In Re Nothnagel Estate ( 2024 )


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  •              If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to
    revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.
    STATE OF MICHIGAN
    COURT OF APPEALS
    In re ESTATE OF MARILYN I. NOTHNAGEL.
    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN                                        UNPUBLISHED
    SERVICES,                                                             October 10, 2024
    3:31 PM
    Appellant,                                             APPROVED FOR
    PUBLICATION
    November 21, 2024
    8:50 AM
    v                                                                     No. 367551
    Benzie Probate Court
    JAMES R. MODRALL III,                                                 LC No. 21-000016-DE
    Appellee.
    Before: BORRELLO, P.J., and MURRAY and LETICA, JJ.
    PER CURIAM.
    The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) appeals as of right the probate
    court’s order of allowance, providing that appellee’s attorney fee claim in the amount of
    $22,876.20, be paid pursuant to MCL 700.5429(6), from the estate of decedent. We reverse and
    remand.
    I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND
    Decedent, Marilyn I. Nothnagel, died on December 31, 2020. Before her death, decedent
    was under a conservatorship with her daughter, Patricia Rogers, serving as her conservator until
    January 2019. On January 15, 2019, Brenda Miller, a person employed by a fiduciary services
    agency, was appointed the successor conservator. For a period of time, decedent was deemed
    eligible for Medicaid benefits and services, and she resided for approximately two years at the
    Maples, a county-owned Medicare and Medicaid skilled nursing facility located in Frankfort,
    Michigan. However, in July 2018, the DHHS terminated her residency, determining decedent was
    no longer eligible for benefits for “failing to provide verifications.” Decedent subsequently
    transferred to Frankfort Pines, an assisted living facility, located in Frankfort Michigan, at her own
    expense, where she presumably resided until her death.
    -1-
    In February 2021, Rogers filed an application for informal probate, requesting her
    appointment as personal representative of decedent’s estate pursuant to decedent’s will. The
    probate court subsequently issued letters of authority recognizing Rogers as the personal
    representative of decedent’s estate.
    On February 18, 2021, the DHHS filed a statement and proof of claim concerning Medicaid
    services provided to decedent from May 2016 through June 2018, in the amount of $182,049.74.
    Six days earlier, appellee filed a statement and proof of claim asserting that he was owed
    $22,876.20 in legal fees for services rendered between December 2017 and January 2019,
    concerning Medicaid eligibility. The December 2015 legal agreement listed Rogers as the client
    on Nothnagel’s behalf as her next friend and durable power of attorney at that time.
    In June 2022, Rogers filed a petition to resign as personal representative and appoint Miller
    as the successor personal representative of decedent’s estate, which the probate court approved.
    In January 2023, Miller filed a petition for complete estate settlement, detailing the schedule for
    payment of properly presented claims. Miller listed the DHHS as a third creditor to be
    compensated in the amount of $181,910.35, and listed appellee as the fourth and final creditor to
    be compensated in the amount of $0 due to insufficient assets.
    Appellee filed an objection to the petition for complete estate settlement contending that
    the proposed payment distribution was improper because his legal services claim was of a higher
    priority than the DHHS’s claim under MCL 700.5429. The DHHS responded that MCL 700.3805,
    the proper statute governing the priority of claims for decedents’ estates, provided that appellee’s
    predeath legal services claim was of a lower priority than the DHHS’s federally mandated claim
    under the Michigan Medicaid Estate Recovery Program (MMERP), MCL 400.112g et seq.
    In May 2023, the probate court held a hearing on Miller’s petition for complete estate
    settlement and appellee’s objection. Miller testified that appellee was retained by Rogers, who
    was decedent’s conservator at the time, to assist with determining decedent’s Medicaid eligibility.
    Although decedent was entitled to Medicaid benefits for a period of time, the DHHS subsequently
    concluded decedent was no longer eligible for further Medicaid services. 1 As to appellee, Miller
    believed that he delayed seeking compensation for his legal services because “there was concern
    that [decedent’s] funds would not outlast her[,]” after the DHHS denied her continued receipt of
    Medicaid services and benefits. The court determined it would take the matter under advisement
    and ordered further briefing from the parties regarding “the priority of claims to be paid from the
    estate.”
