In Re: Est. of. E.M.F., Appeal of: Zuber, M. ( 2023 )


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  • J-S37004-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: ESTATE OF EUGENIA M.           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    FINNIE, DECEASED                      :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: MAUREEN ZUBER, CO-         :
    EXECUTRIX                             :
    :   No. 1476 EDA 2022
    Appeal from the Order Entered March 30, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Orphans’ Court at
    No(s): 2015-X2023
    IN RE: ESTATE OF EUGENIA M.           :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    FINNIE, PRINCIPAL                     :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: MAUREEN ZUBER              :
    :
    :   No. 1477 EDA 2022
    Appeal from the Order Entered March 30, 2022
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County Orphans’ Court at
    No(s): 2016-X2427
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., LAZARUS, J., and OLSON, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                      FILED FEBRUARY 27, 2023
    In these appeals which we have consolidated sua sponte, Maureen
    Zuber challenges the order entered in the above-captioned cases that
    disposed of the objections to the accounts of (1) Ms. Zuber and her sister,
    Denise Finnie, as co-executrices of the estate of their mother, Eugenia M.
    Finnie (“Decedent”), and (2) Ms. Zuber as Decedent’s power of attorney
    (“POA”).   Since the rulings of the orphans’ court are based upon a
    J-S37004-22
    misapprehension of the law, we vacate the order and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this memorandum.
    We glean the following factual background from the notes of testimony
    and the parties’ stipulation of facts. Decedent was married to George Finnie,
    the father of Ms. Zuber and Ms. Finnie. The parents purchased a home on
    Hampton Road together with Ms. Finnie in 1992. In 1996, the Hampton Road
    house was transferred into the parents’ name alone after the couple paid an
    $85,000 entrance fee to move into a two-bedroom apartment a few miles
    away at Gloria Dei Farms independent-living community.
    In 2000, Decedent executed a will leaving the house and all its contents
    to Ms. Finnie, with the residual estate left in equal shares to Ms. Finnie and
    Ms. Zuber in the event that Decedent’s husband predeceased her, which he
    did in 2007. Thereafter, Decedent opened joint checking and savings accounts
    at Fox Chase Bank with Ms. Zuber as the joint owner with survivorship.
    Decedent also executed a POA naming Ms. Zuber as her agent with Ms. Finnie
    as successor agent. In 2012, Decedent transferred the Hampton Road house
    to Ms. Finnie. In the following years, the Fox Chase Bank checking account
    (“FC Joint Account”), from which Decedent paid her monthly expenses,
    typically had a balance of between $10,000 and $20,000.
    Decedent continued to reside in her apartment at Gloria Dei Farms with
    the help of home-care aides until March 2014, when Decedent’s physical
    condition had deteriorated to the point where more assistance was necessary.
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    Decedent moved into The Park, an assisted-living facility on the same grounds
    as Gloria Dei Farms. Decedent’s rent at The Park was more than $5,000 per
    month, which was significantly more expensive than what she had paid at her
    apartment, such that Ms. Zuber paid $5,850 from her own funds to cover the
    first month’s expenses at The Park. Ms. Zuber subsequently requested and
    received the return of the $85,000 Gloria Dei Farms deposit, which she
    deposited into the FC Joint Account. Ms. Zuber never used the funds in the
    FC Joint Account for her own expenses and never deposited her own funds
    into it. Ms. Zuber paid Decedent’s monthly rent and fees from the FC Joint
    Account until Decedent died on May 1, 2015, at the age of ninety-two. Ms.
    Zuber paid for Decedent’s funeral expenses from the FC Joint Account, which,
    at the time of Decedent’s death, had a balance of approximately $69,400.
    Decedent’s will was submitted for probate by Ms. Zuber and Ms. Finnie,
    who were granted letters testamentary as co-executrices after appearing at
    the Register of Wills with Christine Embery Steele, Esquire.1 Unsurprisingly,
    since the sisters’ relationship had for years been, as Ms. Finnie described,
    “either strained or nonexistent,” conflict arose. See N.T. Objections, 9/14/21,
    at 39.
    ____________________________________________
    1  Attorney Steele had prepared estate planning documents for Decedent and
    her husband, including the POA that named Ms. Zuber and Ms. Finnie as agent
    and successor agent. Although her surname changed during the course of the
    litigation of this case, we refer to her as Attorney Steele for ease of discussion.
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    Ms. Finnie, through counsel Robert L. Adshead, Esquire, filed a petition
    to remove Ms. Zuber as co-executrix and for accountings, alleging that Ms.
    Zuber had engaged in self-dealing and had converted assets of Decedent’s
    estate.   Ms. Zuber filed a petition to remove Ms. Finnie as co-executrix,
    contending, inter alia, that Ms. Finnie refused to communicate with Ms. Zuber,
    precluding proper and timely administration of the estate.             Following
    discovery, the court ordered the co-executrices to cooperate with each other
    and their individual counsel to provide Attorney Steele all she needed to
    prepare the estate’s tax returns and account and to report back to the court.
