R. Michael DeGroat v. Lucinda A. Papa

CourtCourt of Chancery of Delaware
DecidedApril 30, 2020
DocketC.A. No. 12738-VCZ
StatusPublished

This text of R. Michael DeGroat v. Lucinda A. Papa (R. Michael DeGroat v. Lucinda A. Papa) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Chancery of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. Michael DeGroat v. Lucinda A. Papa, (Del. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CHANCERY OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE

In the matter of the Estate of RICHARD ) L. DEGROAT, deceased. ) ) R. MICHAEL DEGROAT, Individually ) and as Executor of the Estate of Richard L. ) DeGroat, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) and ) ) CARROLL IACOVETTI and JAN ) C.A. No. 12738-VCZ DEGROAT, ) ) Plaintiff-Intervenors, ) ) v. ) ) LUCINDA A. PAPA a/k/a LUCINDA M. ) PAPA a/k/a LUCINDA P. DEGROAT ) a/k/a LUCINDA A. ZIATYK and ) MICHAEL ZIATYK, ) ) Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Date Submitted: January 14, 2020 Date Decided: April 30, 2020

David J. Ferry, Jr. and Brian J. Ferry, FERRY JOSEPH, P.A., Wilmington, Delaware, Attorneys for Plaintiff and Plaintiff-Intervenors R. Michael DeGroat, Carroll Iacovetti, and Jan DeGroat.

Jason C. Powell, THE POWELL FIRM, LLC, Wilmington, Delaware, Attorney for Defendants Lucinda A. Papa and Michael Ziatyk.

ZURN, Vice Chancellor. The children and first ex-wife of Richard DeGroat, who is deceased, contend

that his second ex-wife, Lucinda Papa, misappropriated his assets during his life

and upon his death.1 In his final years, and years after their divorce, Richard

willingly sought Lucinda’s help with his affairs and her companionship. Although

the two had not been in touch for a number of years, the role seemed fitting, as

Lucinda has substantial business experience and Richard was not close to his

family. Instead of honoring this relationship and the trust Richard instilled in her,

Lucinda took advantage of the opportunity to take his assets. This post-trial

opinion concludes that Richard needed and accepted Lucinda’s help with his

finances, but that Richard did not intend to give all of his assets to Lucinda.

Rather, Lucinda used her access to Richard’s assets to improperly take them for

herself.

I. BACKGROUND

Richard was a very intelligent and well-read man who followed financial

news and was active in managing his assets.2 He was stubborn and not easily

1 In this family dispute, I use the parties’ first names in pursuit of clarity. I intend no familiarity or disrespect. Citations in the form of “[Name] Tr. ––” refer to witness testimony from the trial transcripts. Citations in the form of “[Name] Dep. ––” refer to deposition transcripts in the record. Citations in the form of “PTO ¶ ––” refer to stipulated facts in the pre-trial order. See Docket Item (“D.I.”) 218. Citations in the form of “JX –– at ––” refer to a trial exhibit. 2 Papa Tr. 810:7–10; Tavani Tr. 192:21–193:5, R. M. DeGroat 463:7–14; A. J. DeGroat 578:5–9; G. R. Spritz 327:13–17.

1 persuaded.3 Lucinda is also very intelligent, with a keen mind for business and

entrepreneurship. She holds a bachelor’s degree in economics, has worked in audit

management, and has practiced as a certified public accountant.4 Lucinda, too, is

stubborn: she wanted more of Richard’s assets than she received out of her

divorce, and engaged in a persistent course of conduct to obtain them. Lucinda’s

testimony concerning the financial agreements she and Richard purportedly

reached, and the manner in which she managed Richard’s affairs, is contradictory

and unsubstantiated by any contemporaneous evidence. Lucinda’s credibility

leaves much to be desired.

A. Richard’s Two Marriages, Children, And Two Divorces.

Richard married plaintiff Jan DeGroat in 1954, had five children with her,

and divorced her in 1978.5 Richard and Jan’s children are plaintiff R. Michael

DeGroat, Thomas DeGroat, plaintiff Carroll Iacovetti, Brian DeGroat, and Andrew

DeGroat.6 In that divorce, Richard was represented by counsel, and the couple

executed a written divorce agreement.7

3 Papa Tr. 961:7–10; Iacovetti Tr. 747:15–17. 4 Papa Tr. 807:13–808:9, 943:18–20. 5 PTO ¶ 2 at 1–3. 6 J. DeGroat Tr. 771:8–13. 7 J. DeGroat Tr. 771:21–773:14.

