Polly Sue Pickens v. Murl Louise Tribble and Janet Pearl Sargent

783 S.E.2d 310, 236 W. Va. 670, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 111
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 2016
Docket14-1060
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 783 S.E.2d 310 (Polly Sue Pickens v. Murl Louise Tribble and Janet Pearl Sargent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Polly Sue Pickens v. Murl Louise Tribble and Janet Pearl Sargent, 783 S.E.2d 310, 236 W. Va. 670, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 111 (W. Va. 2016).

Opinion

KETCHUM, Chief Justice:

The litigants in this matter,are three adult sisters, Polly Pickens, Hurl Tribble and Janet Sargent, involved in a dispute over the Estate of their deceased mother, Louise Pickens (the “mother”).

Polly Pickens (“Pickens”), the petitioner and defendant below, appeals from the September 5, 2014, order of the Circuit Court of Mason County which denied her motion for a new trial. During the trial, Tribble and Sargent, the respondents and plaintiffs below, asserted'that, from the death of their father in 1988 to the death of their mother in 2005, Pickens hád a fiduciary relationship with their mother. "Pickens allegédly breached that relationship through the creation of various joint accounts with her mother, with the right of survivorship, through which Pickens ultimately acquired thousands of dollars of their mother’s funds. In addition, Tribble and Sargent asserted that Pickens breached her fiduciary duties as Executrix under their mother’s Will by not disclosing the joint accounts on the inventory form for non-probate assets. The jury awarded Tribble and Sargent damages in the amount of $94,124.00 which the circuit court directed to be. paid into the Estate. 1

Setting forth a number of assignments of error, Pickens principally contends that the circuit court committed error in ruling, as a matter of law, that Pickens had a fiduciary relationship with her mother from the death of the father in 1988 until July 7, 2000, at which time the mother gave Pickens general and medical powers of attorney. Pickens maintains that, prior to July 7, 2000, her relationship with her mother was merely familial, rather than fiduciary. In the alternative to a new trial, Pickens asks this Court to dismiss Tribble’s and Sargent’s action as untimely under the statute of limitations.

For the reasons stated below, this Court finds Pickens’s assignments of error to be without merit, including her assignments concerning the fiduciary relationship and the statute of limitations. The circuit court’s order of September 5, 2014, which denied Pick-ens’s motion for a new trial is, therefore, affirmed. 2

*673 I. Factual Background

The funds Tribble and Sargent allege that Pickens wrongfully acquired, and as subsequently determined by the jury, were in the form of certificates of deposit, United States Savings Bonds and a checking account. Of those three items, the certificates of deposit comprise the major portion of Tribble’s and Sargent’s claims. The following is a brief history of the transactions which occurred prior to the. filing, of the complaint. .

On April 11,. 1988, the parties’ father, Charles Pickens, died. The appraisement of his Estate named the mother, age seventy, as his surviving spouse and fiduciary. Pickens was named as the “preparer” on the ap-praisement form. Included in the father’s probate documents was. an inventory of non-probate assets which listed forty-three certif-' icates of deposit jointly owned by; the father and the mother: fifteen certificates issued by Citizens National of Point Pleasant, West Virginia, (now Peoples Bank) and twenty-eight certificates issued by the Putnam County Bank at Hurricane, West Virginia.

Between the father’s death in 1988 and July 2000, a-, great many transactions took place in which certificates of deposit were cashed, merged, renewed or newly purchased. As a result, by July 2000 approximately sixty-four certificates of deposit were issued, mostly by the Putnam County Bank, in the name of the mother “or” Pickens. According to Pickens, all such transactions were carried out by her mother, personally, without any influence or wrongdoing by Pick-ens. Neither Tribble nor Sargent were present when the transactions occurred. The face value of the sixty-four certificates ranged from $1,000.00, representing the majority of the certificates, to $30,000.00. 3 The certificates were kept in Pickens’s safety deposit box at the Putnam County Bank.- -

In the meantime, Pickehs assisted her mother in the preparation of a March 1 18, 2000, letter to the United States Treasury Department’s Bureau of the Public Debt. The letter stated that a number of United States Savings Bonds, purchased prior to the father’s death, were lost and needed to be replaced. The letter, signed by the mother, concluded: “I-am 82 years of age,-,and am finding it very-difficult to get all my personal business taken care of.” Ultimately, the Savings Bonds were -reissued with an aggregate face value of $5,050.00. The reissued Bonds were in the name of -the mother .“or” Pickens and under Pickens’s .Social Security number.

On July 7, 2Ó00, the mother executed a General Power of Attorney which authorized Pickens to act as the mother’s attomey-in-fact in all matters, including real estate and banking transactions. 4 In conjunction with the General Power of Attorney, the mother executed a Medical Power of Attorney,, also dated July 7, 2000, which authorized Pickens to make health care decisions on the mother’s behalf in the event of the mother’s incapacity.

By deed made on February 20, 2002, the mother conveyed 35.42 acres in Union District, Mason County, to Pickens, subject to the reservation of a life , estate for the mother’s benefit. The consideration for the conveyance, from parent to child, was “less, than $100.00.” In an affidavit dated September 24, 2010, Rosalee Juba-Plumley, the lawyer who prepared the deed and notarized the mother’s signature, stated that she told the mother that the deed did not have to be recorded. Shortly after the mother’s death, *674 Pickens recorded -the deed. According to Pickens, it was her mother’s wish that the deed not be recorded during the mother’s lifetime. In the complaint, Tribble and Sargent challenged the validity of the February 20, 2002, deed. However, the circuit court entered a judgment as a matter of law in favor of Pickens on that issue, and the validity of the deed is not before this Court in this appeal.

In August 2004, Pickens established a joint checking account at the Putnam' County Bank in- her and her mother’s names. The record indicates that the initial deposit of $11,623.72 consisted of the mother’s funds from the Peoples Bank in Point Pleasant. Pickens maintained that opening the account at the Putnam County Bank made it easier to pay individuals who provided care for her mother.

On January 6, 2006; the parties’ mother, age eighty-seven, died of a stroke. 5 The mother’s Will had been made on October 2, 1980. The father having predeceased the mother, the Will provided that the mother’s property would go to her three daughters, Tribble, Sargent and Pickens, equally, “share and share alike.” The Will named Pickens as Executrix and probate of the Estate was conducted in Putnam County where the mother last resided. 6

Included in the probate documents for the mother’s Estate was an inventory form for non-probate assets signed by Pickens on April 19, 2005. The Savings Bonds, valued at $5,050.00, were noted on the form.

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783 S.E.2d 310, 236 W. Va. 670, 2016 W. Va. LEXIS 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/polly-sue-pickens-v-murl-louise-tribble-and-janet-pearl-sargent-wva-2016.