    The initial account, filed on June 8, 2020, by Attorney Steele and verified
    by Ms. Zuber, listed the gross estate at approximately $314,000, with the
    assets mainly including stocks, bonds, and a Morgan Stanley account. Ms.
    Finnie filed objections, asserting, inter alia, that the account did not include
    the $85,000 refund from Gloria Dei Farms that Ms. Zuber had deposited in the
    FC Joint Account of which she was the lone beneficiary, and should include
    disbursements to Ms. Finnie of half of that refund as well as Ms. Finnie’s
    counsel fees. Ms. Zuber also objected, contending that the account did not
    reflect the value of two of Decedent’s diamond rings that Ms. Finnie received
    from Ms. Zuber on the day that the will was submitted to probate. On August
    3, 2020, Ms. Zuber, through Attorney Steele, filed an amended account, and
    the parties renewed their objections.
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    Meanwhile, Ms. Finnie also pursued a petition to compel an accounting
    of Ms. Zuber’s agency pursuant to Decedent’s POA.        First and amended
    accountings were filed by Ms. Zuber.    Pertinent to this appeal, Ms. Finnie
    objected to Ms. Zuber’s disbursement to herself of the $54,557.34 remaining
    in the FC Joint Account after Decedent’s funerary expenses were paid
    therefrom.
    Following discovery pursuant to a case management order that was
    repeatedly amended, the objections to the estate account and to Ms. Zuber’s
    POA accounting were entertained by the orphans’ court over a two-day
    hearing in September 2021. By order and opinion of March 30, 2022, the
    orphans’ court confirmed both accounts with the modifications that: (1) Ms.
    Zuber was directed to refund $69,412.25 to the estate as a surcharge for
    breaching her duty as agent under the POA; and (2) the estate was to pay to
    Ms. Finnie any “legal fees related to representation of [Ms. Finnie] in her
    capacity as co-executrix,” despite the fact that “[a]t trial, no evidence was
    related to these fees.” Opinion and Adjudication, 3/30/22, at 17-18. The
    court in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion noted its acceptance of $11,289 as a
    fair and reasonable fee based upon Attorney Adshead’s invoices that Ms.
    Finnie supplied in her post-trial memorandum. See Orphans’ Court Opinion,
    6/13/22, at 11.
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    Ms. Zuber filed a motion for reconsideration, which the orphans’ court
    denied by order of April 26, 2022. Thereafter, Ms. Zuber filed a timely notice
    of appeal, and both she and the orphans’ court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    Ms. Zuber presents the following questions for our consideration, which
    we have re-ordered for ease of disposition:
    1.    Did the [orphans’] court err when it relied, to the extent it
    did, on In re Matter of Estate of Waite, [
    260 A.3d 143
    (Pa.Super. 2021) (non-precedential decision)]?
    2.    Did the [orphans’] court err when it found that [Ms. Zuber]
    commingled funds or breached any of her fiduciary duties under
    the applicable statute, 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601(e)?
    3.    Did the [orphans’] court err when it found that [Ms. Zuber]
    created a conflict of interest in violation of her fiduciary duties?
    4.   Did the [orphans’] court err when it found that [Ms. Zuber]
    engaged in self-dealing in violation of her fiduciary duties?
    5.    Did the [orphans’] court err when it found that [Ms. Zuber]
    was acting as agent under the 2007 POA when she deposited the
    refund check into the FC Joint Account?
    6.    Did the [orphans’] court commit an abuse of discretion when
    it found that co-executrices are obligated to pay “any portion of
    these legal fees related to representation of [Ms. Finnie] in her
    capacity as co-executrix”?
    7.     Did the [orphans’] court commit an abuse of discretion when
    it allowed [Ms. Finnie] to present post-trial evidence to support
    her claim for legal fees in her post-hearing memorandum?
    Ms. Zuber’s brief at 10 (cleaned up).
    We begin with a review of the applicable legal principles.         “When
    reviewing an order entered by the orphans’ court, the decision will not be
    reversed unless there has been an abuse of discretion or a fundamental error
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    in applying the correct principles of law.” Tr. Under Deed of Wallace F. Ott,
    
    271 A.3d 409
    , 416 (Pa.Super. 2021) (cleaned up).             More specifically,
    “[b]ecause the orphans’ court sits as the fact-finder, it determines the
    credibility of the witnesses and, on review, we will not reverse its credibility
    determinations absent an abuse of that discretion.” Interest of M.A., 
    284 A.3d 1202
    , 1210 (Pa.Super. 2022) (cleaned up).          “However, we are not
    constrained to give the same deference to any resulting legal conclusions.
