J-A23014-17
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
SHIREETA TURNER, IND & AS : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE : PENNSYLVANIA
OF LAMIYAH GRAVES, DECEASED :
AND AS PARENT& NATURAL :
GUARDIAN OF SAMIM HICKS- :
TURNER, SAMAD TURNER & :
RASHIRAH MUHAMMAD :
:
: No. 490 EDA 2017
v. :
:
:
HELEN OF TROY, L.P. INTERMATIC, :
INC. CAMBRIDGE BEAUTY SUPPLY, :
INC. TAE E. LEE, BELSON :
PRODUCTS, APPLICA CONSUMER :
PRODUCTS, INC: HELEN OF TROY :
CORPORATION :
:
:
APPEAL OF: LAMONT GRAVES :
Appeal from the Order December 29, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
Civil Division at No(s): No. 02193 December Term 2013
BEFORE: PANELLA, J., DUBOW, J., and FITZGERALD*, J.
JUDGMENT ORDER BY PANELLA, J. FILED DECEMBER 15, 2017
Lamiyah Graves was seven years old when she died in a fire at her
mother’s home in New Jersey. Her mother, Shireetta Turner, filed suit in the
Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas against the manufacturers of a
curling iron and power strip she believed to be the cause of the fire. Prior to
trial, all parties reached a global settlement subject to approval of
distribution of the funds under the Rules of Civil Procedure and
____________________________________
* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
J-A23014-17
Pennsylvania’s intestacy statute. The rules provided that the settlement
proceeds arising from the wrongful death claim would be distributed to
Lamiyah’s parents equally. See 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 2103.
Shortly thereafter, Turner filed a petition seeking to have Appellant,
Lamont Graves, Lamiyah’s father, excluded from the distribution of the
settlement funds. Under Pennsylania’s forfeiture statute, a parent who fails
to adequately support a child for at least a year prior to the child’s death has
no right to a distribution from the child’s estate. See 20 Pa.C.S.A. §
2106(b)(1).
At the hearing on Turner’s petition, Graves testified he had seen his
daughter only twelve or thirteen times in the last six years of her life. See
N.T., Hearing, 12/22/16, at 21. When asked when he had most recently
seen his daughter, he identified only one meeting in the year before her
death. See id., at 36, 49-50.
Graves admitted he had only ever offered minimal monetary support
for Lamiyah, and had never sought to have legal visitation with her. See id.,
at 9-13, 25. In the year prior to Lamiyah’s death, he provided “maybe about
a hundred, $150” to her mother for Lamiyah’s support. Id., at 12.
After considering both Graves’s testimony and other evidence before
it, the court concluded Graves had failed to provide support to Lamiyah in
the year before her death and determined he had therefore forfeited any
-2-
J-A23014-17
right to a distribution from Lamiyah’s estate. Graves then filed this timely
appeal.
On appeal, Graves argues, under various guises, that Turner’s failure
to keep him apprised of his daughter’s whereabouts rendered his failure to
support Lamiyah reasonable. Our standard in reviewing decisions of the
orphans’ court is as follows:
The findings of a judge of the orphans’ court division, sitting
without a jury, must be accorded the same weight and effect as
the verdict of a jury, and will not be reversed by an appellate
court in the absence of an abuse of discretion or a lack of
evidentiary support. This rule is particularly applicable to findings
of fact which are predicated upon the credibility of the witnesses,
whom the judge has had the opportunity to hear and observe,
and upon the weight given to their testimony. In reviewing the
orphans’ court’s findings, our task is to ensure that the record is
free from legal error and to determine if the orphans’ court’s
findings are supported by competent and adequate evidence and
are not predicated upon capricious disbelief of competent and
credible evidence.
When the trial court has come to a conclusion through the
exercise of its discretion, the party complaining on appeal has a
heavy burden. It is not sufficient to persuade the appellate court
that it might have reached a different conclusion if, in the first
place, charged with the duty imposed on the court below; it is
necessary to go further and show an abuse of the discretionary
power. An abuse of discretion is not merely an error of
judgment, but if in reaching a conclusion the law is overridden or
misapplied, or the judgment exercised is manifestly
unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill-will,
as shown by the evidence [of] record, discretion is abused. A
conclusion or judgment constitutes an abuse of discretion if it is
so lacking in support as to be clearly erroneous.
