Hauser v. Hauser , 252 N.C. App. 10 ( 2017 )


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  •                IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA16-606
    Filed: 21 February 2017
    Forsyth County, No. 15CVS7698
    TERESA KAY HAUSER, Plaintiff,
    v.
    DARRELL S. HAUSER and ROBIN E. WHITAKER HAUSER, Defendants.
    Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 3 March 2016 by Judge John O. Craig,
    III, in Forsyth County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 16 November
    2016.
    The Law Office of Michelle Vincler, by Michelle Vincler, for plaintiff-appellant.
    David E. Shives, PLLC, by David E. Shives, for defendants-appellees.
    DAVIS, Judge.
    This appeal presents the issues of whether (1) North Carolina law recognizes
    a cause of action for tortious interference with an expected inheritance by a potential
    beneficiary during the lifetime of the testator; and (2) in cases where a living parent
    has grounds to bring claims for constructive fraud or breach of fiduciary duty such
    claims may be brought instead by a child of the parent based upon her anticipated
    loss of an expected inheritance. Teresa Kay Hauser (“Plaintiff”) appeals from the
    trial court’s 3 March 2016 order granting the motion to dismiss of Darrell S. Hauser
    and Robin E. Whitaker Hauser (collectively “Defendants”) as to her claims for tortious
    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    interference with an expected inheritance, constructive fraud, and breach of fiduciary
    duty as well as her request for an accounting.1 Because Plaintiff’s claims for relief
    are not legally viable in light of the facts she has alleged, we affirm the trial court’s
    order.
    Factual and Procedural Background
    We have summarized the pertinent facts below using Plaintiff’s own
    statements from her complaint, which we treat as true in reviewing the trial court’s
    order granting a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). Feltman v. City of Wilson,
    
    238 N.C. App. 246
    , 247, 
    767 S.E.2d 615
    , 617 (2014).
    Plaintiff and Darrell S. Hauser (“Darrell”) are the only children of Hilda Hege
    Hauser (“Mrs. Hauser”) and her late husband, James Hauser (“Mr. Hauser”). Before
    his death, Mr. Hauser set up a trust (the “Trust”), naming Edward Jones Investments
    as trustee and listing Plaintiff, Darrell, and Mrs. Hauser as the Trust’s beneficiaries.
    On 31 December 1998, Mrs. Hauser executed a will, devising all of her real and
    personal property to Plaintiff and Darrell per stirpes in the event that Mr. Hauser
    predeceased her. Her real property included a residence located on Harper Road in
    Lewisville, North Carolina (the “Harper Road Property”). The 1998 will also devised
    1The trial court also dismissed Plaintiff’s claim for undue influence but Plaintiff has not
    appealed the dismissal of that claim. See N.C. R. App. P. 28(a) (“The scope of review on appeal is
    limited to issues so presented in the several briefs. Issues not presented and discussed in a party’s
    briefs are deemed abandoned.”).
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    her residual estate to the trustee of the Hilda Hege Hauser Revocable Trust
    Agreement.
    On 8 March 2005, Mrs. Hauser executed a power of attorney, naming Plaintiff
    as her attorney-in-fact. In late 2011, Darrell’s wife, Robin Hauser (“Robin”), began
    caring for Mrs. Hauser.    Mrs. Hauser’s primary sources of income at this time
    consisted of payments from the Trust and her social security benefits. She also
    maintained checking and savings accounts with Wells Fargo.
    Beginning in December 2011, as a result of the exercise of undue influence over
    Mrs. Hauser by Defendants, Mrs. Hauser began transferring money from the Trust
    to her Wells Fargo accounts and withdrawing cash from these accounts. Between 27
    December 2011 and 24 April 2012, these transfers and withdrawals totaled
    approximately $20,000.
