In the Matter of Yogiji ( 2013 )


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  •        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: ________________
    Filing Date: August 19, 2013
    Docket No. 31,178
    IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE
    OF HARBHAJAN SINGH KHALSA
    YOGIJI, Deceased,
    INDERJIT KAUR PURI,
    Petitioner-Appellant,
    v.
    SHAKTI PARWHA KAUR KHALSA,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF SANTA FE COUNTY
    Barbara J. Vigil, District Judge
    The Soni Law Firm
    Surjit P. Soni
    Pasadena, CA
    for Appellant
    Sanders & Westbrook, PC
    Maureen A. Sanders
    Albuquerque, NM
    Wray & Girard, PC
    Jane Katherine Girard
    Katherine Wray
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee
    OPINION
    1
    FRY, Judge.
    {1}      This case requires us to interpret NMSA 1978, Section 45-3-108(A)(4) (2011), which
    provides an exception to the Probate Code’s three-year time limit for opening a formal
    testacy or appointment proceeding under certain circumstances. Under this exception, a
    personal representative appointed more than three years after the decedent’s death has the
    right to possess estate assets only to the extent necessary to confirm title in those assets, and
    no claims, other than for administrative expenses, may be asserted against the estate. The
    district court permitted the initiation of a formal testacy proceeding but restricted the
    personal representative’s investigation of the estate’s assets to those assets that had not
    previously been transferred to the decedent’s trust. We conclude that these restrictions were
    the result of an improper interpretation of the applicable statute and reverse.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    {2}     Inderjit Kaur Puri (Wife), the wife of the decedent Harbhajan Singh Khalsa Yogiji
    (Decedent), filed a petition seeking the formal probate of her husband’s will and
    appointment of a personal representative over four years after Decedent’s death. No
    appointment or probate proceeding had been filed in connection with Decedent’s estate
    between Decedent’s death and the date of Wife’s petition. The petition stated that it was
    brought pursuant to Section 45-3-108(A)(4) “for the limited purpose of confirming title to
    the assets of the estate in the successors to the estate.”
    {3}      Section 45-3-108(A) prohibits the initiation of a formal testacy or appointment
    proceeding more than three years after a decedent’s death unless certain exceptions apply.
    In this case, Wife sought to take advantage of Subsection (4)’s exception, which permits a
    late filing of a proceeding but prohibits the assertion of claims against the estate other than
    claims for administrative expenses. The exception also restricts the personal representative’s
    right to possess estate assets. The exception provides:
    A.      No informal probate or appointment proceeding or formal
    testacy or appointment proceeding, other than a proceeding to probate a will
    previously probated at the testator’s domicile or appointment proceedings
    relating to an estate in which there has been a prior appointment, may be
    commenced more than three years after the decedent’s death, except:
    ....
    (4)     an informal appointment in an intestate proceeding or
    a formal testacy or appointment proceeding may be commenced thereafter if
    no proceeding[] concerning the succession or estate administration has
    occurred within the three-year period after the decedent’s death, but the
    personal representative has no right to possess estate assets as provided in
    [NMSA 1978,] Section 45-3-709 [(1975)] beyond that necessary to confirm
    2
    title thereto in the successors to the estate and claims other than expenses of
    administration may not be presented against the estate[.]
    Section 45-3-108(A)(4). In this Opinion, we refer to this exception as Subsection (4).
    {4}     Decedent’s will, which was attached to Wife’s petition, contained three specific
    devises of certain of Decedent’s personal property to persons other than Wife and a
    provision requiring the residue of Decedent’s estate to be transferred to a trust. The will
    recited that Decedent and Wife had “mutually agreed upon a plan of disposition of [their]
    assets which is set forth in this [w]ill and the [t]rust described above.” The will also
    nominated Shakti Parwha Kaur Khalsa, a devisee under the will, as executor.
    {5}     Ms. Khalsa filed objections to Wife’s petition, stating that to the best of her
    knowledge, “there are no assets in the estate the title to which can be confirmed” because
    all assets had been transferred to the trust and were to be administered by way of the trust.
    Ms. Khalsa further objected on the ground that Wife’s petition did not fall within the
    exception to the three-year limitation period permitted by Subsection (4).