    The parties filed their briefs. The DHHS continued to argue that MCL 700.3805, not
    MCL 700.5429, controlled. Appellee argued that as a court of equity, the probate court should
    consider that he purposefully held back on pursuing collection of his bills for legal fees to ensure
    decedent would have sufficient funds for her care. Thus, it would be “unjust . . . to allow this act
    to go unrecognized upon the revelation of the windfall to the estate in the amount of $180,000.00.”
    1
    Miller testified that decedent was not entitled to continued benefits because of “unusual
    circumstances.” The Medicaid redetermination was apparently closed for “failing to provide
    verifications” of stock and IRA withdrawals and receipts.
    -2-
    Had appellee’s claim been made during decedent’s lifetime, it would have had priority. Moreover,
    appellee’s claim was payable under MCL 700.5429(6), the more specific statute, without imposing
    the order of priority reflected in MCL 700.3805.
    In July 2023, the probate court held another hearing. After the parties argued, the probate
    court determined that, despite the priority provision detailed under MCL 700.3805, it would allow
    the compensation of appellee’s claim under MCL 700.5429(6). The court reasoned:
    At the end of the day, the estate’s not going to any family member of the decedent.
    Because the battle is it either all goes to the State of Michigan as reimbursement
    for Medicaid or it gets dived [sic] up, with the bulk still going to the State, but
    $22,000 and change going to [appellee] for his—attorney fees. In this matter, the
    Court views its role as one of equity. Ms. Brenda Miller testified that it appears
    that [appellee] essentially sat on his attorney fees out of concern for the protected
    individual as he did not wish to deplete all of her funds.
    The probate court added that, when it viewed the underlying matter from an equity lens, appellee’s
    conduct protected, in part, the DHHS’s interest in recovering its funds from decedent’s estate, and
    that the DHHS remained entitled to the majority of decedent’s assets, even if appellee was
    compensated. The court later entered an order of allowance, providing that appellee’s claim of
    $22,876.20 be paid from decedent’s estate under MCL 700.5429(6) before the DHHS claim. The
    DHHS appealed.
    II. PRIORITY OF CLAIMS
    The DHHS argues that the probate court erred when it entered its order of allowance
    providing that appellee’s claim be paid pursuant to MCL 700.5429(6) because MCL 700.3805
    governed the priority of claims related to the distribution of a decedent’s estate and the DHHS’s
    MMERP claim had higher priority under MCL 700.3805 than appellee’s predeath legal services’
    claim. We agree.
    The interpretation of a statute or court rule is a question of law that we review de novo.
    Premiere Prop Servs, Inc v Crater, 
    333 Mich App 623
    , 632 n 3; 
    963 NW2d 430
     (2020). “An
    appeal of a decision of the probate court, however, is on the record; it is not reviewed de novo.”
    In re Lundy Estate, 
    291 Mich App 347
    , 352; 
    804 NW2d 773
     (2011), citing MCL 600.866(1);
    MCR 5.802(B)(1). “This Court reviews the probate court’s factual findings for clear error and its
    dispositional rulings for an abuse of discretion.” 
    Id.
     An abuse of discretion occurs when a court’s
    decision falls outside the range of reasonable and principled outcomes. Maldonado v Ford Motor
    Co, 
    476 Mich 372
    , 388; 
    719 NW2d 809
     (2006).
    The goal when interpreting a statute is to give effect to legislative intent by examining its
    plain language. McNeil v Charlevoix Co, 
    484 Mich 69
    , 75; 
    772 NW2d 18
     (2009). “Where the
    language is unambiguous, we presume that the Legislature intended the meaning clearly
    expressed—no further judicial construction is required or permitted, and the statute must be
    enforced as written.” In re Petition of Attorney General for Investigative Subpoenas, 
    282 Mich App 585
    , 591; 
    766 NW2d 675
     (2009) (quotation marks and citation omitted). “[I]n determining
    the Legislature’s intent, statutory provisions must be read in the context of the whole statute and
    -3-
    harmonized with the statute’s other provisions.” Walt Disney Co v Eubanks, 
    345 Mich App 213
    ,
    223; 4 NW3d 797 (2023) (quotation marks and citation omitted). “It is well established that
    different provisions of a statute that relate to the same subject matter are in pari materia and must
    be read together as one law.” TCF Nat’l Bank v Dep’t of Treasury, 
    330 Mich App 596
    , 609; 
    950 NW2d 469
     (2019) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    The Estates and Protected Individuals Code (EPIC), MCL 700.1101 et seq., “shall be
    liberally construed and applied to promote its underlying purposes,” including “[t]o discover and
    make effective a decedent’s intent in distribution of the decedent’s property” and “[t]o promote a
    speedy and efficient system for liquidating a decedent’s estate and making distribution to the
    decedent’s successors.” MCL 700.1201(b) and (c). The provisions relevant to this case are within
    Article III, MCL 700.3101 et seq., which governs probate of wills and estate administration, and
    Article V, MCL 700.5101 et seq., which pertains to the protection of an individual under disability
    and their property.
