J-A27031-21
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
ESTATE OF JOHN DIJOSEPH, JR. : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
APPEAL OF STEPHEN DIJOSEPH, : PENNSYLVANIA
BENEFICIARY AND :
:
Objector :
:
:
:
: No. 738 EDA 2021
Appeal from the Order Entered March 8, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County Orphans' Court at
No(s): 1516-1539
BEFORE: PANELLA, P.J., DUBOW, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
MEMORANDUM BY DUBOW, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 16, 2022
Appellant, Stephen DiJoseph, appeals from the March 8, 2021 order
entered in the Chester County Orphans’ Court overruling his objections to the
to the First and Final Account of the Estate of his father, John DiJoseph, Sr.
(“Decedent”). After careful review, we affirm.
The facts and procedural history, as gleaned from the record including,
the orphans’ court’s April 27, 2021 Corrected Decision (“Decision”), are as
follows.
Decedent’s Insurance Business
For years, Decedent owned a State Farm insurance agency (the
“Agency”), where he worked side-by-side with his son, Robert DiJoseph
(“Robert”). Decedent and Robert worked together for the better part of 40
years from 1974 until they closed the Agency on April 30, 2013.
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The Agency held a bank account entitled “John DiJoseph DBA DiJoseph
Insurance Agency” at Wells Fargo.
Decedent had an “Agent’s Agreement” with State Farm that provided
for termination payments and life termination payments (the “Termination
Payments”), of approximately $4,100 per month for a period of five-years
following termination of the Agent’s Agreement. The Termination Payments
were payable to Decedent or his legal representative.
On May 1, 2001, Decedent and Robert executed a contract—the
“Contract of Employment Substitute Plan”—that established a private pension
plan (“Pension Plan”) payable to Robert. Pursuant to the terms of the Pension
Plan, Robert was the beneficiary of the 5-year payout of Termination
Payments, even if Decedent died prior to the completion of the payments.
State Farm calculated, based on a number of factors, the Termination
Payments due as $89,067.1
The Power of Attorney
On December 14, 2012, Decedent signed a Power of Attorney naming
Robert as his agent.
The Loan
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1 Robert received this payment as a lump sum several months after Decedent
died in May 2016.
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In 2001, Decedent and Robert exchanged correspondence referencing a
$140,0002 “loan” from Decedent to Robert.3 Decedent, however, considered
the sum referenced as a gift and not an actual loan in that Decedent did not
expect Robert to repay the money. This was in keeping with similar “loans”
made by Decedent to both Robert and Appellant, neither of whom repaid those
“loans.”
The Family Relationships
Robert and Decedent had a close relationship as they worked alongside
each other for many decades. Robert was in daily communication with
Decedent, either in person or by phone, throughout that period of time. After
Decedent’s wife’s 2012 death, Robert took even greater care of Decedent,
including by having breakfast, lunch, or dinner with Decedent multiple times
weekly. Decedent routinely gave Robert instructions concerning finances. In
2013, Decedent suffered a stroke, following which Robert spent almost every
day caring for Decedent and advocating for him in Decedent’s assisted living
facility. Appellant, on the other hand, “was not around for his parents” and
“wasn’t there when they needed him.”4
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2 The orphans’ court refers in its Decision to the “$147,000 ‘loan’”; in contrast,
the correspondence and the parties refer to a $140,000 “loan.” Cf. Decision
at 4, 6; Correspondence, February 2001, at 2 (unpaginated). For consistency,
when referring to the loan amount, we adopt the position of the parties.
3In this correspondence, the word “loan” appears in quotation marks. N.T.,
12/11/20, at 25.
4 Decision at 5.
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The Estate Administration
Decedent died testate on May 29, 2016. On March 6, 2018, the Register
of Wills admitted Decedent’s December 14, 2012 will (“Will”) to probate and
granted letters testamentary to Robert, whom Decedent had named executor.
Appellant and Robert were the only beneficiaries of Decedent’s estate.
The Will provided that Robert inherit (1) all of Decedent’s interest in the
Agency; and (2) all of the business and personal property located within the
DiJoseph Agency, including the bank account known as “DiJoseph Jr. DBA,
DiJoseph Agency.” The Will further provided that Robert inherit 70% of the
remainder of the Estate and Appellant inherit 30%.
