Matter of Elizabeth Boyd

CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedAugust 11, 2014
Docket272, 2014
StatusPublished

This text of Matter of Elizabeth Boyd (Matter of Elizabeth Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of Elizabeth Boyd, (Del. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

§ § No. 272, 2014 In the Matter of ELIZABETH § BOYD, a disabled person. § Court Below: Court of Chancery § of the State of Delaware, § C.M. No. 16474-K-VCN §

Submitted: July 7, 2014 Decided: August 11, 2014

Before STRINE, Chief Justice, HOLLAND and RIDGELY, Justices.

ORDER

This 11th day of August 2014, upon consideration of the appellant’s opening

brief, the appellee’s motion to affirm, and the record in this case, it appears to the

Court that:

(1) The appellant, Charles T. Conaway, III, filed this appeal from the

April 30, 2014 opinion and order of the Court of Chancery appointing Senior

Partner, Inc. to act as guardian of the property of Elizabeth Boyd. Boyd is

Conaway’s mother. The appellee, Delaware Hospital for the Chronically Ill

(“DHCI”), has moved to affirm the Court of Chancery’s judgment on the ground

that it is manifest on the face of the opening brief that the appeal is without merit. 1

We agree and affirm.

1 Supr. Ct. R. 25(a). DHCI filed the motion to affirm in response to Conaway’s request for a stay pending appeal, which was docketed as his opening brief. The request for a stay was virtually (2) The record reflects that Conaway has had durable power of attorney

for Boyd since 1999. In 2003, Conaway executed an Irrevocable Trust Agreement

(the “Trust Agreement”) as trustee of the trust (the “Trust”) and as his mother’s

attorney in fact.2 The Trust Agreement states that the purpose of the Trust is to

make Boyd eligible for Medicaid.3 According to the Trust Agreement, Boyd’s

monthly social security benefits and two monthly International Brotherhood of

Electrical Workers pension payments are to be transferred to the Trust.4 After

certain designated monthly distributions, the remaining monthly income is to be

paid to the nursing facility at which Boyd received care.5 Upon Boyd’s death, the

trustee is required to distribute the entire Trust corpus, up to an amount equal to the

total amount of medical assistance paid to Boyd, to the State of Delaware.6 If the

identical to the opening brief Conaway subsequently filed, so we have treated the motion to affirm as if it was filed in response to the document Conaway titled as his brief. 2 Based on the record, it appears that DHCI was not aware of the Trust Agreement until Conaway presented it at the guardianship hearing. 3 Respondent’s Exhibit 2 § 2. To qualify for Medicaid, an individual may establish a Miller Trust and place their income in that trust. 16 Del. Admin. C. § 5100-20400.11.1. If the trust meets all of the requirements for exemption (for example, the trust must be irrevocable and only contain income), then the trust corpus is not counted as available to the individual in determining whether than individual qualifies for Medicaid. 16 Del. Admin. C. § 5100-20400.11.2. 4 Respondent’s Exhibit 2 § 1. 5 Id. § 3. 6 Id. § 4.

2 Trust corpus exceeds the amount of medical assistance paid to Boyd by the State,

then the excess will be paid to Boyd’s estate.7

(3) Boyd was a patient at the Delaware Psychiatric Center (“DPC”) from

2003 until June 2010. The DPC received Boyd’s monthly social security benefits.

After a boiler explosion at the DPC building where Boyd lived, she was transferred

to DHCI in July 2010.

(4) After Boyd’s admission, DHCI tried to work with Conaway in order

to obtain Medicaid for Boyd. DHCI’s daily rate for non-Medicaid patients is over

$500 a day, so DHCI tries to set patients up with Medicaid promptly. The

Medicaid office requested additional information concerning Boyd’s income,

including a survivor’s pension she was receiving, and DHCI asked Conaway to

provide the requested information. He did not do so, and the Medicaid application

process could not be completed.

(5) DHCI also requested that Conaway arrange for Boyd’s pension

payments to be applied toward Boyd’s DHCI bill. Conaway arranged for Boyd’s

social security benefits ($1,213 a month) to apply to Boyd’s DHCI bill, but was

unwilling to arrange for DHCI to receive the pension payments. Throughout 2010

and 2011, DHCI asked Conaway to arrange for payment of the balance of Boyd’s

bill. Conaway took no action.

7 Id.

3 (6) On March 26, 2012, DHCI filed a petition for appointment of Senior

Partner, Inc., a professional guardian, as a permanent guardian of Boyd’s property

in the Court of Chancery. The petition stated that Boyd suffered from, among

other things, dementia, and that appointment of a guardian was necessary in order

to handle Boyd’s financial needs. William C. Wagner, II, Esquire was appointed

attorney ad litem for Boyd. Conaway objected to the guardianship petition and a

contested hearing was scheduled for November 2, 2012. The attorney ad litem

submitted reports recommending the appointment of Senior Partner, Inc. or another

court-supervised guardian as guardian of Boyd’s property and that Conaway

continue to be responsible for decisions concerning Boyd’s medical care.

(7) At the November 2, 2012 hearing, the master heard testimony from

Barbara Brogan, the DHCI administrator for financial determination. Conaway

chose not to testify, but made an opening and closing statement and extensively

cross-examined Brogan. At the conclusion of the hearing, the master issued a draft

oral report. The master found that Boyd suffered from dementia, Conaway was a

fiduciary as a result of the 1999 power of attorney and the Trust Agreement,

Conaway was responsible for arranging payment of his mother’s bills, and

Conaway breached his fiduciary duties by not cooperating with the Medicaid

application process and by not using the pension payments for his mother’s care.

The master recommended appointment of Senior Partner, Inc. as guardian of

4 Boyd’s property, removal of Conaway as trustee of the Trust, and appointment of

Senior Partner as trustee of the Trust.

(8) After the parties filed briefs on Conaway’s exceptions to the master’s

oral draft report, the master issued a final report on July 16, 2013. The parties then

submitted briefs to the vice chancellor. Following de novo review under Court of

Chancery Rule 144, the Court of Chancery adopted the master’s findings of fact

and conclusions of law. The Court of Chancery entered an order appointing Senior

Partner, Inc. as guardian of Boyd’s property and, to the extent there was a valid

irrevocable trust, removing Conaway as trustee and appointing Senior Partner, Inc.

as trustee. Conaway filed this appeal and sought a stay pending appeal of the

Court of Chancery’s order. The Court of Chancery denied Conaway’s request for

a stay on May 21, 2014.

(9) When reviewing a decision of the Court of Chancery, this Court

reviews rulings of law de novo.8 This Court will disturb factual findings only when

such findings are clearly wrong.9 Under 12 Del. C. § 3901, the Court of Chancery

may appoint a guardian for the property of a person who “[b]y reason of mental or

physical incapacity is unable properly to manage or care for their own person or

8 Kahn v. Household Acquisition Corp., 591 A.2d 166, 175-76 (Del. 1991). 9 Levin v. Smith, 513 A.2d 1292, 1301 (Del. 1986).

5 property, or both, and, in consequence thereof, is in danger of dissipating or losing

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