    In relevant part, MCL 700.5429 provides:
    (1) A conservator may pay or secure from the estate a claim against the estate or
    against the protected individual arising before or during the conservatorship upon
    the presentation of the claim and allowance in accordance with the priorities in
    subsection (4)[2] . . . .
    * * *
    (3) A claimant whose claim has not been paid may petition the court for
    determination of the claim at any time before it is barred by the applicable statute
    of limitations and, upon due proof, may procure an order for the claim’s allowance,
    payment, or security from the estate . . . .
    2
    MCL 700.5429(4) provides:
    If it appears that the estate in conservatorship is likely to be exhausted before all
    existing claims are paid, the conservator shall distribute the estate in money or in
    kind in payment of claims in the following order:
    (a) Costs and expenses of administration.
    (b) Claims of the federal or state government having priority under law.
    (c) Claims incurred by the conservator for care, maintenance, and education that
    were previously provided to the protected individual or the protected individual’s
    dependents.
    (d) Claims arising before the conservatorship.
    (e) All other claims.
    -4-
    * * *
    (6) If a protected individual dies while under conservatorship, upon petition of the
    conservator and with or without notice, the court may hear a claim for burial
    expense or another claim as the court considers advisable. Upon hearing the claim,
    the court may enter an order allowing or disallowing the claim or a part of it and
    may provide in an order of allowance that the claim or a part of it shall be paid
    immediately if payment can be made without injury or serious inconvenience to the
    protected individual’s estate.
    Stated alternatively, MCL 700.5429 provides a procedure for a claimant to follow when seeking
    payment on a claim against a protected individual or against the estate. MCL 700.5429 is
    encompassed under Part 4 of Article V, titled, “Protection of Property of an Individual under
    Disability or of a Minor,” with various subsections detailing the processes related to the creation
    and termination of conservatorships, duties of a conservator, and the proper method for handling
    transactions related to the protected person’s estate.
    MCL 700.3805 sets forth the priority of claim payments. In relevant part, MCL 700.3805
    provides:
    (1) If the applicable estate property is insufficient to pay all claims and allowances
    in full, the personal representative shall make payment in the following order of
    priority:
    (a) Costs and expenses of administration.
    (b) Reasonable funeral and burial expenses.
    (c) Homestead allowance.
    (d) Family allowance.
    (e) Exempt property.
    (f) Debts and taxes with priority under federal law, including, but not limited to,
    medical assistance payments that are subject to adjustment or recovery from an
    estate under section 1917 of the social security act, 42 USC 1396p.
    (g) Reasonable and necessary medical and hospital expenses of the decedent’s last
    illness, including a compensation of persons attending the decedent.
    (h) Debts and taxes with priority under other laws of this state.
    (i) All other claims.
    (2) A preference shall not be given in the payment of a claim over another claim of
    the same class, and a claim due and payable is not entitled to a preference over a
    claim not due.
    -5-
    MCL 700.3805 is contained under Part 8 of Article III, governing creditors’ claims, with numerous
    subsections addressing the appropriate means of dispensing claims arising before, at, or after the
    death of a decedent, the sufficiency of estate property to pay claims, and the settlement of claims.
    The DHHS’s claim falls under MCL 700.3805(1)(f) because it relates to the MMERP. Appellee’s
    claim falls under MCL 700.3805(1)(i) because it cannot be classified as an administration expense
    when his legal services were incurred while decedent was alive. 3
    The parties do not dispute the validity of their respective claims under the EPIC. Rather,
    the parties challenge whether MCL 700.5429(6) may essentially override the order of priority
    under MCL 700.3805, such that appellee’s predeath legal fees were properly compensated before
    the DHHS’s medical assistance payments. We conclude that the probate court erred when it
    entered its order of allowance providing that appellee’s claim be paid pursuant to
    MCL 700.5429(6).