On January 3, 2019, Appellant filed a Petition for Citation to File
Accounting and to Remove Executor. On July 22, 2019, the orphans’ court
granted the petition for accounting and ordered Robert to file an account
within 60 days.
On September 20, 2019, Robert filed the account (“Executor’s
Accounting”) and a Petition for Adjudication/Statement of Proposed
Distribution of the estate assets. The Executor’s Accounting included
Decedent’s $2,311 interest in a Wells Fargo checking account held jointly with
Robert.
On February 5, 2020, Appellant filed objections to the account.
Appellant objected to Robert not characterizing the $140,000 payment from
Decedent to Robert as a loan that Robert was required to repay to the estate.
Appellant further alleged that during the period between April 2013 and
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Decedent’s death in May 2016, when the Agency had been closed, Robert
dissipated Decedent’s estate assets by improperly using the Agency bank
account for financial transactions in the amount of $407,000.
Following two days of hearings on Appellant’s objections, the orphans’
court overruled them. The orphans’ court concluded, relevantly, that (1) the
$140,000 payment to Robert was a gift and not a loan; (2) Decedent
bequeathed his business interests to Robert in the Will; (3) Robert was the
named beneficiary of the May 1, 2001 business contract creating the Pension
Plan; (4) the State Farm Termination Payments were payable contractually to
Robert and were not probate assets; (5) the referenced 70%/30% split in the
Will pertained to any probate assets remaining in the estate; (6) even if the
Termination Payments were probate assets, they would ultimately pass 100%
to Robert to whom Decedent specifically bequeathed them in the Will and
Appellant’s share would be zero; (7) Decedent’s estate consisted solely of non-
probate assets; and (8) the Estate Accounting filed by Robert was accurate
and complete.5
Appellant raises the following issue on appeal:
1. Whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused its
discretion in overruling the objections and exceptions of
[Appellant]?
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5 Decision at 6-7.
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Appellant’s Brief at 3.6
Standard of Review
Appellant’s issues challenge the findings of the orphans’ court. Thus,
our standard of review is deferential. In re Ware, 814 A.2d 725, 731 (Pa.
Super. 2002). “When reviewing a decree entered by the [o]rphans’ [c]ourt,
this Court must determine whether the record is free from legal error and the
court’s factual findings are supported by the evidence.” In re Estate of
Rosser, 821 A.2d 615, 618 (Pa. Super. 2003) (citation omitted). “Because
the [o]rphans’ [c]ourt 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.” Ware, 814 A.2d at 731 (citation omitted).
An abuse of discretion exists when a finding by the lower court is not based
upon the evidence of record. In re Paxson Trust I, 893 A.2d 99, 112 (Pa.
Super. 2006). “The test to be applied is not whether we, the reviewing court,
would have reached the same result, but whether a judicial mind, after
considering the evidence as a whole, could reasonably have reached the same
conclusion.” In re Gumpher, 840 A.2d 318, 321 (Pa. Super. 2003) (citations
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6 Although Appellant has raised one question for review, he has included
argument in his Brief pertaining to two distinct questions: (1) whether the
orphans’ court “improperly speculated as to Decedent’s intent with regard to
the loan to Robert [] in the amount of $140,000”; and (2) whether the
orphans’ court erred in failing to include $407,000 spent by Robert between
April 2013 and May 2016 in the Estate and to properly address the liquidation
of the IRAs. Despite Appellant’s failure to divide his argument “into as many
parts as there are questions to be argued,” see Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a), we address
Appellant’s arguments in turn.
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omitted). This Court is not, however, constrained to defer to the legal
conclusions of the orphans’ court. Ware, 814 A.2d at 731.
Issue I- The “Loan”
Appellant first claims that the trial court erred in finding that the
$140,000 given to Robert by Decedent was a gift and not a loan. Appellant’s
Brief at 9-11. He asserts that the record evidence, including Robert’s own
testimony and prior reference in writing to the payment as a “loan,” belied
that characterization. Id. at 9. He further asserts that Robert did not present
any affirmative evidence that Decedent intended that sum as a gift to Robert.
Id. He concludes, therefore, that the orphans’ court erred in not including
$140,000 in Decedent’s Estate subject to the residuary distribution scheme
set forth in Decedent’s Will. Id. at 11.
