Snizaski v. Public School Employees' Retirement Board

69 A.3d 170, 620 Pa. 449, 2013 WL 2401038, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1041
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 28, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 A.3d 170 (Snizaski v. Public School Employees' Retirement Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snizaski v. Public School Employees' Retirement Board, 69 A.3d 170, 620 Pa. 449, 2013 WL 2401038, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1041 (Pa. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice McCAFFERY.

The issue before this Court is as follows:

Whether the Commonwealth Court correctly interpreted 24 Pa.C.S. § 8507(e) to require in this case that a Public School Employees’ Retirement System nomination of benefits form must have been completed entirely in the hand of the member/decedent in order to effectuate a valid change of beneficiary designation.

Snizaski v. Public School Employees’ Retirement Board, 606 Pa. 87, 995 A.2d 334 (2010) (per curiam).

We conclude that the Commonwealth Court erred, and hold that the Public School Employees’ Retirement Board (the “Board”) correctly determined that, under the pertinent findings of fact, Section 8507(e) of the Public School Employees’ Retirement Code (the “Code”)1 allows for the distribution of the retirement benefits at issue to Appellant.2 Accordingly, we vacate the Commonwealth Court’s order and remand for consideration of any other issues raised by Appellees to the extent that they have been properly preserved.

[172]*172On June 11, 2002, Sandra N. Lapcevic (“Decedent”) retired at age 57 from her position as a public school teacher employed by the Penn Hills School District. On May 6, 2002, Decedent, who had never married and had no children, submitted an application for retirement (the “first nomination form”) to the Public School Employees’ Retirement System (“PSERS”) in which she designated her mother, Helen Lapcevic, as the primary beneficiary of her pension death benefit and two friends, Karen Snizaski and Christine Vilsack, as contingent beneficiaries, who would each receive fifty percent of the death benefit if Helen Lapcevic pre-deceased Decedent.

Slightly more than one month after Decedent’s retirement, on July 15, 2002, Helen Lapcevic died. On August 2, 2002, PSERS received a nomination of beneficiary form (the “second nomination form”) naming Willette Galman, Appellant herein, as the primary beneficiary of Decedent’s death benefit.3 Portions of the second nomination form had been completed by Appellant, but not Decedent’s signature, her social security number, or the date on the form. Hearing Officer’s Opinion and Recommendation, dated 3/10/08, at 12, Finding of Fact No. 50, as adopted by the Board’s Opinion and Order, dated 6/24/08, at 3. Although Appellant was listed as the sole primary beneficiary, the second nomination form provided that she receive only fifty percent of the funds. Snizaski and Vilsack remained as contingent beneficiaries, with each woman slated to receive twenty-five percent of the death benefit.

PSERS returned the second nomination form to Decedent on October 19, 2002, with a letter explaining that the document could not be processed because it did not distribute one hundred percent of the death benefit payable to each beneficiary class. The letter also stated that if the problem could be rectified without altering the existing information, Decedent could simply insert additional information on the same document; however, in the event that Decedent might seek to modify the existing percentages printed on the document, a blank nomination of beneficiary form was enclosed to serve as a replacement.

Appellant altered the second nomination form (at Decedent’s direction, according to Appellant’s testimony) by first applying a white-out solution to the areas where the death benefit percentages were printed. Hearing Officer’s Opinion and Recommendation at 12-13, Findings of Fact Nos. 53-57, as adopted and modified by the Board’s Opinion and Order at 3. Appellant then wrote in new percentages indicating that she was to receive one hundred percent of the death benefit as primary beneficiary, and Snizaski and Vilsack each would be entitled to fifty percent of the benefit in their capacity as contingent beneficiaries. Decedent did not re-sign or re-date the document, nor did she initial the changes made by Appellant. Hearing Officer’s Opinion and Recommendation at 6, Finding of Fact No. 13, as adopted by the Board’s Opinion and Order at 3. The modi-[173]*173fíed second nomination form was then returned to PSERS, which received it on October 29, 2002. Id., Finding of Fact No. 11.

Following receipt of the altered form, PSERS notified Decedent by letter dated December 27, 2002, that the modified second nomination form had been “received and processed.” Id., Finding of Fact No. 14. This same letter informed Decedent that if she desired to make any future change to her beneficiary nomination, she must obtain, complete, and forward to PSERS “for processing” a new nomination of beneficiary form. Id. at 7, Finding of Fact No. 14. Critically, Decedent made no further beneficiary changes after receiving PSERS’s letter of December 27, 2002. Board’s Opinion and Order at 5, Finding of Fact No. 58.

Decedent’s mental and physical condition began to deteriorate in 2004, and she was hospitalized for various physical infirmities. On October 18, 2004, she was adjudicated a totally incapacitated person in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County. The trial court appointed Dianne Spivak, a social worker, to serve as Decedent’s permanent plenary guardian. On December 13, 2004, PSERS received a new nomination of beneficiary form (the “third nomination form”), signed by Spi-vak, naming Snizaski, Vilsack, Laura Lap-cevic, and Joseph Lapcevic as the primary beneficiaries of Decedent’s death benefit.

Decedent died on February 11, 2006, with more than $688,000 in her PSERS account. When PSERS subsequently concluded that the primary beneficiaries were Snizaski, Vilsack, and the Lapeevics, Appellant requested an administrative hearing with the Board seeking to challenge that determination on the ground that Spi-vak lacked authority to designate new beneficiaries without approval from the common pleas court. The administrative proceedings were stayed pending resolution of the matter in the common pleas court, which ultimately agreed with Appellant that Spivak lacked authority to change beneficiaries under Section 5536(b) of the Probate, Estates, and Fiduciaries Code, 20 Pa.C.S. § 5536(b).4 For this reason, the court ruled that the third nomination form submitted by Spivak was a nullity-

Following the common pleas court’s ruling, the Board set aside the third nomination form and ordered an administrative hearing to determine how the death benefit should be distributed; that is, should the Board distribute the funds in accordance with the second nomination form, naming Appellant as sole primary beneficiary (the nomination form at issue), or distribute the funds in accordance with the first nomination form. The hearing officer conducted a hearing on September 12, 2007, where evidence was presented regarding, among other things, Appellant’s role with respect to the second nomination form and PSERS’s guidelines for processing such forms.5

Marla Cattermole, the manager of the department that oversees disability and death benefit payments for PSERS, testified that, during the relevant period, PSERS had an internal policy that nomination of beneficiary forms containing information that had been altered using white-out solution were to be rejected un[174]*174less the changes were initialed by the PSERS member, in order to prevent fraud and to honor only the clear intent of the member.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Verizon Pennsylvania, Inc. v. Commonwealth
72 A.3d 799 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A.3d 170, 620 Pa. 449, 2013 WL 2401038, 2013 Pa. LEXIS 1041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snizaski-v-public-school-employees-retirement-board-pa-2013.