    During March 2012, Plaintiff “was alerted to questionable transfers of funds
    from the Trust to [Mrs.] Hauser’s Wells Fargo accounts by a trustee at Edward Jones
    Investments.” Upon learning of these transactions, Plaintiff transferred $12,000
    from Mrs. Hauser’s Wells Fargo account to Plaintiff’s personal account pursuant to
    her authority as Mrs. Hauser’s attorney-in-fact.
    On 12 July 2012, Mrs. Hauser revoked the 8 March 2005 power of attorney
    naming Plaintiff as her attorney-in-fact and executed a new power of attorney (the
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    “2012 Power of Attorney”), appointing Darrell as her attorney-in-fact.2 That same
    day, she executed a new will, which devised the Harper Road Property to Darrell and
    left the remainder of her real and personal property to Plaintiff and Darrell in equal
    shares.
    On 22 January 2015, Mrs. Hauser created the Hilda Hege Hauser Irrevocable
    Trust (the “Irrevocable Trust”). On that same day, she signed a quitclaim deed for
    the Harper Road Property to Darrell and an attorney, George M. Cleland, IV, as
    trustees of the Irrevocable Trust.
    Plaintiff filed a complaint in Forsyth County Superior Court on 17 December
    2015 alleging constructive fraud, breach of fiduciary duty, tortious interference with
    an expected inheritance, and undue influence. In her complaint, she sought, inter
    alia, the return of any of Mrs. Hauser’s funds that had been fraudulently transferred
    from her accounts, the removal of Darrell as Mrs. Hauser’s attorney-in-fact, the
    revocation of Mrs. Hauser’s July 2012 will, and an order requiring Darrell to “render
    an accounting of his actions as [Mrs.] Hauser’s attorney-in-fact from July 12, 2012 to
    the date of the filing of th[e] Complaint.”
    On 12 February 2016, Defendants filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule
    12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure and filed an answer twelve
    2   Mrs. Hauser was eighty-seven years old at the time she executed the 2012 Power of Attorney.
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    days later. A hearing was held on Defendants’ motion to dismiss before the Honorable
    John O. Craig, III, on 29 February 2016. On 3 March 2016, the trial court entered an
    order dismissing Plaintiff’s complaint. Plaintiff filed a timely notice of appeal.
    Analysis
    The standard of review of an order granting a Rule
    12(b)(6) motion is whether the complaint states a claim for
    which relief can be granted under some legal theory when
    the complaint is liberally construed and all the allegations
    included therein are taken as true. On appeal, we review
    the pleadings de novo to determine their legal sufficiency
    and to determine whether the trial court’s ruling on the
    motion to dismiss was correct.
    
    Feltman, 238 N.C. App. at 251
    , 767 S.E.2d at 619. “Dismissal is proper when one of
    the following three conditions is satisfied: (1) the complaint on its face reveals that
    no law supports the plaintiff’s claim; (2) the complaint on its face reveals the absence
    of facts sufficient to make a good claim; or (3) the complaint discloses some fact that
    necessarily defeats the plaintiff’s claim.” Podrebarac v. Horack, Talley, Pharr, &
    Lowndes, P.A., 
    231 N.C. App. 70
    , 74, 
    752 S.E.2d 661
    , 663 (2013) (citation omitted).
    I. Tortious Interference with an Expected Inheritance
    Plaintiff’s first argument on appeal is that the trial court erred in dismissing
    her claim for tortious interference with an expected inheritance. In support of this
    claim, Plaintiff alleges that Defendants’ wrongful acts in causing the transfer and
    withdrawal of Mrs. Hauser’s funds have “deplete[d] the assets of [her] eventual
    estate[,]” thereby diminishing Plaintiff’s expected inheritance.
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    In her brief, Plaintiff cites several cases from North Carolina’s appellate courts
    that she claims recognize the existence of a cause of action for tortious interference
    with an expected inheritance. See, e.g., Bohannon v. Wachovia Bank & Tr. Co., 
    210 N.C. 679
    , 685, 
    188 S.E. 390
    , 394 (1936) (“If the plaintiff can recover against the
    defendant for the malicious and wrongful interference with the making of a contract,
    we see no good reason why he cannot recover for the malicious and wrongful
    interference with the making of a will.”). However, none of the North Carolina cases
    cited by Plaintiff stand for the proposition that an expected beneficiary can bring such
    a claim during the lifetime of the testator.