    {6}     The district court held several hearings on Wife’s petition and Ms. Khalsa’s
    objections. At the hearings, the parties informed the court about a separate proceeding that
    could impact the proceedings in the present case. The separate proceeding was a declaratory
    judgment action that Ms. Khalsa and the other trustees of Decedent’s trust had initiated
    against Wife before Judge James Hall to determine the validity of claims Wife was asserting
    against the trustees. In that case, which we refer to as the trust litigation, Wife filed
    counterclaims seeking an accounting and alleging that the trustees had breached their
    fiduciary duties.
    {7}      At the hearings in the present case, Ms. Khalsa urged the court to deny Wife’s
    petition for appointment of a personal representative because the circumstances did not
    satisfy the limitations exception in Subsection (4). Ms. Khalsa claimed that there was no
    asset in the estate to which title could be confirmed due to the transfer of assets into the trust
    upon Decedent’s death. In response, Wife argued that because there had never been a
    personal representative appointed, there had never been a determination of what assets
    belonged to Decedent at the time of his death in the form of either his separate property or
    his half of the community property and, as a result, it was unclear whether Decedent had
    improperly disposed of any portion of Wife’s half of the community property. Wife
    maintained that all assets were initially controlled by Decedent’s will and that the residual
    assets should not have been transferred to the trust until all assets had first been identified.
    The problem, according to Wife, was that a personal representative had never been
    appointed, and an inventory of assets had never occurred. Consequently, Wife urged the
    district court to appoint an independent personal representative to investigate what assets
    existed when Decedent died in order to determine what assets belonged to Decedent and
    which belonged to Wife.
    3
    {8}     The district court formally probated Decedent’s will and appointed Christopher
    Cullen as personal representative in a supervised administration. Cullen’s appointment was
    subject to two prior orders entered by the district court. The first order stated that the
    personal representative was to determine “whether any assets were owned by [Decedent] and
    [Wife] on [the date of Decedent’s death] other than those previously identified and
    distributed by the trustees” of the trust and, “if any such assets exist, to confirm title to those
    assets in the successors to [Decedent’s estate].” Wife objected to this provision in the order
    because, in her view, the trust may have disposed of assets inappropriately, and the personal
    representative should be charged with determining what assets and interests existed at the
    time of Decedent’s death, as opposed to what assets were left after distribution by the
    trustees.
    {9}     The second order was more specific. That order required Wife to identify “all
    entities in which [she] believes that Decedent may have, on the date of his death, owned an
    interest (legal or equitable), which interest has not been previously identified and distributed
    by the trustees.” The order further required the personal representative to make inquiry of
    the entities identified and determine whether an entity was a non-profit and, if it was not a
    non-profit, determine whether Decedent owned an interest in that entity. If there was
    credible information that an entity was a non-profit or that Decedent did not own an interest
    in the entity, the order directed the personal representative to report that entity to be a non-
    asset. The order required the personal representative to prepare a report of his investigation,
    and the parties could file objections to the report.
    {10} Following an investigation, the personal representative filed a report and a
    supplemental report. He explained at a hearing that several of the entities investigated were
    non-profits, some entities were actually products owned by other entities, and one could not
    be identified as a separately existing entity. Of the remaining entities, the personal
    representative said he could not identify any of them as being entities that Decedent had any
    interest in.
    {11} At the same hearing, Wife’s counsel stated that while Wife had no objection to the
    court’s acceptance of the personal representative’s report, the authority given to the personal
    representative was too narrow. Wife maintained that, even if Decedent had no interest in the
    entities investigated, there was still a question as to whether the entities had possession of
    assets in which Decedent had an interest. Wife argued that the probate proceeding should
    be stayed until things had been sorted out in the trust litigation, which would determine the
    distribution of identified community property.
    {12} In response to Wife’s arguments, Ms. Khalsa asserted that the personal representative
    had completed all of the duties ordered by the court, and there was no evidence of any asset
    whose title needed to be confirmed. Consequently, it would be appropriate for the court to
    close the estate.
    {13}    The district court found that the personal representative had acted in accordance with
    4
    the court’s previous orders and that he had “fulfilled the purposes for which this case was
    opened pursuant to [Subsection (4)].” The court granted Ms. Khalsa’s motion for a final
    order closing the estate. This appeal followed.