We are not constrained to give the same level of deference to
the orphans’ court’s resulting legal conclusions as we are to its
credibility determinations. We will reverse any decree based on
palpably wrong or clearly inapplicable rules of law. Moreover,
-3-
J-A23014-17
we are not bound by the chancellor’s findings of fact if there has
been an abuse of discretion, a capricious disregard of evidence,
or a lack of evidentiary support on the record. If the lack of
evidentiary support is apparent, reviewing tribunals have the
power to draw their own inferences and make their own
deductions from facts and conclusions of law. Nevertheless, we
will not lightly find reversible error and will reverse an orphans’
court decree only if the orphans’ court applied an incorrect rule
of law or reached its decision on the basis of factual conclusions
unsupported by the record.
In re Paxson Trust I, 893 A.2d 99, 112-113 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citations
and quotation marks omitted).
We have reviewed the briefs of the parties and the certified record
pursuant to this standard, and conclude the opinion authored by the
Honorable Matthew D. Carrafiello adequately addresses the issues raised by
Graves on appeal. See Opinion Sur Appeal, 3/24/17, at 1-12. We therefore
adopt its reasoning as our own, and affirm on that basis.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 12/15/17
-4-
Circulated 11/30/2017 11:26 AM
SHIREETT A TURNER, Individually and as
Administratrix of the Estate of LAMIYAH PHILADELPHIA COUNTY
GRAYES, Deceased, and as Parent and Natural
Guardian ofSAMIM HICKS-TURNER, SAMAD COURT OF COMMON PLEAS
TURNER, and RASHIRAH MUHAMMAD
DECEMBER TERM, 2013
v. N0:02193
CONTROL NO: 16070278
CAMBRIDGE BEAUTY SUPPLY, et al.
-r-
,·
- . ..,
OPINION SUR APPEAL
Lamont Graves, (hereinafter referred to as "Appellant"), appeals -the Trial
... ••. j
Court's Order dated December 29, 2016, which granted Shireetta Turner'sPetition
for Forfeiture against Lamont Graves. Turner Elal Vs Catnhrtdge Beauty supply. lnc.-OPFLD
1111111111 II 11111 111111111 Ill
13120219300607
Facts and Procedural History
Lamiyah Graves, a minor, (hereinafter referred to as "Lamiyah"), died at
seven years of age on December 28, 2011 as a result of a house fire caused by an
alleged defective product. At the time of her death, Lamiyah was living with her
mother, Shireetta Turner, (hereinafter referred to as Appellee), and her siblings.
Appellant, Lamiyah' s father, separated from Appellee when Lamiyah was
three months old. N.T. 11/22/2016, p. 14. The uncontroverted testimony indicated
that, other than purchasing a crib for Larniyah, Appellant did not provide clothing or
food and offered only small monetary support throughout Lamiyah's life. In the
1
()PII=� �J=f\lT Pl IR�I IAf\lT T() P� R r: P ?".\Rfh\ n".\1')7/?n17
year preceding Lamiyah's death, Appellant only saw Lamiyah once for a brief
moment and gave Appellee "maybe about a $100, $150." N.T. 12/22/2016, p. 12.
Appellant was incarcerated for a period of one month during which Lamiyah died.
Id. at 58.
Appellee was appointed Administrator ad prosequendum of the Estate of
Lamiyah Graves by the Surrogate's Court of Burlington County, New Jersey. On
December 17, 2013, Appellee, as Administrator ad prosequendum, individually, and
as parent and natural guardian of Lamiyah' s three minor siblings, filed suit in the
Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. Appellee's complaint asserted strict liability,
negligence, breach of warranty, and wrongful death and survival action claims. Prior
to trial, the parties negotiated a global settlement subject to approval of distributions
pursuant to Pa. R.C.P. Rules 2206 and 2039.
On June 29, 2016, Appellee filed a Petition for Approval of the Minors'
Settlement for Lamiyah's siblings. On July 1, 2016, Appellee filed a Petition for
Forfeiture pursuant to 20 Pa. C.S. § 2106(b)(l) of Appellant's share of the wrongful
death proceeds arising from Lamiyah's death, and on July 11, 2016, she filed a
Petition for Approval of Wrongful Death and Survival Action Claims.