    The legal invalidity of Plaintiff’s claim is clearly demonstrated by our Supreme
    Court’s decision in Holt v. Holt, 
    232 N.C. 497
    , 
    61 S.E.2d 448
    (1950). In Holt, the
    plaintiff brought an action for fraud and undue influence against his brothers in
    which he asserted that they had fraudulently induced their father to convey property
    to them prior to his death. 
    Id. at 499,
    61 S.E.2d at 450. The trial court dismissed the
    plaintiff’s action. 
    Id. Our Supreme
    Court affirmed, holding that the plaintiff lacked
    standing to maintain the action until such time as the will was declared to be invalid
    in a caveat proceeding. 
    Id. at 503,
    61 S.E.2d at 453. In its opinion, the Court stated
    the following:
    A child possesses no interest whatever in the
    property of a living parent. He has a mere intangible hope
    of succession. His right to inherit the property of his parent
    does not even exist during the lifetime of the latter. Such
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    right arises on the parent’s death, and entitles the child to
    take as heir or distributee nothing except the undevised
    property left by the deceased parent.
    In so far as his children are concerned, a parent has
    an absolute right to dispose of his property by gift or
    otherwise as he pleases. He may make an unequal
    distribution of his property among his children with or
    without reason. These things being true, a child has no
    standing at law or in equity either before or after the death
    of his parent to attack a conveyance by the parent as being
    without consideration, or in deprivation of his right of
    inheritance.
    When a person is induced by fraud or undue
    influence to make a conveyance of his property, a cause of
    action arises in his favor, entitling him, at his election,
    either to sue to have the conveyance set aside, or to sue to
    recover the damages for the pecuniary injury inflicted upon
    him by the wrong. But no cause of action arises in such case
    in favor of the child of the person making the conveyance
    for the very simple reason that the child has no interest in
    the property conveyed and consequently suffers no legal
    wrong as a result of the conveyance.
    
    Id. at 500-01,
    61 S.E.2d at 451-52 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted).
    The above-quoted principles remain the law of this State and defeat Plaintiff’s
    claim — brought during Mrs. Hauser’s lifetime — for tortious interference with an
    expected inheritance. All of the allegations in the complaint relate to property owned
    by Mrs. Hauser rather than by Plaintiff. Plaintiff filed this action solely on her own
    behalf rather than in a representative capacity on behalf of Mrs. Hauser. Indeed,
    Plaintiff makes no allegation that Mrs. Hauser has ever been adjudicated to be
    incompetent.
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    In her brief, Plaintiff acknowledges the novelty of her claim based on existing
    North Carolina law but nevertheless urges us to adopt the reasoning of the Maine
    Supreme Court in Harmon v. Harmon, 
    404 A.2d 1020
    (Me. 1979). In Harmon, a
    mother had executed a prior will under which one of her two sons — the plaintiff —
    would receive a one-half interest in her property upon her death, but her other son
    and his wife — the defendants — subsequently induced her to instead transfer all of
    her property to them, effectively disinheriting the plaintiff. 
    Id. at 1021.
    While the
    mother was still living, the plaintiff filed suit against the defendants for wrongful
    interference with an intended legacy, and the trial court dismissed the claim. 
    Id. at 1021-22.
    The Maine Supreme Court reversed the trial court’s order, holding that the
    Plaintiff had stated a valid claim for relief.
    We conclude that where a person can prove that, but
    for the tortious interference of another, he would in all
    likelihood have received a gift or a specific profit from a
    transaction, he is entitled to recover for the damages
    thereby done to him. We apply this rule to the case before
    us where allegedly the Defendant son and his wife have
    tortiously interfered with the Plaintiff son’s expectation
    that under his mother’s will he would receive a substantial
    portion of her estate.