    II.    DISCUSSION
    {14} Wife argues that the district court erroneously concluded that Subsection (4)
    prevented the personal representative from investigating what assets were owned by
    Decedent at the time of his death, regardless of who was in possession of the assets at that
    time. She further maintains that the district court improperly determined that Subsection (4)
    precluded the personal representative’s investigation into the propriety of the transfer of
    estate assets to the trust. We agree.
    {15} The interpretation of Subsection (4) is a matter of law that we review de novo. In re
    Estate of Baca, 
    1999-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 12, 
    127 N.M. 535
    , 
    984 P.2d 782
    . “In interpreting
    [statutes], we seek to give effect to the Legislature’s intent[.]” Zuni Indian Tribe v.
    McKinley Cnty. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs, 
    2013-NMCA-041
    , ¶ 8, 
    300 P.3d 133
     (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    A.     Overview of Subsection (4)
    {16} Section 45-3-108 begins with a broad prohibition against the initiation of a probate
    or appointment proceeding more than three years after the decedent’s death. It then lists five
    exceptions to this prohibition, but we are concerned only with the fourth
    exception—Subsection (4)—which states, in relevant part, that “a formal testacy or
    appointment proceeding may be commenced” more than three years after the decedent’s
    death “if no proceeding[] concerning the succession or estate administration has occurred
    within the three-year period after the decedent’s death.” Section 45-3-108(A)(4). The
    exception goes on to state, “but the personal representative has no right to possess estate
    assets as provided in Section 45-3-709 . . . beyond that necessary to confirm title thereto in
    the successors to the estate and claims other than expenses of administration may not be
    presented against the estate.” Section 45-3-108(A)(4).
    {17} This subsection permits any appointment or formal testacy proceeding to be initiated
    more than three years after the decedent’s death with three limitations. First, the
    subsection’s exception is not applicable if there has been any other proceeding regarding
    succession or estate administration during the three-year period. Second, in proceedings
    brought under this exception, no claims other than for the expenses of administration may
    be asserted against the estate. Third, the personal representative’s right to possess estate
    assets is limited to the possession necessary to confirm title to the assets in the estate’s
    successors. This case concerns the second and third limitations.
    B.     Second Limitation: Precluding Claims Against the Estate
    5
    {18} Regarding the second limitation, we are not persuaded by Ms. Khalsa’s argument that
    Wife is asserting an improper claim against the estate. Ms. Khalsa maintains that this
    alleged “claim” arose from Wife’s argument that unilateral gifts that Decedent may have
    made to third parties were possibly taken from Wife’s share of the community property.
    {19} Wife argued in the district court that she was not asserting a claim against the estate.
    To the contrary, she was asserting that Decedent’s estate could only transfer to the trust those
    assets in which he had an interest and that it could not properly transfer to the trust the assets
    in which Wife had an interest. On appeal, Wife clarifies that she does not seek to recover
    any portion of Decedent’s estate, nor does she want any damages from the estate. Instead,
    she wants to identify and confirm title in any asset that represents her share of community
    property that should never have been deemed to be part of Decedent’s estate in the first
    place.
    {20} We conclude that Wife’s desire to identify assets representing her share of
    community property is not a “claim” against Decedent’s estate. NMSA 1978, Section 45-1-
    201(A)(7) (2011), of the Probate Code defines “claims” as including “liabilities of the
    decedent . . . whether arising in contract, in tort or otherwise and liabilities of the estate that
    arise at or after the death of the decedent . . ., including funeral expenses and expenses of
    administration.” More relevantly, this subsection states, “ ‘Claims’ does not include estate
    or inheritance taxes or demands or disputes regarding title of a decedent . . . to specific
    assets alleged to be included in the estate[.]” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added); cf. Houston v. Young,
    
    1980-NMSC-053
    , ¶ 6, 
    94 N.M. 308
    , 
    610 P.2d 195
     (stating that “[a] widow’s one-half
    community property interest belongs to her and does not become a part of her deceased
    husband’s estate”). Wife’s arguments in this case are disputes regarding Decedent’s title to
    the assets alleged to belong to his estate and, therefore, they are not “claims” against the
    estate.