The Trial Court approved funding of structured settlement annuities and
restricted accounts for each minor, as part of the Order issued on September 28, 2016
approving the global settlement.
2
The Trial Court's Order of September 28, 2016 further approved an allocation
of 90% to the wrongful death action and 10% to the survival action. As this was a
New Jersey estate and Appellee was only appointed Administrator ad
prosequendum, the survival action proceeds were ordered to be held in custodia legis
by Messa & Associates, P.C. pending appointment of a general administrator by the
Surrogate's Court of Burlington County, New Jersey.
The wrongful death proceeds, which are distributed pursuant to
Pennsylvania's intestacy statute and were to be paid in equal 50% shares to
Lamiyah's parents, Appellant and Appellee, were also ordered to be held in custodia
legis by Messa & Associates, P.C. pending resolution of the Forfeiture Petition.
Evidentiary hearings on the Forfeiture Petition were held on November 22,
2016 and December 22, 2016. Following review of the parties' letter briefs
submitted directly to the undersigned Judge, the Trial Court, by Order dated
December 29, 2016, granted the Forfeiture Petition finding that the amounts paid by
Appellant on behalf of Lamiyah did not constitute support and in fact, were grossly
inadequate to support even the bare necessities of the minor. The Trial Court further
found that while Appellant was not encouraged to pursue a familial relationship with
Lamiyah, Appellant was not prevented from visiting and failed to pursue such a
relationship.
3
Counsel for Appellant timely filed this appeal on January 19, 2017. Pursuant
to the Trial Court's Order dated January 23, 2017, Appellant timely filed his R.A.P.
1925(b) Statement of the Errors Complained of on Appeal on February 7, 2017.
Issues
Appellant filed his Statement of Matters Complained of on Appeal, pursuant
to Pa. R.A.P. 1925(b ), raising the following issues, as quoted from his statement:
1. Whether the Learned Trial Judge committed reversible error in
finding that the overall quality, nature and extent of Appellant's
contact with the minor and the physical, emotional and financial
support provided to the mother justified the determination that
Appellant failed to perform the duty to support the minor for a period
of in excess of one (1) year before her death.
2. Whether the Learned Trial Judge failed to apply the doctrine of
estoppel in arriving at the conclusion that Appellant failed to perform
the duty to support the minor and thus justified the granting of the
Petition for Forfeiture.
3. Whether the Learned Trial Judge failed to consider the fact that
petitioner, Shireetta Turner, prevented Appellant from having
contact with the minor child and did not pursue support from
Appellant through the courts, thus rendering Appellant's alleged
inadequate support not willful.
4. Whether the Learned Trial Judge erred in granting the Petition for
Forfeiture considering the high burden of proof required for a
forfeiture particularly considering petitioner's own conduct m
preventing Appellant from having contact with minor child.
5. Whether the Learned Trial Judge erred in finding that the amounts
paid by Appellant did not constitute support and in fact were grossly
inadequate to support the bare necessities of the minor.
4
While the above issues are not concise and at times compound, repetitive
and/or based upon assumptions not supported by the evidence, the Trial Court shall
attempt to respond to these issues as fully as possible after restating them in a more
concise fashion.
Discussion
1. The Trial Court, in applying the applicable law to the credible
evidence, determined that Appellee successfully met her burden of
proof that Appellant failed to perform his duty to support, thereby
forfeiting his claim.
Pennsylvania's forfeiture statute, 20 Pa. C.S.A. § 2106(b)(l), provides in
relevant part:
(b) Any parent who, for one year or upwards previous to
the death of the parent's minor or dependent child has:
(1) failed to perform the duty to support the minor or
dependent child or who, for one year has deserted the
minor or dependent child; or ...
shall have no right or interest under this chapter in the
real or personal estate of the minor or dependent child.
The determination under paragraph ( 1) shall be made by
the court after considering the quality, nature and extent
of the parent's contact with the child and the physical,
emotional and financial support provided to the child.