    That an expectant legatee or an expectant heir has
    an interest of immediate economic value is implicit in the
    decisions holding that the expectant heir may effectively
    convey his interest for valuable consideration. Protection of
    this interest from tortious interference comports with
    recognition of this valuable right.
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    
    Id. at 1024-25
    (internal citations omitted).
    Even if we were persuaded by the reasoning in Harmon — which we are not3
    — this Court lacks the authority to expand the limited cause of action recognized in
    Bohannon and its progeny in the manner requested by Plaintiff in this case. See
    Johnson v. Pearce, 
    148 N.C. App. 199
    , 202, 
    557 S.E.2d 189
    , 191 (2001) (“Only our
    General Assembly and Supreme Court have the authority to abrogate or modify a
    common law tort.” (citation omitted)). Accordingly, the trial court properly dismissed
    this claim under Rule 12(b)(6).
    II. Breach of Fiduciary Duty and Constructive Fraud
    Plaintiff next argues that the trial court erred in dismissing her claims for
    breach of fiduciary duty and constructive fraud. Defendants, conversely, contend that
    Plaintiff lacks standing to pursue these claims because she is not the real party in
    interest and no fiduciary relationship exists between Plaintiff and Defendants.
    In order “[f]or a breach of fiduciary duty to exist, there must first be a fiduciary
    relationship between the parties.” Green v. Freeman, 
    367 N.C. 136
    , 141, 
    749 S.E.2d 262
    , 268 (2013) (citation and quotation marks omitted). “A fiduciary relationship may
    arise when there has been a special confidence reposed in one who in equity and good
    3   We note that Harmon has not achieved broad acceptance by courts in other jurisdictions.
    See, e.g., Labonte v. Giordano, 
    426 Mass. 319
    , 322, 
    687 N.E.2d 1253
    , 1256 (1997) (“[W]e remain
    unpersuaded by the conclusions in the Harmon opinion and decline to recognize a new cause of action
    that [the plaintiff] seeks here.”).
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    conscience is bound to act in good faith and with due regard to the interests of the
    one reposing confidence.” 
    Id. (citation and
    quotation marks omitted).
    Similarly, in order “[t]o survive a motion to dismiss, a cause of action for
    constructive fraud must allege (1) a relationship of trust and confidence, (2) that the
    defendant took advantage of that position of trust in order to benefit himself, and (3)
    that plaintiff was, as a result, injured.” White v. Consolidated Planning, Inc., 
    166 N.C. App. 283
    , 294, 
    603 S.E.2d 147
    , 156 (2004) (citation omitted), disc. review denied,
    
    359 N.C. 286
    , 
    610 S.E.2d 717
    (2005). “The primary difference between pleading a
    claim for constructive fraud and one for breach of fiduciary duty is the constructive
    fraud requirement that the defendant benefit himself.” 
    Id. It is
    well established that “a lack of standing . . . may be challenged by a motion
    to dismiss for failure to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.” Teague v.
    Bayer AG, 
    195 N.C. App. 18
    , 22, 
    671 S.E.2d 550
    , 554 (2009). It is axiomatic that
    “[e]very claim must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” Street v.
    Smart Corp., 
    157 N.C. App. 303
    , 306, 
    578 S.E.2d 695
    , 698 (2003) (citation and
    quotation marks omitted). “[F]or purposes of reviewing a 12(b)(6) motion made on
    the grounds that the plaintiff lacked standing, a real party in interest is a party who
    is benefitted or injured by the judgment in the case.” Woolard v. Davenport, 166 N.C.
    App. 129, 135, 
    601 S.E.2d 319
    , 323 (2004) (citation, quotation marks, and brackets
    omitted).
