Estate of Beidl, M. Appeal of: Beidl, J. ( 2022 )


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  • J-A25036-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: ESTATE OF MARY M. BEIDL             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    APPEAL OF: JILL A. BEIDL                   :
    :
    :
    :
    :
    :   No. 1069 WDA 2021
    Appeal from the Order Entered August 6, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Jefferson County Orphans’ Court at
    No(s): 31 OC 2021
    BEFORE: KUNSELMAN, J., NICHOLS, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY McCAFFERY, J.:                       FILED: NOVEMBER 29, 2022
    Jill A. Beidl (Jill) appeals from the August 6, 2021, order entered in the
    Jefferson County Court of Common Pleas, which denied her petition for rule to
    show cause why her brother, Robert D. Beidl (Bob), should be disqualified as
    a co-executor of the estate (Estate) of their mother, Mary M. Beidl (Mary).1
    Jill claims the orphans’ court erred and abused its discretion by: (1) holding a
    hearing on issues that were not before it; (2) denying her omnibus discovery
    motion; (3) denying her request to have two sibling beneficiaries testify
    remotely; (4) denying her petition for a protective order pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.
    4012; (5) admitting certain medical records without the authors of the
    ____________________________________________
    1  The order in question is appealable as of right. See Pa.R.A.P. 342(a)(5)
    (“An appeal may be taken as of right from the following orders of the
    [o]rphans’ [c]ourt Division: . . . [a]n order determining the status of fiduciaries
    . . . in an estate [.]”).
    J-A25036-22
    documents being available to testify; and (6) failing to remove Bill as a co-
    executor. Based on the following, we affirm.
    In denying Jill’s request for relief, the orphans’ court made the following
    findings of fact:
    In her last will and testament, executed on March 23, 1990,
    the decedent, Mary . . . designated Jill and Bob as her co-
    executors in the event that her husband was unable or unwilling
    to serve. She later named them and their brother[, Timothy
    Beidl,] as her agents under a durable power of attorney (“POA”).
    Predeceased by her husband, she passed away on October 3,
    2020.
    After Mr. Beidl’s death, Bob and his wife, Kim Beidl (“Kim”),
    moved in with Mary. The three lived together at the family farm,
    located at 858 Glenn Road, Cosica, PA, for the next eight years.
    Bob and Kim moved out in July of 2018, and Mary continued to
    live alone at the property until August of 2020. She then moved
    in with her daughter, Darlene Kersey (“Darlene”) after being
    hospitalized and outfitted with a thoracic catheter that required
    daily draining.
    Nineteen months earlier, Mary had been diagnosed with
    breast cancer for a second time and shared with Darlene in the
    spring of 2020 that she was experiencing a burning sensation in
    her chest. She had lost one breast to cancer years earlier and
    likely understood what was happening, and whether driven by that
    knowledge or something else, she advised Bob in May that she
    was thinking about selling the farm and asked him to secure an
    appraisal.
    A licensed real estate agent familiar with the relevant
    players, Kim contacted James Reed (“Reed”) on her husband’s
    behalf and asked him to undertake a market value appraisal of
    Mary’s property. The two were familiar with one another from
    previous real estate transactions but did not have a personal or
    close professional relationship, and Reed accepted the
    assignment.
    Fully aware that Mary was his client, . . . it was she to whom
    Reed directed his questions when he visited the property on May
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    26, 2020. She advised him that she wanted the appraisal for
    decision-making purposes, readily answered his questions, and
    was generally knowledgeable about all aspects of the farm. Bob
    was present, as well, but his participation was limited to filing in
    a couple of gaps relative to the 2018 roof replacement.
    Following the same process he had employed for three
    decades, Reed soon delivered his formal appraisal, which reflected
    an estimated market value of $315,000.00. Thereafter, Bob
    proposed that Mary sell the farm to him. He did not suggest a
    price, though; Mary arrived at $255,000.00 on her own after
    reviewing Reed’s report. That number coincided with the sales
    price of two of the three comparable properties shown on page
    four. That number would also include the farm equipment, she
    decided, with the sale in its entirety being contingent upon Bob
    securing a conventional mortgage or home equity loan.