    The plain language of MCL 700.5429 reflects that it pertains to claims against a protected
    person during his or her lifetime, as opposed to the appropriate means of distributing the estate of
    protected persons after their death. First, MCL 700.5429(1) provides, “A conservator may pay or
    secure from the estate a claim against the estate or against the protected individual arising before
    or during the conservatorship upon the presentation of the claim . . .[,]” (emphasis added),
    indicating the statute applies to claims against the protected person’s estate while the
    conservatorship remained intact; however, a conservatorship naturally terminates upon the
    protected person’s death. 4 Second, appellee failed to file a claim during the conservatorship of
    decedent. Instead, he filed the claim on February 11, 2021, during the administration of decedent’s
    estate. Third, while MCL 700.5429(6) specifically provides for the court to consider another claim
    as it deems advisable upon petition of the conservator, 5 Miller did not expressly petition, verbally
    or in writing, for appellee’s claim to take precedence over the DHHS’s claim. Rather, during the
    May 16, 2023 hearing, Miller explained that the determination of which claim maintained the
    higher priority should be resolved by the probate court. Miller further expressed that she scheduled
    3
    Under MCR 5.409(F), when an individual who is subject to a conservatorship dies, the
    conservator “must give written notification to the court within 14 days of individual’s date of
    death” and “[i]f accounts are required to be filed with the court, a final account must be filed within
    56 days of the date of death.”
    4
    See MCL 700.5431 (“The protected individual, conservator, or another interested person may
    petition the court to terminate the conservatorship. A protected individual seeking termination is
    entitled to the same rights and procedures as in an original proceeding for a protective order. Upon
    determining, after notice and hearing, that the minority or disability of the protected individual has
    ceased, the court shall terminate the conservatorship. Upon termination, title to the estate property
    passes to the formerly protected individual or to successors subject to the provision in the order
    for expenses of administration and to directions for the conservator to execute appropriate
    instruments to evidence the transfer.”).
    5
    “When a statute designates the person who may bring a claim, only the person[] so designated
    have the right to bring such an action.” In re Swope, 
    190 Mich App 478
    , 480-481; 
    476 NW2d 459
    (1991).
    -6-
    the priority of claims pursuant to MCL 700.3805 in her petition seeking a complete estate
    settlement. Miller recognized that, under the statute, the DHHS’s MMERP claim was of a higher
    priority because it was a debt related to a federal law. And, although Miller did not object to
    petitioning for the compensation of appellee’s legal fees under MCL 700.5429(6), if the probate
    court deemed such conduct was appropriate, she did not explicitly agree to it either. See Hottmann
    v Hottmann, 
    226 Mich App 171
    , 179; 
    572 NW2d 259
     (1997) (“[T]he duty to interpret and apply
    the law has been allocated to the courts, not to the parties’ expert witnesses.”).
    MCL 700.5429(6) additionally provides that, after the petition of a conservator, “the court
    may hear a claim for burial expense or another claim as the court considers advisable.”
    “Advisable” is defined as “fit to be advised or done”; “advised” is defined as “thought out.”
    Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed). Appellee provided legal services to
    decedent’s conservators, Rogers and Miller, regarding Medicaid eligibility greater than one year
    before decedent’s death. However, appellee failed to collect fees until after the administration of
    decedent’s estate; therefore, his claims are not the type contemplated in MCL 700.5429(6). While
    the term “advisable” certainly maintains a broad definition, it is unreasonable to conclude that one
    subsection, which is not encompassed under the proper article governing the administration of a
    decedent’s estate, renders a statute dedicated to delineating the proper priority of claims against an
    estate, MCL 700.3805, meaningless. See Jesperson v Auto Club Ins Ass’n, 
    499 Mich 29
    , 34; 
    878 NW2d 799
     (2016) (providing, “[W]hen determining [the Legislature’s] intent we must give effect
    to every word, phrase, and clause in a statute and avoid an interpretation that renders nugatory or
    surplusage any part of a statute”) (quotation marks and citation omitted).