    Where the rules of law on which the court relied are palpably wrong or clearly
    inapplicable, we will reverse the court’s decree.” 
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
    Ms. Zuber’s first five issues are interconnected and all concern the
    orphans’ court’s interpretation and application of this Court’s decision in
    Waite, supra, to conclude that Ms. Zuber should be surcharged $85,000
    because, in depositing that amount into the FC Joint Account, she breached
    her POA duties.
    Since the orphans’ court believed itself to be bound to apply its reading
    of this Court’s non-precedential Waite decision in making its ruling, we deem
    it appropriate to examine that case in detail.2 In Waite, the decedent had
    two children, Whitney and James. James was married to Lisa. In January
    2014, the decedent executed a will, modified by a November 2014 codicil, that
    ____________________________________________
    2We note that, while this Court’s non-precedential decisions filed after May 1,
    2019, may be cited for their persuasive value, they are, as the term “non-
    precedential” suggests, not binding on lower courts except as law of the case.
    See 210 Pa.Code § 65.37(A).
    -7-
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    named Lisa executor and distributed the bulk of the estate equally among
    Whitney, James, and Lisa. Shortly thereafter, on the same day, the decedent
    executed a POA making Lisa his agent, and also made Lisa the sole beneficiary
    of his credit union checking and savings accounts pursuant to the Multiple-
    Party Accounts Act (“MPAA”), 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 6301-6306.            The decedent
    subsequently became a resident at a personal care home where most of his
    expenses were covered by insurance. The decedent decided to sell his main
    assets, namely a farm and farm equipment, and directed Lisa to put the
    proceeds of over $160,000 into the credit union savings account.
    Lisa and the decedent’s son James divorced in 2016. Lisa did not inform
    the decedent of the divorce, and she continued to serve as his agent pursuant
    to the POA.    The decedent’s pension and other income continued to be
    deposited into the credit union accounts of which Lisa was the beneficiary,
    growing to over $560,000. The decedent died in 2018, leaving Lisa the sole
    beneficiary of the credit union funds, while the rest of the decedent’s estate,
    with a far less significant net value of $7,000, passed in equal shares to Lisa,
    James, and Whitney.
    James and Whitney challenged the disposition of the decedent’s assets,
    claiming, inter alia, that Lisa exerted undue influence over the decedent and
    that she violated her duties under the POA. After a trial, the court rejected
    the claim of undue influence, but concluded that Lisa did violate her POA
    duties, explaining as follows:
    -8-
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    In large print covering less than one-quarter of a standard sheet
    of paper, the last page of the POA specifically referenced Chapter
    56 of Title 20 and contained four specific affirmations that [Lisa]
    adopted as the decedent’s agent. They included, “I shall exercise
    the powers for the benefit of the principal” and “I shall keep the
    assets of the principal separate from my assets.”              Those
    statements correspond with the duties enumerated in 20 Pa.C.S.
    § 5601.3(b)(1), which also obligated [Lisa] to “act so as not to
    create a conflict of interest that impairs the agent’s ability to act
    impartially in the principal’s best interest” and to “attempt to
    preserve the principal’s estate plan, to the extent actually known
    by the agent, if preserving the plan is actually in the principal’s
    best interest based on all relevant factors.”           20 Pa.C.S.
    § 5601.3(b)(2) & (6). By acquiescing to the decedent’s decision
    to name her as his designated beneficiary, [Lisa] violated each of
    the duties.
    Although the evidence does not indicate that [Lisa] was depositing
    her own income into the decedent’s accounts or transferring any
    of his money into hers—excepting the compensation she was
    legitimately receiving for her POA services—her status as his
    designated beneficiary meant, in effect, that his money was her
    money. She certainly understood that; she grasped right away
    that every penny would become hers to utilize as she wished once
    the decedent passed, and she certainly should have
    comprehended that the decedent’s decision thus effectuated a
    commingling of their assets.
    What [Lisa] unquestionably knew, moreover, was that her being
    the decedent’s designated beneficiary did not comport with the
    terms of the January 6, 2014 will he had executed just five weeks
    before. She had read that will only days before taking the
    decedent to the credit union and thus knew that he only planned
    to leave her a third of the assets and wanted to divide the other
    two-thirds between James and Whitney. Yet she chose to remain
    silent on February 14, 2014 and every day thereafter and,
    knowing that all the money would eventually be hers, was content
    to see the balance of the decedent’s accounts increase month by
    month. Knowing the money would eventually be hers, moreover,
    she raised no objection when the decedent instructed her to
    deposit the proceeds from the farm and equipment sales into his
    savings account.
    -9-
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    As the record reflects, the risk envisioned in 20 Pa.C.S.