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    We agree with Defendants that Plaintiff’s claims for both breach of fiduciary
    duty and constructive fraud fail as a matter of law. While Plaintiff’s complaint alleges
    the existence of a fiduciary relationship between Defendants and Mrs. Hauser,
    nowhere does she allege the existence — or breach — of a fiduciary duty owed by
    Defendants to Plaintiff. Indeed, in her brief Plaintiff concedes “that she was not in
    an agency relationship with either Defendant.” North Carolina law simply does not
    permit her to proceed on these claims based solely on her theory that her “expected
    inheritance of [Mrs.] Hauser’s assets was substantially reduced” as a result of
    Defendants’ alleged breach of their fiduciary duty owed to Mrs. Hauser.
    While Mrs. Hauser remains living, any claim arising out of a fiduciary
    relationship between her and Defendants can only be brought by Mrs. Hauser herself
    or someone legally authorized to act on her behalf. Therefore, Plaintiff lacks standing
    to bring a claim on her own behalf alleging that Defendants have breached a fiduciary
    duty owed by them to Mrs. Hauser.           Absent allegations of the existence of a
    relationship of trust and confidence between Plaintiff and Defendants, Plaintiff’s
    claims for constructive fraud and breach of fiduciary duty fail as a matter of law. See
    
    Green, 367 N.C. at 141
    , 749 S.E.2d at 268 (requiring existence of fiduciary
    relationship between the parties in order for plaintiff to succeed on breach of fiduciary
    duty claim); Barger v. McCoy Hillard & Parks, 
    346 N.C. 650
    , 666, 
    488 S.E.2d 215
    ,
    224 (1997) (“In order to maintain a claim for constructive fraud, plaintiffs must show
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    HAUSER V. HAUSER
    Opinion of the Court
    that they and defendants were in a relation of trust and confidence . . . .” (citation and
    quotation marks omitted)).
    III. Request for Accounting
    Finally, Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in dismissing her request for
    an accounting. We disagree.
    Plaintiff’s complaint stated the following with regard to this claim:
    114. Pursuant to the 2012 Power of Attorney, Plaintiff
    demands the Defendant Darrell S. Hauser render an
    accounting of his actions as [Mrs.] Hauser’s attorney-in-
    fact from July 12, 2012 to the date of the filing of this
    Complaint.
    115. As a beneficiary of [Mrs.] Hauser’s 2012 Will and other
    assets, Plaintiff is entitled to an accounting of Defendant’s
    actions while acting as [Mrs.] Hauser’s attorney-in-fact to
    determine whether [Darrell] has breached his fiduciary
    duty and intentionally interfered with Plaintiff’s expected
    inheritance.
    Plaintiff did not attach the 2012 Power of Attorney to her complaint. Nor has
    she referenced in her complaint any specific provision of the 2012 Power of Attorney
    purporting to confer upon her the right to demand such an accounting. We are not at
    liberty to simply assume that such a provision may exist. See Norman v. Nash
    Johnson & Sons’ Farms, Inc., 
    140 N.C. App. 390
    , 394, 
    537 S.E.2d 248
    , 252 (2000)
    (“While the well-pled allegations of the complaint are taken as true . . . unwarranted
    deductions of fact are not deemed admitted.” (citation and quotation marks omitted)),
    disc. review denied, 
    353 N.C. 378
    , 
    547 S.E.2d 13
    (2001).
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    Opinion of the Court
    Moreover, Plaintiff has failed to cite any legal authority for the proposition that
    her present status as a potential beneficiary of Mrs. Hauser’s estate would — without
    more — entitle her to an accounting of Darrell’s actions as Mrs. Hauser’s attorney-
    in-fact. Her attempt to rely upon Darrell’s alleged breach of his fiduciary duty to Mrs.
    Hauser is, once again, insufficient to provide a basis for the relief she seeks.
    Therefore, the trial court correctly denied her request for an accounting.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm the trial court’s 3 March 2016 order.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges STROUD and HUNTER, JR. concur.
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