    Even assuming, arguendo, that MCL 700.5429(6) was applicable to appellee’s claim, we
    recognize that the aforementioned subsection does not address the priority of such “advisable”
    claims, but MCL 700.5429(4) does. See South Dearborn Environmental Improvement Ass’n, Inc
    v Dep’t of Environmental Quality, 
    502 Mich 349
    , 367-368; 
    917 NW2d 603
     (2018) (stating, “[W]e
    do not read statutory language in isolation and must construe its meaning in light of the context of
    its use”). MCL 700.5429(4) states:
    If it appears that the estate in conservatorship is likely to be exhausted before all
    existing claims are paid, the conservator shall distribute the estate in money or in
    kind in payment of claims in the following order:
    (a) Costs and expenses of administration.
    (b) Claims of the federal or state government having priority under law.
    (c) Claims incurred by the conservator for care, maintenance, and education that
    were previously provided to the protected individual or the protected individual’s
    dependents.
    (d) Claims arising before the conservatorship.
    (e) All other claims.
    Thus, under MCL 700.5429(4), the DHHS’s claim, which falls under MCL 700.5429(b), would
    take priority over appellee’s claim, which may be considered under MCL 700.5429(c) as a claim
    -7-
    incurred by the conservator for the care of decedent, as appellee’s legal services fundamentally
    pertained to decedent’s Medicaid eligibility, or MCL 700.5429(e), under all other claims.
    Moreover, MCL 700.3805 contemplates the priority of reasonable funeral and burial expenses
    under MCL 700.3805(1)(b); comparatively, the priority provision under MCL 700.5429(4) does
    not, which may explain the exception delineated under MCL 700.5429(6) allowing the probate
    court to consider such expenses.
    MCL 700.3805, however, expressly addresses circumstances when an estate, such as
    decedent’s estate, maintains insufficient assets to pay all permissible claims, after a protected
    person’s death, and it delineates the priority of claims. MCL 700.3805 additionally falls under
    Article III, which governs estate administrations. Appellee failed to present an adequate reason to
    overlook the priority provision under MCL 700.3805, and to require the probate court to use its
    equitable power to bypass the Legislature’s clear intent and order payment of appellee’s claim.
    Moreover, there is no prior caselaw, published or unpublished, addressing the applicability of
    MCL 700.5429 to the distribution of a decedent’s estate, whereas MCL 700.3805 has been
    repeatedly cited to determine the priority of claims following a decedent’s passing. See In re
    DeCoste Estate, 
    317 Mich App 339
    , 353-354; 
    894 NW2d 685
     (2016) (citing MCL 700.3805(1) to
    advance, “appellants had the duty to settle and distribute the [decedent’s] estate in accordance with
    EPIC, which requires payment of the costs and expenses of administration”); see also In re Lundy
    Estate, 
    291 Mich App at 356
     (in examining the proper priority of the challenged claims against
    the decedent’s estate noted, “MCL 700.3805 sets forth the priority of claim payments”).
    While appellee advanced that, as a court of equity, the probate court was permitted to
    consider the circumstances surrounding his delay in seeking compensation for his legal services,
    equitable courts are not exempt from following the plain language of a statute. See Gleason v
    Kincaid, 
    323 Mich App 308
    , 318; 
    917 NW2d 685
     (2018) (stating, “[W]hen a statute is applicable
    to the circumstances and dictates the requirements for relief by one party, equity will not interfere”)
    (quotation marks and citation omitted); see also Trentadue v Buckler Lawn Sprinkler, 
    479 Mich 378
    , 406-407; 
    738 NW2d 664
     (2007) (opining, “[I]f courts are free to cast aside a plain statute in
    the name of equity, even in such a tragic case as this, then immeasurable damage will be caused
    to the separation of powers mandated by our Constitution”). Thus, appellee’s conduct, while
    admirable, remains subject to the priority provision delineated under MCL 700.3805. The DHHS
    maintained a valid MMERP claim, and pursuant to MCL 700.3805, its claim was of a higher
    priority than appellee’s claim when determining the appropriate distribution of decedent’s estate.
    Accordingly, the probate court erred by applying MCL 700.5429(6) to the instant matter, and
    ordering appellee’s claim to be paid before the DHHS’s higher priority MMERP claim pursuant
    to MCL 700.3805.
    Reversed and remanded to the probate court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    /s/ Stephen L. Borrello
    /s/ Christopher M. Murray
    /s/ Anica Letica
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 367551

Filed Date: 11/21/2024

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/22/2024