In Re the Guardianship of Hinerman, Unpublished Decision (11-1-2001)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 2001
DocketCase No. 00CA1.
StatusUnpublished

This text of In Re the Guardianship of Hinerman, Unpublished Decision (11-1-2001) (In Re the Guardianship of Hinerman, Unpublished Decision (11-1-2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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In Re the Guardianship of Hinerman, Unpublished Decision (11-1-2001), (Ohio Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY This is an appeal from a Hocking County Common Pleas Court, Probate Division, judgment which found a "de facto guardianship" over the estate of Sara E. Hinerman. The following error is assigned for our review:

"THE COURT BELOW ERRED IN ASSERTING A `DE FACTO' CONTINUING JURISDICTION OVER A NON-RESIDENT ADULT WARD WHOSE STATUS AS WARD WAS ORIGINALLY ESTABLISHED SOLELY ON THE BASIS OF MINORITY."

The facts in this case are relatively undisputed. Sara E. Hinerman was born on March 10, 1976. From birth Sara has suffered from "cerebral palsy with mento-motor retardation" as well as a host of other related medical conditions. She was a member of the "Dalkon shield" class action litigation and, in 1993, settled her claim with the pertinent defendants.

On September 8, 1993, Sara's parents filed an "application for appointment of guardian of minor" with the Probate Court.1 The stated reason for the application was that "authority [was] required to settle a claim on behalf of said minor and to thereafter administer the minor's estate." The following month the Probate Court issued two judgment entries that appointed the parents as co-guardians of Sara's estate and appointed Appellant Marie Hinerman (n/k/a Marie Patton), Sara's mother, as sole guardian of Sara's person.

At the time the parties created the guardianship, Sara was seventeen years of age. After Sara turned eighteen, both parties continued to operate as if the guardianship was still in effect. Various accounts and applications were filed over the ensuing years. In May of 1996, Sara moved to Florida with appellant and they both currently reside in that state.

During a 1999 hearing, one of the parties raised a question as to whether the Probate Court had jurisdiction over Sara in view of the fact that she had reached the age of majority and was no longer an Ohio resident. The trial court gave each party the opportunity to submit memoranda on the issue. Appellee Roger Hinerman, Sara's father, argued that although Sara's guardianship may have initially been created because his daughter was a minor, all parties had continued to operate as if the guardianship was created because Sara was incompetent. Appellee also argued that Sara had more "contacts" with Ohio than any other place.

Appellant argued that whatever basis the parties may have mistakenly operated under as to the reason for the existence of the guardianship, the fact remains that the guardianship was created solely for the reason that Sara was a minor. Appellant further argued that (1) no basis exists for converting a minority guardianship into one for an incompetent, and (2) the minority guardianship automatically terminated once Sara reached the age of majority. Thus, appellant concluded, the Probate Court had no further jurisdiction over this matter.

At a November 8, 1999 hearing no disagreement existed that Sara is incompetent and needs a guardianship to further monitor/control her financial affairs.2 Appellant also testified that she had initiated guardianship proceedings in Florida and that she was amenable to her ex-husband (appellee) continuing to serve as co-guardian of Sara's estate.

On December 15, 1999, the trial Court issued its judgment and found,inter alia, that a "de facto guardianship of the estate of Sara Hinerman" exists. The court acknowledged that it found "no case law dispositive" of this issue. However, in a very detailed explanation of its reasoning, the court noted that the parties had treated this case as if the guardianship had been created on the basis of Sara's incompetency. The court noted that the "singular act, or more accurately, omission that would take this case from a de facto guardianship to a de jure guardianship" was the investigation of Sara's incompetency which the parties do not dispute. This appeal followed.

In her sole assignment of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred by adjudicating the existence of a "de facto" guardianship. We agree.

Our review of the court file reveals that Sara's guardianship was initiated on the basis of Sara's minority. This reason appears in her parents' application3 and this is the trial court's reason for appointing them co-guardians of Sara's estate.4 We find nothing in the record to indicate that the parties sought guardianship on any basis other than Sara's minority or that the trial court appointed them as guardians for any reason other than Sara's minority. Moreover, there is no question that Sara has reached the age of majority.

The only statutory provision that addresses the status of a minority guardianship after the ward reaches the age of majority is R.C. 2111.46. This provision specifies that "[w]hen a guardian has been appointed for a minor before such minor is over fourteen years of age, such guardian's power shall continue until the ward arrives at the age of majority . . ." Obviously, that statute has no application in circumstances like the cause sub judice, in which the guardian was appointed after the ward's fourteenth birthday. Nevertheless, case law provides that a minority guardianship terminates once the ward is no longer a minor. See e.g.Seguin v. Gallo (1985), 21 Ohio App.3d 163, 164, 486 N.E.2d 1270, 1272;In re Estate of Streit (C.P. 1901), 12 Ohio Dec. 158, 161, as well as a number of treatises on the subject. See e.g. 2 Merrick-Rippner, Probate Law (1997) 98 101, §§ 66.01 66.10; 1 Anderson's, Ohio Probate Practice and Procedure (7th Ed. 1997) 563, § 32.02; 53 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d (2001) 203, Guardian and Ward, § 195. We therefore hold that the guardianship in the case sub judice terminated once Sara reached the age of majority.5

The trial court implicitly acknowledged that the minority guardianship had terminated. The court reasoned, however, that a "de facto" guardianship had also been formed on the basis of Sara's incompetence. The gist of the court's rationale was as follows:

"The singular act, or more accurately, omission that would take this case from a de facto guardianship to a de jure guardianship, was the appointment of an investigator, issuance of a report, and the investigator's return filed with the Court speaking to delivery of notice of hearing on guardianship with ancillary explanation of potential ward's rights, to the potential ward. In all other regards, from September 3, 1993, the proceedings of Case No. 932012 have proceeded on the basis of guardianship proceedings for an incompetent. For this Court to find, in the face of all the referred to undisputed facts of this case, that a guardianship of an incompetent has not existed since March 10, 1994, would be the worst form of legal fiction."

We have no doubt that the trial court struggled over this decision. Its judgment, issued more than a month after the hearing and spanning sixteen (16) pages, reveals considered and careful thought. Nevertheless, we must respectfully disagree with the underlying opinion that a de facto guardianship is recognized by Ohio law.

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486 N.E.2d 1270 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1985)
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74 Ohio St. 3d 19 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1995)

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In Re the Guardianship of Hinerman, Unpublished Decision (11-1-2001), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-guardianship-of-hinerman-unpublished-decision-11-1-2001-ohioctapp-2001.