    C.      Third Limitation: Restriction on Personal Representative’s Right to Possess
    Assets
    {21} The third limitation on initiating a proceeding under Subsection (4) states that the
    personal representative “has no right to possess estate assets as provided in Section 45-3-
    709.” Section 45-3-108(A)(4). Thus, to determine what possessory rights Subsection (4)
    removes from the personal representative, we turn to Section 45-3-709, which generally
    permits a personal representative to take possession and control of a decedent’s property, to
    manage the property, and to initiate actions to recover possession or to determine title. The
    statute states:
    Except as otherwise provided by a decedent’s will, every personal
    representative has a right to, and shall take possession or control of, the
    decedent’s property, except that any real property or tangible personal
    property may be left with or surrendered to the person presumptively entitled
    thereto unless or until, in the judgment of the personal representative,
    6
    possession of the property by the personal representative will be necessary
    for purposes of administration. The request by a personal representative for
    delivery of any property possessed by an heir or devisee is conclusive
    evidence, in any action against the heir or devisee for possession thereof, that
    the possession of the property by the personal representative is necessary for
    purposes of administration. The personal representative shall take all steps
    reasonably necessary for the management, protection and preservation of the
    estate in his possession. He may maintain an action to recover possession of
    property or to determine the title thereto.
    Section 45-3-709. Although Subsection (4) states that the personal representative does not
    have the right to possess estate assets as provided in Section 45-3-709, it also states that the
    personal representative may possess estate assets to the extent “necessary to confirm title
    thereto in the successors to the estate.” Section 45-3-108(A)(4). This language is the crux
    of the present appeal.
    D.      Ms. Khalsa’s Arguments
    {22} Ms. Khalsa makes two primary arguments in support of her view that this limitation
    permitted the district court to restrict the breadth of the personal representative’s
    investigation of Decedent’s assets. She maintains (1) that Subsection (4)’s limitation on the
    personal representative’s possessory rights prohibited the full-scale investigation of assets
    sought by Wife and that this position is supported by In re Estate of Baca; and (2) the district
    court properly restricted the personal representative’s investigation to only those assets that
    had not already been transferred to the trust because (a) it had the discretion to do so and (b)
    allowing a more extensive investigation would thwart Decedent’s estate plan to avoid
    probate. We do not agree.
    1.      First Argument: Limited Possessory Rights and In re Estate of Baca
    {23} First, we see nothing in Subsection (4) that prohibits a personal representative from
    performing an investigation to identify with particularity what assets belonged to the
    decedent at the time of death. Even if Subsection (4) precludes the management or control
    of estate assets, as Ms. Khalsa argues, a personal representative could certainly conduct an
    investigation to ensure that only the decedent’s separate property and his or her share of
    community property were identified as estate assets, whereupon the personal representative
    could confirm title to those assets in the successors identified in the decedent’s will. Such
    an investigation would not be inconsistent with the limitations on possession stated in
    Subsection (4).
    {24} The goal of Subsection (4)’s restriction on the personal representative’s rights of
    possession is apparent. In cases such as the present one where no intestacy or formal testacy
    proceeding has been initiated within the first three years after a decedent’s death, the
    Legislature intended to preclude the personal representative from selling or otherwise
    7
    exerting possessory control over assets that had been in the possession of others for more
    than three years. However, the Legislature wanted to provide a mechanism for a personal
    representative to confirm title in an estate’s successors for purposes of establishing the
    validity of title. See NMSA 1978, § 45-3-102 (2005) (stating that “to be effective to prove
    the transfer of any property . . . , a will must be declared to be valid”).
    {25} Ms. Khalsa’s reliance on In re Estate of Baca is also misplaced. That case
    interpreted Subsection (4) and stated that “an estate may be settled through inaction and
    passage of time” consistent with the Probate Code’s policy “to promote the speedy and
    efficient liquidation and distribution of estates, while allowing claimants adequate time to
    protect themselves.” 
    1999-NMCA-082
    , ¶ 24. This statement is correct in the context of the
    circumstances in In re Estate of Baca, which involved a claim asserted against an estate by
    a non-devisee seeking enforcement of an alleged oral agreement the decedent entered into
    prior to death. See id. ¶ 8-9. The present case does not involve a claim against the estate.1
    {26} Furthermore, what Wife seeks—an investigation to identify what assets were
    properly in Decedent’s estate—is consistent with another policy of the Probate Code, which
    is “to discover and make effective the intent of a decedent in distribution of the decedent’s
    property.” NMSA 1978, § 45-1-102(B)(2) (2011). Effectuating Decedent’s intent first
    requires identification of the property subject to distribution.
