White v. Harold L.

730 S.E.2d 213, 222 N.C. App. 277, 2012 WL 3171558, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 958
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 7, 2012
DocketNO. COA11-1351
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 730 S.E.2d 213 (White v. Harold L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Harold L., 730 S.E.2d 213, 222 N.C. App. 277, 2012 WL 3171558, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 958 (N.C. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

MARTIN, Chief Judge.

Michael David Bland, in his capacity as Collector of the Estate of Audree Shore Mills, appeals from the trial court’s order denying a motion for partial summary judgment — originally filed by then-plaintiff Ray C. White, in his capacity as Guardian of the Estate of Audree Shore Mills — and entering partial summary judgment in favor of the following defendants: Harold L. and Audree S. Mills Charitable Remainder Unitrust; Fletcher L. Hartsell, Jr., in his capacity as Trustee of the Harold L. and Audree S. Mills Charitable Remainder Unitrust; H & A Mills Properties, LLC; the Estate of Harold L. Mills (“Mr. Mills’ Estate”); Edmond Thomas Hartsell, in his capacities as Manager of H & A Mills Properties, LLC, as Executor of Mr. Mills’ Estate, and as an individual; and McGill Baptist Church of Concord, North Carolina, Inc. For the reasons stated, we vacate the trial court’s order.

On 27 August 1996, Audree Shore Mills executed an eight-page durable power of attorney (“the 1996 POA”), in which she appointed her husband Harold L. Mills or Central Carolina Bank and Trust Company to serve as her attorney-in-fact and conveyed upon them the power and authority to act on her behalf with respect to a number of matters, including: to collect and control “any sums of money”; to sell or otherwise dispose of “all or any part of [Mrs. Mills’] real or personal property or [her] interest in such property”; to continue to own or to “form initially” and operate “any business interest” and to dispose of any part of such business interest; to borrow or lend [279]*279money “upon any terms and conditions”; to register, hold, and vote any securities; to make gifts of Mrs. Mills’ real or personal property; and to assign, transfer, and convey “all or any part of [Mrs. Mills’] real or personal property” to any revocable trust established by Mrs. Mills or by her attorney-in-fact during her lifetime. In addition, Article VII, Paragraph F of the 1996 POA provided the following further instructions:

If this Power of Attorney has not been registered in an office of the register of deeds in any county in North Carolina, then in addition to the methods of revocation provided by [N.C.G.S. § 32A 13(b)], this Power of Attorney may be revoked by my executing and acknowledging, in the manner provided for execution of durable powers of attorney in Article 2 of Chapter 32A of the General Statutes of North Carolina, a subsequent Power of Attorney, a copy of which is delivered to the Attorney-in-Fact acting under this Power of Attorney in person or to such person’s last known address by certified or registered mail, return receipt requested.

The 1996 POA was not recorded in the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds until 14 December 2009.

However, on 21 June 2005 — almost five years before the 1996 POA was recorded — Mrs. Mills executed another, durable power of attorney (“the 2005 POA”), in which she appointed only her husband to serve as her attorney-in-fact. In contrast to the detailed terms of the eight-page 1996 POA, the 2005 POA was a two-page short form durable power of attorney, which borrowed its content from a then-outdated version of N.C.G.S. § 32A l1, and indicated Mrs. Mills’ intent-by-check-mark that Mr. Mills was authorized to act on her behalf with respect to the following matters: “Real property transactions”; [280]*280“Personal property transactions”; “Banking transactions”; “Personal relationships and affairs”; and “Tax.” The 2005 POA did not, by its enumerated terms, expressly revoke the then-as-yet-unrecorded 1996 POA, and was itself recorded with the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds on 24 June 2005.

In September 2005, Mr. Mills’ nephew filed a Petition for Adjudication of Incompetence and Application for Appointment of Guardian, by which he sought to have Mrs. Mills declared incompetent. Almost a year-and-a-half later, on 28 December 2006, H & A Mills Properties, LLC (“the LLC”) was formed by operating agreement, establishing Mr. and Mrs. Mills as the LLC’s sole and equal members, and designating E. Thomas Hartsell and Mr. Mills as its managers. Within the next week, two non-warranty deeds were recorded, one in Mecklenburg County and one in Cabarrus County, conveying a total of sixteen tracts of land from Mr. and Mrs. Mills to the LLC. The following month, on 9 February 2007, the Harold L. and Audree S. Mills Charitable Remainder Unitrust (“the Unitrust”) was established by an instrument that named Mr. and Mrs. Mills as the Unitrust’s grantors and Fletcher L. Hartsell, Jr. as its trustee, and provided that “100% of the ownership interest of the [LLC]” would constitute the original property of the Unitrust. According to the record, the establishing instruments of both the LLC and the Unitrust were each signed once by Mrs. Mills on her own behalf, and twice by Mr. Mills; once on his own behalf, and once on behalf of Mrs. Mills as her attorney-in-fact. The deeds conveying the real property from Mr. and Mrs. Mills to the LLC were not signed by Mrs. Mills, and were instead signed twice by Mr. Mills; once on his own behalf, and once on behalf of Mrs. Mills as her attorney-in-fact.

On 1 May 2008, Mrs. Mills was adjudicated incompetent by the Cabarrus County Clerk of Superior Court and, three months later, Ray C. White was appointed to serve as Guardian of the Estate of Audree Shore Mills (“Mrs. Mills’ Estate”). On 9 September 2008, Mr. White, in his capacity as Guardian of Mrs. Mills’ Estate, filed a complaint against defendants in which he challenged the formation of the LLC and of the Unitrust based on Mrs. Mills’ incompetence and based on claims of unjust enrichment, breach of fiduciary duties, constructive fraud, and conversion. In addition to seeking damages and attorney’s fees, Mr. White asked the trial court to rescind the transfers of real property to the LLC, to rescind the transfer of the LLC’s assets to the Unitrust, and to return the real property or the proceeds of any subsequent sale of such properties to Mr. and Mrs. Mills’ respective [281]*281estates. Mr. White then moved for summary judgment as to six of his ten claims.

Since the 1996 POA was not recorded at the time that Mr. White was appointed to serve as Guardian of Mrs. Mills’ Estate, Mr. White first learned of the existence of the 1996 POA only after it was recorded in the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds — less than three hours before the court heard arguments regarding his motion for partial summary judgment on 14 December 2009. Four days later, Mr. White recorded a Revocation of Durable Power of Attorney with the Cabarrus County Register of Deeds, in which he sought to revoke the 1996 POA in accordance with his authority as Guardian pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 32A 10(a), based on allegations that the 1996 POA was recorded “by a third party with no apparent standing to file [the document] and no authorization from Audree S. Mills, an adjudicated incompetent, from [Mr. White,] as Guardian of the Estate of Audree S. Mills, or from Harold L. Mills, deceased, to file [the document].”

About six weeks later, on 29 January 2010, Mrs. Mills died. The following week, defendants moved to dismiss the complaint on the grounds that, pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 35A 1295, Mr. White’s powers and duties to serve as Guardian of Mrs. Mills’ Estate and to maintain the underlying action terminated upon Mrs. Mills’ death and, therefore, Mr. White lacked standing to prosecute the claims further. Mr. White moved to stay the proceedings pending the appointment of a personal representative of, or a collector for, Mrs. Mills’ Estate.

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Related

Bland v. Mills
Court of Appeals of North Carolina, 2014

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Bluebook (online)
730 S.E.2d 213, 222 N.C. App. 277, 2012 WL 3171558, 2012 N.C. App. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-harold-l-ncctapp-2012.