2 On September 9, 1978, Richard married defendant Lucinda Papa, who was

twenty-one years his junior.8 When they married, Richard’s earning potential was

declining, while Lucinda’s was rising.9 In fact, Richard stopped working

altogether, while Lucinda worked hard and grew a successful women’s clothing

company.10 During their marriage, Lucinda and Richard agreed that Lucinda

would fund all of their expenditures and taxable savings with her earnings, while

their retirements would be funded by Richard’s growing tax-deferred savings.11 In

2001, Lucinda and Richard purchased 3 Somerset Lane, Newark, Delaware 19711

(the “Property”) as tenants by the entirety.12 Lucinda’s relationships with

Richard’s children were cordial and positive.13

In both of his marriages, Richard was stubborn and abusive.14 Richard and

Lucinda separated in 2000, reconciled, and separated again in 2004.15 Richard and

Lucinda divorced on July 25, 2008.16 There is no written divorce agreement or

8 PTO ¶ 2 at 4–5. 9 Papa Tr. 812:9–813:21, 819:3–13. 10 Papa Tr. 813:22–814:16, 818:2–10, 819:3–4. 11 Papa Tr. 817:4–22. 12 Papa Tr. 827:13–18. 13 Papa Tr. 834:2–835:19. 14 J. DeGroat Tr. 771:23–772:1; Papa Tr. 821:13–20, 823:22–826:18, 845:8–14. 15 R. M. DeGroat Tr. 375:16–18, 376:18–21; Papa Tr. 823:22–826:18, 828:6–20. 16 PTO ¶ 2 at 6.

3 property division from their divorce.17 According to Lucinda, she and Richard

maintained their marital financial agreement, by which Richard would retain her as

the beneficiary of his retirement assets, after the divorce.18 This agreement was not

documented, and I do not believe it existed.19 The evidence shows that at the time

of their divorce, Richard and Lucinda agreed to remove each other as beneficiaries

on their Vanguard accounts.20 Richard also removed Lucinda as the beneficiary to

his Penn Mutual and Lincoln Financial Group life insurance policies in 2007.21

Richard made Jan the primary beneficiary on his Vanguard Individual Retirement

17 Papa Tr. 955:21–957:20. 18 Papa Tr. 817:4–22, 830:10–18, 886:12–887:3. 19 See JX 35; Papa Tr. 955:21–957:20. The only evidence Lucinda offers to support her purported agreement with Richard is his December 15, 2011, call with Vanguard. That evidence refutes the terms of the purported agreement. In that call, Richard was attempting to remove Lucinda’s name from his accounts, and he references their 2007 divorce. JX 18 at 77 (“And it’s mentioned in the divorce papers that the – there was no money amount transferred or one with the divorce, but the divorce papers indicate that the – that the financial arrangements were all not part of the divorce. The divorce says that they were agreed upon by the parties in the divorce. So that’s – that’s all I – that’s all I have. But, see, nothing does me any good if I can’t locate the party that’s on the – you know, the account. And I’m afraid she’s – I’m afraid, if her name is here, she can withdraw anything that’s in that account.”). This call does not evidence the terms of any divorce agreement, and indeed, Richard was trying to remove Lucinda from his accounts, counter to the terms of the agreement Lucinda seeks to prove. And in 2012, Richard continued to try to protect his assets from Lucinda, again while referencing his divorce. JX 23 at 138–39 (“And I’m trying to remove a person -- an ex-wife, really. And make sure that she has no way of getting her hands on any money that’s in those funds. We’re divorced and we had an agreement -- not part of the divorce, but a -- the divorce mentions a -- that we have -- we being my ex-wife and myself. A financial agreement, which we do. But now I’m trying to make sure that there’s no way she can go back and grab money in any of these funds.”). 20 See JX 2; JX 3; JX 4; JX 18 at 77; JX 23 at 138–39. 21 JX 6; JX 7.

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R. Michael DeGroat v. Lucinda A. Papa, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-michael-degroat-v-lucinda-a-papa-delch-2020.