    Darlene was present on September 1, 2020 as Kim reviewed
    each provision of the sales agreement with Mary and on
    September 14, 2020 as Laura Dunkel explained the closing
    documents. By the latter, Mary’s physical health was quickly
    deteriorating; she became tired very quickly. Darlene did not
    observe signs of mental impairment either time, though. It
    seemed to her that Mary fully understood each document
    presented to her.1
    ___________________________
    1 Because Bob and Kim did not execute the closing
    documents until September 24, 2020, the sale was not
    finalized until that date.
    ___________________________
    Throughout the course of the sale, Mary acted as her own
    agent; Bob did not sign anything on her behalf or otherwise use
    his POA powers to effectuate the transaction. It was his belief, in
    fact, that he was authorized to act in that capacity only if his
    mother was unable to act for herself. When her physical condition
    prevented her from writing legibly, therefore, Bob utilized the POA
    to write a few checks on her behalf, albeit at her behest, because
    even though her body sometimes refused to cooperate with the
    mechanics of writing a check, she was still making her own
    financial decisions.
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    Although Bob held her POA, it was Darlene with whom Mary
    was the closest during the last couple of years of her life. Even
    before Bob moved in 2018, the two women saw one another
    nearly every day, and it was Darlene in whom Mary reposed the
    greatest trust and who became her primary caretaker from August
    12, 2020 until the day she died. Darlene thus knew long before
    the transaction was consummated that Mary intended to sell the
    farm to Bob for $60,000.00 less than its appraised market value.
    She also knew that Mary’s decision to do that was entirely
    volitional and that Bob was not pressuring her in any way.2
    Whether she agreed with its terms or was simply inclined to
    respect her mother’s wishes, therefore, Darlene did not attempt
    to modify or stop the sale. As she observed events on September
    1, 2020 and September 14, 2020, moreover, she knew she was
    witnessing the fulfillment of a decision Mary had made
    approximately three months earlier.
    ___________________________
    2To that end, Darlene and Bob’s testimony was entirely
    credible. Both testified without contradiction that Darlene
    and Mary were close, and Darlene’s efforts on her mother’s
    behalf painted a clear picture of a woman looking out for her
    mother’s best interests. The Court may reasonably infer,
    therefore, that Darlene would have raised an objection had
    she independently questioned the propriety of the sale and
    that Mary would have confided in Darlene if selling the farm
    to Bob for $255,000.00 had been something he was
    pressuring [her] to do rather than something she wanted to
    do.
    ___________________________
    Unlike Darlene, Jill did not approve of the sale. Long
    estranged from her brother, she was suspicious of the transaction;
    she believed that Bob had taken advantage of Mary while she was
    in a weakened mental state, imposing his will to get a favorable
    deal on the farm. Nonetheless, she was not immediately certain
    that she wanted to act on her suspicions and thus was willing as
    of November 17, 2020 to serve with Bob as co-executors of Mary’s
    estate. Bob was likewise willing and asked her to provide “several
    dates” when they and their attorneys could meet at the
    courthouse to open the estate. No less distrustful of Jill than she
    was of him, however, he also sought assurances that all of their
    mother’s assets would be properly valued and included in the
    estate accounting.
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    From the outset, the siblings elected to communicate
    through counsel, Thomas R. Coyer, Esq. speaking on Jill’s behalf
    and Terry R. Heeter representing Bob, and in a letter dated
    December 17, 2020, Attorney Coyer advised Attorney Heeter to
    contact Jill directly about serving as the estate’s legal counsel
    since she had only retained him to represent her, not the estate.
    Apparently uncomfortable with that course of action, though,
    Attorney Heeter sent another letter to counsel in which he sought
    to ascertain whether Bob and Jill were in agreement regarding
    which siblings owned eight specific items of Mary’s personal
    property, six of which comprised the “machinery,” i.e[.], farm
    equipment, he had purchased in conjunction with the farm.
    Proffering the reason for his inquiry, Attorney Heeter explained,
    “If your client agrees with the position as stated herein and there
    are no other issues that need addressed, I will proceed to perform
    the Estate administration. If not, then our clients are at odds and
    I do not believe I should represent the Estate.”
    Jill did not agree with her brother’s position, though. More
    than that, she interpreted Attorney Heeter’s inquiry as Bob’s
    declaration that he would not cooperate to open their mother’s
    estate unless she conceded that he was the rightful owner of the
    farm and farm equipment. That perceived ultimatum, it seemed,
    helped to cement her decision to challenge his purchase of the
    family farm.