    § 5601.3(b)(2) was also realized when [Lisa] failed to keep her
    assets separate from the decedent’s. Confronted with the
    likelihood of becoming hundreds of thousands of dollars richer as
    the decedent’s designated beneficiary, she made no attempt to
    caution him about how it would affect his estate plan. Evidencing
    a pernicious mindset, moreover, she kept the designation a secret
    even from Whitney and James, her own husband—the only other
    people who would be affected and might force her to relinquish
    her claim to all of the decedent’s liquid assets.
    Further highlighting the conclusion that [Lisa] was acting in her
    own best interests, not the decedent’s, was her continued silence
    during her and James’s divorce. She knew the decedent wanted
    a third of his estate to go directly to his son. She knew the
    collective balance of his deposit accounts would have significantly
    increased the size of the estate. And she knew a divorce would
    ensure that James got none of that money.
    Even assuming [Lisa] had convinced herself that the decedent did
    not want his money to pass through his estate, the only
    reasonable conclusion [Lisa] could have come to would have been
    that he wanted her and James to benefit from it, as she knew he
    believed even at the time of his death that they were still married.
    Even were it plausible that she was merely trying to honor the
    decedent’s wishes when she initially accepted the benefit of being
    his designated beneficiary, therefore, her persistent failure to
    advise James . . . would effectively contradict the notion that she
    continued to afford the decedent’s interests over her own.
    Waite, supra (non-precedential decision at 9-11) (cleaned up).
    On appeal, we affirmed the ruling of the trial court that Lisa had a
    conflict of interest under the POA. Specifically, we stated:
    Following our review, we conclude that the record supports
    the trial court’s finding that [Lisa] acted in a manner as to create
    a conflict of interest under 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601.3(b)(2).
    Furthermore, we find no abuse of discretion or legal error in the
    trial court’s determination that [Lisa] ultimately placed her own
    self-interests ahead of those of the decedent. Under these
    circumstances, we find no basis to disturb the trial court’s decision
    to direct [Lisa] to restore the credit union accounts to the
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    decedent’s estate for distribution as a surcharge for the conflict of
    interest.
    Id. (non-precedential decision at 23) (cleaned up).
    Nonetheless, in affirming the result, we indicated that the trial court had
    erred insofar as it found that Lisa commingled her funds with that of the
    decedent and that Lisa’s status as POA necessarily precluded her from being
    the beneficiary of the credit union accounts:
    To the extent [Lisa] argues that that she did not specifically
    violate a duty prohibiting the commingling of funds and
    that her duties under the POA were ministerial, we agree.
    Furthermore, the findings of the trial court suggest that the
    decedent remained competent to arrange his financial affairs even
    after the sale of the farm and equipment in 2014. For example,
    the trial court found that the decedent instructed [Lisa] to deposit
    the proceeds of the sale of the farm and equipment into the credit
    union accounts. We also agree that [Lisa] did not owe James a
    direct legal duty under the POA. Rather, [Lisa] owed the
    decedent a duty to attempt to preserve the decedent’s
    estate plan. See 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601.3(b)(6). To the extent [Lisa]
    relies on the non-liability provision of the POA Act, we agree with
    [Lisa] that there was no inherent conflict of interest at the time
    the decedent initially designated [Lisa] as the beneficiary of the
    credit union accounts. However, as stated above, the trial court’s
    ultimate finding was that [Lisa] was acting under a conflict of
    interest with respect to the growth of the accounts.
    Id. (non-precedential decision at 21 n.5) (cleaned up, emphases added).
    Hence, although the Waite Court disagreed with the trial court that Lisa
    had commingled funds by exercising the ministerial duty of depositing assets
    into the joint account pursuant to the decedent’s instructions, we agreed that
    the other evidence supported its finding that Lisa breached her fiduciary duty
    not to create a conflict of interest. Specifically, we affirmed the trial court’s
    - 11 -
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    finding that Lisa had a conflict because, by keeping her divorce secret from
    the decedent and her beneficiary status secret from the other beneficiaries,
    she evinced a “pernicious mindset” to thwart the decedent’s plan for his assets
    to be shared equally among the three beneficiaries of his will upon his death.
    In other words, we agreed that there was evidence of a conflict in interest
    because the agent allowed the joint account to grow to the point that it
    completely dwarfed the assets of the estate, namely $560,000 versus $7,000,
    ensuring that she would receive exponentially more than the one-third share
    that the decedent’s estate plan envisioned.
    Ms. Zuber’s arguments concerning the orphans’ court’s interpretation
    and application of Waite are as follows. Ms. Zuber contends that the orphans’
    court wrongly applied the version of the POA statute at issue in Waite that
    did not become effective until only a few months before Decedent died, well
    after Ms. Zuber became her agent and deposited the refund check into the FC
    Joint Account. See Ms. Zuber’s brief at 32-33. Ms. Zuber asserts that there
    was no evidence that she violated any of the duties imposed by the applicable
    statute.   Id. at 34-41.   Instead, she maintains that the orphans’ court
    improperly based its decision upon application of this Court’s ultimate holding
    in Waite despite the clearly distinguishable legal and factual circumstances.