20 Pa. C.S.A. § 2106(b)(l).
5
It is important to note at the outset that 20 Pa. C.S.A. § 2106(b)(l) was
amended on December 20, 2000, at which time the Pennsylvania legislature
removed the requirement that a parent's failure to support a minor or dependent child
be willful.' However, the seminal case that addresses a parent's duty to support
remains to be In re Estate of Teaschenko, which was decided by this Honorable
Superior Court before the statute was amended. In re Estate of Teaschenko, 574
A.2d 649 (Pa. Super. 1990); See In re Moyer, 758 A.2d 206, 208 (Pa. Super. 2000).
Accordingly, operating under the Teaschenko framework, Appellee herein has
the burden of proving that Appellant forfeited his right to inherit from his deceased
child. In re Estate of Teaschenko, 574 A.2d 649. Specifically, the elements of a
prima facie case of forfeiture based upon a parent's failure to support a minor or
dependent child are as follows:
1. The decedent is a minor,
2. The parent must owe some duty of support to the decedent,
3. The parent must have failed to perform any duty of support for the
decedent for at least a year prior to the decedent's death, and
4. The parent's failure must be willful.
I
Prior to its amendment, Section 2106 (b )(I) provided that, "any parent who, for one year or upwards previous to
the death of the parent's minor or dependent child, has willfully neglected or failed to perform any duty of support
owed to the minor or dependent child or who, for one year, has willfully deserted the minor or dependent child shall
have no right or interest under this chapter in the real or personal estate of the minor or dependent child." 2000 Pa.
Legis. Serv. Act 2000-118 (H.B. 2328) (PURDON'S).
6
Id. at 651. In determining whether the failure to support was willful, the Court must
consider whether the parent was aware of the duty of support, had the capacity to
perform, and made no attempt to perform. Id. at 652.
There was no dispute that Lamiyah was a minor at the time of her death or
that Appellant, as Lamiyah's father, owed some duty of support. The issue arises as
to what support Appellant provided in the year prior to Lamiyah's death. Appellee
testified that, from the time Lamiyah was three months old until she passed away,
Appellant did not buy food, clothes, toys, birthday gifts or Christmas presents for
Lamiyah; he did not attend any birthday or holiday celebrations; and he never took
Lamiyah to the park, zoo, movies, or even for a walk around the block. N.T.
11/22/16, p. 15-18. Appellee further testified that, from the time Lamiyah was three
months old until she passed away, Appellant only saw Lamiyah once when she was
five years old. Id. at 18-19. On that occasion, Appellee had taken Lamiyah to
Appellant's parents' house and Appellant saw Lamiyah briefly as he was leaving the
house. Id. at 18.
Appellant testified to seeing his daughter in 2011, the year preceding and
inclusive of her death. He admitted that in 2011 he only saw Lamiyah once on a
street in Philadelphia. N.T. 12/22/2016, p. 36, 49-50. His only interaction with
Lamiyah was picking her up and hugging her. Id. at 50. Appellant also claims that
in 2011, he gave Appellee "maybe about a $100, $150." Id. at 12.
7
The Trial Court found Appellee's testimony credible as to Appellant's lack of
physical, emotional, and financial support of his daughter. Therefore, the Trial Court
found that Appellee successfully met her burden in proving that Appellant did not
provide support to Lamiyah in the year prior to her death, thereby forfeiting his right
to share in the wrongful death proceeds arising from Lamiyah's death.
2. The Appellant has failed to show he was estopped in raising his
defense.
The Appellant failed to properly preserve this issue as it was never raised at
trial. Further, it was never raised with any degree of clarity in Appellant's 1925(b)
Statement. This issue has not been preserved for review before this Honorable Court
by merely citing a rule of evidence without concisely relating it to the operative facts.
Therefore, Appellant has effectively prevented the Trial Court from addressing this
issue.
3. The Trial Court did consider the evidence that Appellee did not
pursue child support against Appellant, but found that it did not affect
the Trial Court's decision that Appellant failed to perform his duty to
support his daughter.
Appellant seems to allege that AppelJee, by not seeking formal child support
from Appellant during Lamiyah's life, has made his conduct appropriate and thereby
come into compliance with the statute. However, Appellee did not have a legal
8
obligation to seek support from her child's father. The mere fact that Appellant did
not offer physical, emotional and financial support to Lamiyah is enough to find for
Appellee.