    Patricia Moore (“Trish”) sided with Jill. Mary, she believed,
    would not have wanted Bob to have the farm. She did not support
    that assertion with credible evidence, however. Clearly she was
    dissatisfied with the manner in which Bob maintained the house
    while he and Kim lived there. The Court will not presume that
    Mary shared her dissatisfaction, though, or, even if that were the
    case, that it would cause her to want to keep her son from ever
    owning the property.
    Also unsupported was Trish’s conclusion that Mary lacked
    capacity when she executed the sales documents, as well as the
    attendant implication that Bob finagled the situation in
    furtherance of his long-standing goal to acquire the farm.
    Whether or not Bob hoped to one day take the title to the
    property, the facts to which Trish testified belied her conclusion
    about Mary’s mental state at the relevant time. Specifically, she
    told the Court that she and her mother spoke[ ] briefly every day
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    after her thoracic catheter was inserted and that Mary was always
    “lucid” during those conversations.       Their brevity she then
    attributed, not to a mental defect that made conversation difficult,
    but to the fact that her mother tired quickly. Because Trish did
    not arrive at Darlene’s until September 16, 2020, that necessarily
    means that she had brief but “lucid” conversations with Mary on
    both September 1, 2020 and September 14, 2020.
    Danielle Abrahamson (“Abrahamson”)[, a physician’s
    assistant who treated Mary for seven years,] and the hospice
    records further belied the idea that Mary’s cognitive functioning
    was compromised during the first half of September. Consistent
    with Darlene’s testimony, Abrahamson related that Mary’s
    conduct and conversation struck her as entirely appropriate when
    the two met on September 4, 2020 to discuss the older woman’s
    treatment options. Mary had been her patient for seven years by
    then, and based on their history, Abrahamson was confident that
    Mary understood her choices and was making an informed
    decision to refuse further treatment and enter hospice care. Her
    hospice care began the following day, and with one exception ─
    that being a one-time change in her orientation on September 20,
    2020 ─ she was noted as being “alert” and “oriented x 4” during
    each of the eight nurse visits she received between September 5,
    2020 and September 22, 2020. September 20, 2020, Darlene
    recalled, was the date Mary was fitted with a foley catheter and
    received her first dose of a narcotic.
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 8/6/21, at 1-5 (record citations omitted; italics in original).
    On April 21, 2021, Jill filed petition for rule to show cause why Bob
    should be disqualified as a co-executor of the Estate, claiming: (1) Robert
    refused for over six months to exercise his duty as named co-executor; (2) a
    prima facie case existed that Robert breached his fiduciary duty as POA during
    the sale of Mary’s home to himself; and (3) therefore, the “surreptitious sale
    of [Mary]’s home to [Robert] will be an unavoidable issue for litigation before
    a probate court for whomever is named as Executor/rix of the estate as
    representative of the beneficiaries thereof, and thus that an inherent conflict
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    of interest exists in [Robert] being named as Co-executor. See Jill’s Petition
    for Rule to Show Cause, 4/21/21, at 4 (unpaginated).
    The orphans’ court scheduled a hearing regarding the petition for June
    21, 2021.
    Meanwhile, on May 24, 2021, Robert filed an answer and new matter to
    the petition. He indicated that he lived on the farm for numerous years, and
    then “moved out . . . in July of 2018 because of [a] conflict with his siblings,
    but returned to the farm on a regular basis to maintain the farm in a manner
    acceptable to [Mary].” Robert’s Answer & New Matter to Petition for Rule to
    Show Cause, 5/24/21, at 9. He admitted that his wife prepared the sales
    agreement for the property at issue, but alleged that “[Mary] executed the
    agreement of sale at a time when she was competent, in control of her mental
    abilities and acted of her own free will and according to her wishes and
    desires.” Id. at 4. Robert further stated:
    19. It was [Mary]’s desire that the farm be given to [Bob], but to
    try and keep peace in the family, [Mary] reluctantly agreed to sell
    the farm to [Bob].
    20. To arrive at a price for the farm, [Mary] reviewed the
    appraisal with [Bob] and stated that she would accept $255,000
    for the farm and the equipment.
    21. The appraisal identified two comparables at a price of
    $255,000 which [Mary] felt was adequate consideration for the
    farm and the equipment.
    Id. at 7.