    Id. at 44-53.
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    We begin by observing that, at the time Ms. Zuber became Decedent’s
    agent and at the time she deposited the refund check into the FC Joint
    Account, the POA statute described the agent’s duties as follows:
    An agent acting under a power of attorney has a fiduciary
    relationship with the principal. In the absence of a specific
    provision to the contrary in the power of attorney, the fiduciary
    relationship includes the duty to:
    (1) Exercise the powers for the benefit of the principal.
    (2) Keep separate the assets of the principal from those of an
    agent.
    (3) Exercise reasonable caution and prudence.
    (4) Keep a full and accurate record of all actions, receipts and
    disbursements on behalf of the principal.
    20 Pa.C.S. § 5601(e) (in effect January 26, 2004, to December 31, 2014).
    Thereafter, § 5601.3, discussed and applied in Waite, took effect to
    generally require an agent to act in good faith and “in accordance with the
    principal’s reasonable expectations to the extent actually known by the agent
    and, otherwise, in the principal’s best interest.” 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601.3(a)(1).
    The amendment also specified more detailed duties, such as the duties to:
    (1.1) Keep the agent’s funds separate from the principal’s funds
    unless:
    (i) the funds were not kept separate as of the date of the
    execution of the power of attorney; or
    (ii) the principal commingles the funds after the date of the
    execution of the power of attorney and the agent is the
    principal’s spouse.
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    (2) Act so as not to create a conflict of interest that impairs the
    agent’s ability to act impartially in the principal’s best interest.
    ....
    (6) Attempt to preserve the principal’s estate plan, to the extent
    actually known by the agent, if preserving the plan is consistent
    with the principal’s best interest based on all relevant factors,
    including:
    (i) The value and nature of the principal’s property.
    (ii) The principal’s foreseeable obligations and need for
    maintenance.
    (iii) Minimization of taxes, including income, estate,
    inheritance, generation-skipping transfer and gift taxes.
    (iv) Eligibility for a benefit, program or assistance under a
    statute or regulation.
    20 Pa.C.S. § 5601.3(b).
    The orphans’ court acknowledged that a different statute was at issue
    in Waite, but nonetheless deemed it instructive.             See Opinion and
    Adjudication, 3/30/22, at 7 (“Analyzing the agent’s actions here, in light of
    language of the statute as it was in effect in 2014, this court reaches a similar
    conclusion.”).   The orphans’ court then explained its understanding and
    application of Waite as follows:
    [Ms. Zuber] as agent under a [POA] had a duty, which she
    acknowledged, to keep the funds and assets of [Decedent]
    separate from her own. [Ms. Zuber] also had a duty to exercise
    her powers only for the benefit of the principal. Her deposit of
    the refund check into an account of which she was the
    beneficiary at death violated these fiduciary duties. The
    proper remedy is a surcharge in the amount of $85,000, to be
    repaid by [Ms. Zuber] to [Decedent’s estate]. . . . [T]he amount
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    of this surcharge will be reduced by the amounts spent from these
    funds during [Decedent]’s lifetime for [Decedent]’s benefit.
    ....
    In her post-trial memorandum, [Ms. Zuber] argues that the
    deposit of [Decedent]’s check into the joint account did not
    constitute commingling because, under 20 Pa. C.S. § 6303(a), the
    funds in the joint account continued to belong to [Decedent]
    during her lifetime. However, the Superior Court concluded in . . .
    Waite that the agent who placed funds in an account in which she
    had a beneficial interest, even though her interest was contingent
    upon the death of the principal, nevertheless violated her duties
    as an agent under a power of attorney. Thus, when [Ms. Zuber]
    deposited the refund check of $85,000 into an account of which
    she was a joint owner, with a right of survivorship, she violated
    her fiduciary duty under the power of attorney statute.
    Imposing a surcharge on [Ms. Zuber] for the deposit of the
    check into the joint account may, at first glance, seem a harsh
    result. [Ms. Zuber] testified that the bank accounts had become
    joint in 2010, and that the joint checking account was the main
    account that she and her mother used for the payment of bills.
    She also testified that the account balance had become low and
    she needed to deposit funds into a checking account to continue
    to pay her mother’s expenses for her care, maintenance, and
    residence at The Park.
    Nevertheless, the Superior Court has determined that an
    agent shall be surcharged for breaching a fiduciary duty by
    depositing assets payable to the principal in her sole name into an
    account of which the agent will become a beneficiary. [Waite,
    supra (non-precedential decision at 21).3] That is precisely what
    happened here, and [Ms. Zuber] is therefore subject to a
    surcharge.