Robert testified at the November 4, 2020 hearing about the $140,000
gift from Decedent. Relevantly, he testified that it was not unusual for
Decedent to “loan” Robert and Appellant money and, in fact, Decedent “had
done that for [Appellant] on many occasions, lent him 15 here, ten there.”
N.T., 11/4/20, at 66. Robert also testified as follows about Decedent’s use of
the term “loan,” which appeared in quotation marks in the 2001
correspondence:
My father had a habit of saying, when he gave us money,
[Appellant] or [me], I’ll loan you this money. So those loans were
not contractual loans that’d be paid back. It was just his term.
Dad, I can’t finish my driveway at Wilson Avenue, can you loan
me $10,000, things like that.
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He did the same thing with [Appellant] at various times; although
I don’t have documentation. I just have my memory. There were
no contracts for loans, and there was no payment schedule of
loans. That’s why it’s in quotation marks, your Honor.
N.T., 12/11/20, at 24-25. Robert explained that he did not “ever pay back
directly, dollar for dollar, those [] so-called loans . . . because [Decedent]
didn’t ask for them [to be repaid].” Id. at 25.
The orphan’s court credited this testimony in concluding that the so-
called $140,000 loan from Decedent to Robert was, in fact, a gift. We cannot
and will not disturb the orphans’ court’s credibility determination. Moreover,
we observe that Appellant did not present any affirmative evidence—such as
a promissory note or repayment schedule—that Decedent intended the
transfer of this sum as a loan. See In re Dzierski’s Estate, 296 A.2d 716,
718 (Pa. 1972) (explaining that “[i]t is the general rule in Pennsylvania that
the burden of proving that a transfer of property [] was not a gift rests on the
party so asserting[], and that the burden of proof is met only by the production
of evidence of a clear, strong or compelling nature.”). Accordingly, the
orphan’s court did not abuse its discretion declining to include this $140,000
in the residuary of Decedent’s estate subject to distribution to Appellant.
Issue II- Alleged Dissipation of Estate Assets
In his second issue, Appellant claims that the orphans’ court erred in
not addressing Appellant’s allegation that Robert improperly spent $407,000
over a 36-month period from the Agency’s bank account on his personal
expenses after the Agency closed in 2013. Appellant’s Brief at 11-12. He
asserts that Robert funded the business account from which he improperly
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used funds with the State Farm Termination Payments in the amount of
$147,600 and from Decedents’ IRA accounts of which Appellant and Robert
were co-beneficiaries. Id. at 13. Essentially, Appellant argues that trial court
erred in not including in Decedent’s estate at least $111,800 that Robert
improperly deposited in the Agency’s bank account. Id. at 15.
In support of this claim, Appellant relies on one case—Ryan v.
MacDonald, 30 A.2d 662 (Pa. Super. 1943)7—for the general proposition that
“where it is shown property was owned by a decedent within a short time prior
to his death, the burden is on the person who claims a change of ownership
to prove it.” Appellant’s Brief at 15 (citing Ryan, 30 A.2d at 663). He also
cites extensively to Robert’s testimony where Robert explained the business
and personal relationship between Robert and Decedent, the sources of
funding for the Agency’s account, the nature of the expenditures he made
from the account, and their purposes. Id. at 12-13.
The orphans’ court’s adjudication belies Appellant’s claim that the court
failed to consider Robert’s allegedly improper actions. The Decision reflects
that the court considered Robert’s extensive testimony, found it credible, and
concluded that Appellant’s “averments and allegations concerning
inappropriate or unlawful actions of Robert during his tenure as an employee
of [Decedent’s] State Farm Agency, as [a]gent under [Decedent’s] [p]ower of
[a]ttorney, or as Executor of [Decedent’s] estate[] are baseless[] and
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7This case involved a transfer of stock certificates owned solely by a decedent.
Ryan, 30 A.2d at 663.
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unfounded.” Decision at 7. The court further found that “[p]rior and
subsequent to [] Decedent’s death, Robert took no action as an [a]gent under
Decedent’s [p]ower of [a]ttorney to deplete [Appellant’s] assets or any
beneficial interest in the estate.” Id.
The record supports the orphans’ court’s factual findings, and this Court
cannot and will not reweigh the evidence or disturb the orphans’ court’s
credibility determinations. Thus, we conclude that the orphans’ court did not
abuse its discretion.
Order affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 2/16/2022
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