    2.     Second Argument: Investigation Limited to Assets Not Transferred to Trust
    a.     District Court’s Discretion
    {27} We see nothing in Subsection (4) and Ms. Khalsa has not cited any other portion of
    the Probate Code that confers discretion on the district court to restrict a personal
    representative’s investigation of what assets are properly in the decedent’s estate. Ms.
    Khalsa relies solely on Schwartzman v. Schwartzman Packing Co., 
    1983-NMSC-010
    , 
    99 N.M. 436
    , 
    659 P.2d 888
    , for the notion that a probate court may, in its discretion,
    circumscribe a personal representative’s investigatory obligations. But Schwartzman is not
    helpful. In that case, our Supreme Court interpreted a statute permitting a shareholder to
    inspect a corporation’s books and records “ ‘at any reasonable time or times, for any proper
    purpose.’ ” Id. ¶ 8 (quoting NMSA 1978, § 53-11-50(B) (1983)). The Court stated that “[a
    district] court must of necessity have some discretion in determining when and in what
    manner the right of examination should be exercised.” Schwartzman, 
    1983-NMSC-010
    , ¶
    11.
    1
    We clarify that this Court relied on two cases in In re Estate of Baca that are not
    relevant to the interpretation of Subsection (4) because they were decided before that
    provision of the Uniform Probate Code was adopted by the Uniform Laws Commission in
    1993. Those cases are In re Estate of Taylor, 
    675 P.2d 944
     (Mont. 1984) and In re Estate
    of Wood, 
    710 P.2d 476
     (Ariz. Ct. App. 1985).
    8
    {28} The circumstances in Schwartzman are not similar to those in the present case.
    Subsection (4) does not contain any language suggesting that there are any limitations, other
    than possessory ones, placed on the personal representative when a formal testacy
    proceeding is initiated more than three years after the decedent’s death. Therefore, in cases
    where Subsection (4) applies, the personal representative would have the same obligations
    that are imposed when the personal representative is appointed within the three-year period
    following the decedent’s death. Among those obligations is the duty to “prepare an
    inventory of property owned by the decedent at the time of his death, listing it with
    reasonable detail and indicating as to each listed item its estimated value as of the date of the
    decedent’s death.” NMSA 1978, § 45-3-706(A) (1983). In fact, the personal representative
    is subject to removal for failure to complete the inventory responsibilities. See NMSA 1978,
    § 45-3-611(B)(6) (1975) (permitting removal of the personal representative for “fail[ure] to
    perform any duty pertaining to the office”). Thus, the obligation to inventory estate assets
    is not subject to discretionary limitation by the court presiding over the probate.
    b.      Unrestricted Investigation Does Not Thwart the Estate Plan
    {29} We also conclude that allowing the personal representative to investigate and identify
    estate assets, including assets previously transferred to the trust, would not thwart
    Decedent’s estate plan. Decedent’s will contained several devises of specific personal
    property and then provided that the residue of the estate would pour over into the trust for
    distribution consistent with the trust documents. An investigation would allow the personal
    representative to identify what assets were Decedent’s separate property or his share of the
    community property, and those assets would properly be the subject of the will’s pour-over
    provision.
    {30} If, following an investigation, the personal representative identified assets previously
    transferred to the trust that constituted Wife’s share of community property, the personal
    representative could not take possession of those assets given Subsection (4)’s limitations
    on the personal representative’s possessory rights. However, the parties appear to agree that
    reallocation of community property that was improperly transferred to the trust was the
    subject of the trust litigation.
    III.    CONCLUSION
    {31} We hold that the district court improperly interpreted Subsection (4) as restricting the
    personal representative’s duties to investigate and inventory the assets of Decedent’s estate.
    On remand, the personal representative may conduct a complete investigation and inventory
    of assets in which Decedent had an interest at the time of his death. The personal
    representative may confirm title to any assets that are properly in the possession of a devisee,
    and he may inventory the assets that were properly identified as residue for transfer to the
    trust. Any claim Wife may have for reallocation of improperly transferred community
    property was the subject of the trust litigation.
    9
    {32} For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for
    proceedings consistent with this Opinion.
    {33}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Judge
    10