    ____________________________________________
    3 What the cited portion of the Waite decision actually states is the
    uncontroversial principle that, “[o]nce self-dealing is established, a surcharge
    may be applied to a fiduciary, not as compensation for any loss to the estate,
    but as punishment for the fiduciary’s improper conduct.” In re Matter of
    Estate of Waite, 
    260 A.3d 143
     (Pa.Super. 2021) (non-precedential decision
    at 21) (quoting In re Estate of Harrison, 
    745 A.2d 676
    , 680 (Pa.Super.
    2000)) (emphasis added).
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    J-S37004-22
    Opinion and Adjudication, 3/30/22, at 7-9 (emphases added). Indeed, the
    orphans’ court went so far as to say that:
    The practical implication of . . . the Superior Court’s ruling
    in . . . Waite, interpreting the statute, is that an agent under a
    power of attorney (other than a spouse), in order to maintain the
    principal’s assets as separate from their own, must deposit those
    assets into an account in the principal’s sole name and not into a
    joint account, even if this requires opening a new account in the
    principal’s sole name.
    Id. at 9.
    From the above, it is plain that the orphans’ court misapprehended and
    misapplied the applicable law. To the extent Waite has persuasive value in
    resolving the case sub judice, it militates against the finding of a breach of
    fiduciary duty by Ms. Zuber.
    First, contrary to the orphans’ court’s perception, the Waite Court
    expressly rejected the ideas that:        (1) there was an inherent conflict of
    interest in an agent acquiescing to being a beneficiary of a joint account; and
    (2) an agent’s ministerial act of depositing the principal’s funds into a joint
    account of which she is a designated beneficiary constituted commingling of
    funds in violation of her POA duties. See Waite, supra (non-precedential
    decision at 21 n.5). Cf. Trial Court Opinion, 6/13/22, at 6 (“Simply put, an
    agent does not ‘keep separate’ [the principal’s] assets when she deposits them
    into a joint account.”). Hence, the orphans’ court’s basis for finding a breach
    of duty is a result of an error of law.
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    The actual basis of the Waite Court’s decision to affirm the trial court’s
    finding that the agent had a conflict of interest was that the agent violated her
    duty   to   preserve   the   decedent’s   estate   plan   in   accordance   with
    § 5601.3(b)(6). Specifically, by keeping her divorce secret from the decedent
    and her beneficiary status secret from the other beneficiaries, the agent in
    Waite evinced a “pernicious mindset” to thwart the decedent’s plan. Waite,
    supra (non-precedential decision at 10). In other words, this Court agreed
    that there was evidence in the record to support the finding of a conflict of
    interest because the agent allowed the joint account to continue to grow to
    the point that it completely dwarfed the assets of the estate by a ratio of more
    than eighty to one.
    Section 5106.3(b)(6)’s obligation to preserve the principal’s estate plan
    did not exist at the time Ms. Zuber deposited the refund check into the FC
    Joint Account, but became effective on January 1, 2015. The legislation that
    repealed § 5601(e) and enumerated an agent’s duties within § 5601.3
    provided as follows concerning the new statute’s applicability:
    Section 9. The following shall apply:
    (1) Except as provided by this section, the provisions of this act
    apply to powers of attorney created before, on or after the
    respective effective dates of such provisions, but do not apply
    to the acts or omissions of agents, or third parties
    presented with instructions by agents, that occur before
    such respective effective dates.
    (2) Except as provided by this section, the provisions of this act
    apply to judicial proceedings concerning a power of attorney
    commenced before, on or after the respective effective dates of
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    J-S37004-22
    such provisions, unless the court finds that application of a
    provision of this act would substantially interfere with the effective
    conduct of the judicial proceeding or prejudice the rights of a
    party, in which case that provision does not apply and the
    superseded law applies.
    (3) The amendment, addition or repeal of 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 5601(b),
    (c), (d) and (e.2), 5601.2, 5601.4, 5602(a)(5) and (17) and 5603
    apply only to powers of attorney created on or after the effective
    dates of those provisions.
    (4) The amendment of 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 5601(f) and 5608 shall apply
    retroactively to acts performed after December 15, 1992, and to
    judicial proceedings commenced prior to the effective dates of
    those provisions.
    (5) In interpreting and applying the amendment or addition of 20
    Pa.C.S. §§ 5601(f), 5608, 5608.1, 5608.2 and 5611, a court shall
    give due consideration of the intent of the General Assembly to
    reverse the interpretation of 20 Pa.C.S. § 5608 as set forth in
    Teresa M. Vine v. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, State
    Employees' Retirement Board, 
    9 A.3d 1150
     (Pa. 2010).
    Section 10. This act shall take effect as follows:
    (1) The amendment or addition of 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 5601(f), 5608,
    5608.1, 5608.2, 5611 and 5612 shall take effect immediately.
    (2) This section shall take effect immediately.
    (3) The remainder of this act shall take effect January 1, 2015.
