Katherine’s testimony regarding her mother’s sharp mental acuity did not conform to the realities of Rebecca’s financial affairs. Katherine asserted that her mother handled her own legal and business affairs and paid her own bills with little or no help until just before her death. Yet, while Rebecca was living with Katherine in Katherine’s condominium between 2005 and 2009, Rebecca forgot to pay her homeowner’s insurance premiums for her Livonia residence. As a result, she had no coverage when a frozen pipe burst. Rebecca did not pay property taxes on Florida real estate previously held by her late husband, leading to a tax foreclosure. Katherine had power of attorney over Rebecca at the time and a lawsuit was initiated against both women

-2- to quiet title.2 Katherine signed all timesheets for Rebecca’s home healthcare aides despite claiming that Rebecca did not need assistance and only companionship. And when Rebecca allegedly decided to create her own company to employ her aides based on the advice of her accountant, Katherine was the one who signed all incorporation documents.

Ultimately, petitioners filed a motion to compel Katherine to produce additional information regarding Rebecca’s health. The probate court then ordered petitioners to subpoena all of Rebecca’s known doctors in an attempt to ascertain whether Rebecca was incapacitated due to dementia in August 2005. The court also specifically ordered petitioners to subpoena the records of Rebecca’s primary care physician, Dr. Peggy Cheng, “from June 1, 2004 through December 31, 2005.” By that point, 10 years had passed since Rebecca had amended her estate plan. No one acknowledged on the record that medical providers are only required to keep patient records for seven years. See MCL 333.16213. On June 26, 2015, Dr. Cheng responded, “This is to inform you we have no records for the dates specified in the subpoena.” Petitioners attempted to clarify whether Dr. Cheng was Rebecca’s doctor at the relevant time but Rebecca had not come into the office, whether Dr. Cheng was Rebecca’s doctor at the relevant time but had not kept records that far back, or whether Dr. Cheng meant to convey that she was not Rebecca’s doctor in 2004 and 2005. After an additional order from the court, Dr. Cheng finally answered “that she didn’t have any records at all during the timeframe,” which everyone took to mean that Dr. Cheng had not kept any patient records that far back in time.

Petitioners then sought an order compelling Katherine to produce information regarding Rebecca’s health insurance providers. Katherine indicated that Rebecca received Medicare and was insured by Blue Cross/Blue Shield. Petitioners again hit a dead end as Blue Cross/Blue Shield indicated that it possessed no records earlier than 2008 and Medicare indicated that the requested records were not available.

From the beginning of the case, petitioners had claimed that they could testify to their personal knowledge regarding Rebecca’s condition. Petitioners’ next step was to submit affidavits describing their perception of Rebecca’s capacity. Each described that Rebecca had been diagnosed with “severe vascular dementia” in March 2008, severely limiting her physical and mental condition. This diagnosis was not sudden, but represented the culmination of many years of declining health. In August 2007, Rebecca suffered a series of mini-strokes as a result of skipping her blood pressure medication.

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in Re Rebecca L Clemence Revocable Trust, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-rebecca-l-clemence-revocable-trust-michctapp-2017.