Appellant excuses his failure to support his daughter because he claims that
he was unable to contact Appellee for a period of time in Lamiyah's life. However,
Appellant often contradicts himself in his testimony that Appellee was unreachable.
For example, Appellant testified that he had Appellee's phone number in 2004 when
Lamiyah was born but that Appellee was unreachable in the years that followed and
would call from a blocked number. N.T. 12/22/2016, p. 13-15. Appellant later
testified that there were times when he would call Appellee but was told that she and
her husband would appreciate if he did not call again. Id. at 38-39. When asked
how he had Appellee' s number to call, Appellant replied that he had "whatever
number she would leave at my parents' house." Id. at 39.
Appellant further claims that he was kept from seeing his daughter. However,
during the seven years of Lamiyah' s life, Appellant did not take steps through our
Courts to see his daughter. Id. at 25. Moreover, Appellant admitted that he did not
go to the library, contact the police, contact a private investigator, or contact an
attorney to help him find out how he could see or provide support for his daughter.
Id. at 18, 45-46.
9
Nowhere in his testimony did Appellant demonstrate a sincere or persistent
effort to see or contact his daughter, and the Trial Court was unable to equate
requests that he not call, where he failed to show material concern or support, with
an enforceable permission to abrogate his duty to support his child. Therefore, the
Trial Court concluded that even if Appellant had obstacles in maintaining a
relationship with Lamiyah, he found it to his convenience and failed to provide the
necessary support.
4. The Trial Court has considered all of the evidence, including
stipulated testimony, and properly held that for the year before the
minor's death, no support whatsoever was paid, and any support
during the minor's entire life including "physical, emotional and
financial support" was all but nonexistent.
While the Trial Court need not look beyond the one year prior to Lamiyah' s
death, testimony and evidence presented showed a pattern oflittle or no support from
Appellant during Lamiyah's seven years of life.
According to Appellant, the total extent of financial support that he provided
on behalf of Lamiyah is as follows. In 2011, the year preceding and inclusive of
Lamiyah's death, Appellant gave Appellee "maybe about a $100, $150." N.T.
12/22/2016, p. 12. In 2010, Appellant gave Appellee $60 or $70. Id. In 2009,
Appellant did not see Appellee. Id. at 13. In 2008, Appellant gave Appellee "maybe
10
about a little over a hundred." Id. Lamiyah was born in 2004 and from 2005 to 2008
Appellant had no contact with Appellee and offered no support. Id.
Appellant also claims that his listing Lamiyah as a dependent on his 201 1
income tax return is evidence of adequate support. Id. at 90. However, this
purported support was given after Lamiyah 's death, which pursuant to the statute, is
specifically excluded. Nonetheless, according to Appellant's testimony, rather than
support, it was to be used to pay for Lamiyah's headstone. Id. at 94.
That the Trial Court found that the amounts paid did not constitute support
and, in fact, were grossly inadequate to support the barest of necessities, is not
seriously contested. In fact, Appellant has never suggested that it does. Therefore,
Appellant failed to show any error on this issue.
Conclusion
The Trial Court correctly found that within the guidelines of the relevant
statute, Appellee proved by clear and convincing evidence that Appellant failed to
support his daughter during the last year of her life financially, and also failed to
render any of the non-monetary parental expectations defined therein.
The evidence presented, even viewed most favorably to the Appellant, shows
that he made no serious attempt to maintain a relationship with his daughter, let alone
render support for her care and upbringing. Appellant's feeble attempt to blame
11
Appellee for his failures belies the fact that he did virtually nothing to assume his
rightful duties. As this Honorable Superior Court has held, the purpose of the statute
in question, "is to prevent a parent, who has failed to carry out his or her duty of
support, from gaining a 'windfall' from a minor child's death." In re Kistner, 858
A.2d 1226, 1228 (Pa Super. 2004).
Therefore, it is respectfully submitted that the Appeal in this matter be denied
and the Trial Court's decision be affirmed.
Dated:
--=''3--,-/21.f /7
f-4,: ; ; __-,/I---'--�-
Joseph L. Messa, Jr., Esq.
Gary M. Gusoff, Esq.
12