    2014, July 2, P.L. 855, No. 95 (emphasis added). Since neither § 5601(e) nor
    § 5601.3 is included in any exceptions, pursuant to § 9(1) of the act, while
    the new duties enumerated in § 5601.3 do apply to POAs created before
    January 1, 2015, they do not apply to the acts or omissions of agents that
    occurred before January 1, 2015.
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    J-S37004-22
    Here, Ms. Zuber’s deposit of the refund check into the FC Joint Account
    occurred in August 2014, a time when she had no specific statutory duty to
    preserve Decedent’s estate plan.               Ms. Finnie’s surviving breach-of-duty
    allegations as to the FC Joint Account relate solely to the deposit of the refund
    check, not to any management of the FC Joint Account by Ms. Zuber after the
    effective date of § 5601.3(b)(6).4             See Objections to Amended Account
    (Estate), 10/12/20, at ¶ 1; Additional Objections (Estate), 3/8/21, at ¶¶ 1-3.
    Consequently, the discussion of the law supporting the trial court’s finding of
    the conflict of interest in Waite is inapplicable in the instant case.5
    ____________________________________________
    4 Ms. Finnie also averred that Ms. Zuber converted the FC Joint Account funds
    by improperly adding herself as beneficiary of the account in 2010 and
    distributing the remaining funds to herself after Decedent’s death. See
    Objections to Amended Account (POA), at ¶¶ 3-4. However, the orphans’
    court credited Ms. Zuber’s uncontradicted testimony that Decedent herself
    added Ms. Zuber as a joint owner of the account and held that Ms. Finnie failed
    to present evidence to overcome the presumption that the funds in the joint
    account at the time of Decedent’s death passed to Ms. Zuber as a matter of
    law. See Orphans’ Court Opinion, 3/30/22, at 4 (citing N.T. Objections,
    9/14/21, at 85-86), 11. See also 20 Pa.C.S. § 6304(a) (“Any sum remaining
    on deposit at the death of a party to a joint account belongs to the surviving
    party or parties as against the estate of the decedent unless there is clear and
    convincing evidence of a different intent at the time the account is created.”).
    5 The POA in Waite was also executed before the effective date of § 5601.3.
    Therefore, its provisions did not apply to acts or omissions of the agent before
    January 1, 2015. However, the parties proceeded as if the amendment
    applied to the allegations at issue. See In re Matter of Estate of Waite,
    
    260 A.3d 143
     (Pa.Super. 2021) (non-precedential decision at 19 n.4).
    Moreover, the agent’s failure in that case to consult with the decedent about
    his wishes, and to instead subvert the known estate plan by retaining nearly
    all of his assets in accounts that would not pass through his estate, occurred
    on a continuing basis until the decedent died in 2018. Hence, unlike in the
    instant case, § 5601.3 was applicable to the allegations of breach in Waite.
    - 19 -
    J-S37004-22
    Since § 5601.3 cannot serve as a basis for concluding that Ms. Zuber’s
    act of depositing the $85,000 refund check into the FC Joint Account
    constituted a breach of her fiduciary duty, we cannot affirm the finding of the
    orphans’ court unless it is supported by facts of record evincing a violation of
    a duty in existence at the time of the deposit.      In particular, the certified
    record must establish that Ms. Zuber’s act amounted to a failure to (1)
    exercise her agency for the benefit of Decedent, (2) keep her assets separate
    from those of the Decedent, or (3) exercise reasonable caution and prudence.
    See 20 Pa.C.S. § 5601(e) (in effect January 26, 2004, to December 31, 2014).
    Ms. Finnie argues that the orphans’ court properly found a breach of
    duty here because the act of depositing the refund check into the FC Joint
    Account was inconsistent with her duties to act for the benefit of Decedent
    and keep her funds separate.      See Ms. Finnie’s brief at 23.    As discussed
    above, the deposit of Decedent’s funds into the joint account did not constitute
    commingling since there is no evidence that Ms. Zuber contributed any funds
    to the account.   See Waite, supra (non-precedential decision at 21 n.5)
    (“[T]here was no inherent conflict of interest at the time the decedent initially
    designated [her agent] as the beneficiary of the [joint] accounts.”). See also
    20 Pa.C.S. § 6303(a) (“A joint account belongs, during the lifetime of all
    parties, to the parties in proportion to the net contributions by each to the
    sum on deposit, unless there is clear and convincing evidence of a different
    intent.”).
    - 20 -
    J-S37004-22
    The only alleged basis for finding a breach by Ms. Zuber that can serve
    to validate the order of the orphans’ court is that the deposit was inconsistent
    with Ms. Zuber’s duty to act for the benefit of Decedent. This is undiscernible
    from the certified record as it stands.
    As a result of its misbelief that the deposit into the joint account was a
    per se breach of duty, the orphans’ court deemed irrelevant evidence of
    Decedent’s directions to Ms. Zuber and whether Ms. Zuber exercised her
    powers for Decedent’s benefit. For example, the orphans’ court stated the
    following in its adjudication opinion:
    The parties spent considerable time and effort presenting
    evidence regarding [Decedent]’s cognitive capacity.2 [Ms. Finnie]
    disputes both [Ms. Zuber]’s assertion that [Decedent] directed her
    to deposit the check into the joint bank account, and that
    [Decedent] at that time had the capacity to do so. The Superior
    Court recently held that, even where the decedent directed the
    agent to deposit his funds into a certain account, the agent
    violated her duties when she deposited the funds into an account
    in which she had a beneficial interest. See . . . Waite, supra.
    Thus, this court need not determine whether or not
    [Decedent] actually instructed the agent to deposit the
    funds in any particular account, nor whether [Decedent]
    had the capacity at that time to direct where to deposit the
    funds. The Superior Court opinion in . . . Waite makes clear that
    it was improper for the agent to deposit funds into an account in
    which she had a beneficial interest, even where the principal may
    have directed her to do so. See id. [(non-precedential decision
    at 22-23)].
    ______
    2 The record is replete with discussion of [Decedent’s]
    dementia diagnosis and cognitive abilities; however, there
    is no claim of undue influence in any of the underlying
    pleadings. While this issue was raised by [Ms. Finnie] in her
    post-trial memorandum, the parties agreed on the record
    that there are no assertions of undue influence. . . .
    Instead, the issue was characterized as whether [Decedent]
    - 21 -
    J-S37004-22
    had capacity to direct the deposit of the check into a certain
    account. Based upon the pleadings and the testimony, and
    the positions taken by counsel at trial, this court need not
    address the questions of undue influence or weakened
    intellect.
    Opinion and Adjudication, 3/30/22, at 8. See also N.T. Objections, 9/14/21,
    at 149-50 (orphans’ court indicating that, irrespective of any directions
    expressed by the principal, it is “improper” for a POA agent to “commingle
    funds” by “deposit[ing] the check with her endorsement in a joint account”).
    The court reiterated in its Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion that it believed that the
    issue of “whether [Decedent] had the capacity to provide direction, and
    concomitantly, whether she in fact expressed any direction regarding the
    deposit of the check need not be resolved, because neither inquiry has any
    relevance to the question whether [Ms. Zuber] . . . breached her fiduciary
    duty.” Orphans’ Court Opinion, 6/16/22, at 4-5.
    As our above discussion makes clear, evidence concerning Decedent’s
    best interests and whether Decedent was competent to, and in fact did,
    instruct Ms. Zuber where to place the refund check is pertinent to the breach-
    of-duty analysis. See, e.g., N.T. Objections, 9/14/21, at 165-71 (Ms. Zuber
    explaining Decedent’s concerns about verifying that there were ample funds
    in her checking account to pay her expenses and how she became upset to
    see the balance low).    The orphans’ court not only failed to consider the
    existing evidence on these issues relevant to its decision, but foreclosed the
    parties from fully developing the record in this respect. Consequently, we are
    - 22 -
    J-S37004-22
    constrained to remand for a new trial for the orphans’ court to entertain the
    relevant evidence and determine whether Ms. Finnie is able to establish that
    Ms. Zuber’s August 2014 deposit of the Gloria Dei Farms refund check into the
    FC Joint Account violated her duty to act for the benefit of Decedent.6
    Order vacated.7 Case remanded for further proceedings consistent with
    this memorandum. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 2/27/2023
    ____________________________________________
    6 Our order for a new trial moots Ms. Zuber’s claims that the orphans’ court
    abused its discretion in reopening the record to allow Ms. Finnie to establish
    the amount of reasonable expenses, in this case attorney fees, to which she
    is entitled to have paid by the estate insofar as she incurred them in her role
    as co-executrix as a cost of administering the estate. See 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 3537,
    3392(1). Ms. Zuber will have a full and fair opportunity to challenge in the
    new proceeding Ms. Finnie’s entitlement to such costs and the nature and
    amount of the attorney bills, and to appeal the final result to this Court if she
    disagrees with the findings of the orphans’ court.
    7 Ms. Finnie filed in this Court an application seeking costs, attorney fees, and
    interest on the surcharge should this Court affirm the order of the orphans’
    court and determine that Ms. Zuber was dilatory in violating various Rules of
    Appellate Procedure. See Application For Further Costs, Counsel Fees, and
    Damages, 11/3/22. Since we have not affirmed the order of the orphans’
    court, but rather have vacated it based upon the error of law Ms. Zuber
    alleged, we deny Ms. Finnie’s application.
    - 23 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1476 EDA 2022

Judges: Bowes, J.

Filed Date: 2/27/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/27/2023