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    Jill filed a response, refuting Bob’s assertion that Mary wanted him to
    have the farm, alleging that she had a conversation with her mother on August
    15, 2021, and “[Mary] was vehemently opposed to [Bob]’s owning the subject
    farm, as evidence by the fact that he admittedly lived there for eight . . . years
    and yet received no ownership interest whatsoever therein from [Mary].” Jill’s
    Answer to Bob’s “New Matter,” 6/11/21, at 1 (unpaginated).
    On June 17, 2021, Jill filed a motion to allow remote testimony, averring
    that she intended to call two witnesses, Timothy and Trish ─ both siblings and
    beneficiaries of the Estate.       Jill indicated “their in-person attendance and
    testimony would constitute a severe hardship for both.” Jill’s Motion to Allow
    Remote Testimony, 6/17/21, at 1 (unpaginated). That same day, the court
    entered an order, stating the motion was moot because:
    [Jill’s] own request was for Oral Argument and, therefore, no
    witnesses shall be called for Oral Argument, there is no need to
    rule on the Motion for Remote Testimony as no testimony is ever
    requested for Oral Argument. Accordingly, after . . . Oral
    Argument, if a hearing becomes necessary, the Court will discuss
    at that Argument how testimony should be presented.
    Order, 6/17/21.
    On June 21, 2021,2 after argument and discussion, the court ordered
    that an evidentiary hearing be held on July 6th, which was later continued to
    July 19th. See Order of Court, 6/23/21; see also Order, 6/25/21.
    ____________________________________________
    2   The order was timestamped two days later.
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    During this time, on July 12, 2021, Jill filed an omnibus discovery
    motion, concerning the specific diagnoses that were made of Mary’s condition,
    the level of care that she received during her last few weeks, the drugs she
    was taking and their effect on her, the actual market value of the home, and
    the management of her other financial dealings. See Jill’s Omnibus Discovery
    Motion, 7/12/21, at 2 (unpaginated). Jill also alleged that Bob refused to allow
    her entrance onto the property so that an “independent appraisal” could be
    conducted, and she was requesting the court grant such relief.           Id. at 3
    (unpaginated). The court denied that motion one day later. See Order of
    Court, 7/13/21.
    On July 14, 2021, Bob provided Jill with a notice of the videotaped
    deposition of Danielle Abrahamson, MPAS, PA-C, would take place on July 16,
    2021.     As mentioned above, Abrahamson is a physician’s assistant who
    treated Mary for seven years and met with Mary on September 4, 2020, after
    Mary had been diagnosed with metastatic cancer and decided to forgo further
    treatment. See Orphans’ Ct. Op., 8/6/21, at 4-5.
    In response, Jill filed a petition for a protective order pursuant to
    Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 4012. She alleged, inter alia, that when
    the court denied her omnibus discovery motion,
    such a ruling . . . indicate[d] to those attempting to abide by it
    that discovery is not to take place in the instant case prior to the
    [July 19, 2021, oral argument] hearing, including interrogatories
    . . . under Pa.R.C.P[.] Rule 4003.5 which would have at least
    allowed [Jill] to inquire as to expert witnesses [Bob] intended to
    call as a witness at trial and reports created by said witnesses
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    setting out materials, facts, etc. relied upon by said expert
    witnesses.
    Jill’s Petition for Protective Order – Pa.R.C.P. 4012, 7/14/21, at 2
    (unpaginated).         She     stated    that   Bob’s   proposed   deposition    was
    “contraindicative” of the court’s order and requested that said deposition be
    “disallowed[.]” Id. at 2-3.
    Bob replied that Abrahamson’s testimony would be beneficial to the
    court “in determining the ability of [Mary] to understand, comprehend and
    knowingly make important decisions as of September 4, 2020.”                    Bob’s
    Response to Motion for Protective Order – Pa.R.C.P. 4012, 7/15/21, at 2.
    Moreover, Bob alleged Jill’s “interpretation of the [c]ourt orders is without
    merit inasmuch as the [c]ourt in no way placed any limits on the parties’ ability
    to perform discovery.” Id. at 4. Upon consideration of Jill’s petition and Bob’s
    response, the court ordered that Abrahamson’s deposition would take place
    on July 16, 2021. See Order of Court, 7/15/21.
    On July 19, 2021, the court held a hearing on the instant petition. Four
    of the five siblings (Bob, Jill, Darlene, and Trish) testified.3 James Reed, who
    conducted the appraisal for Mary, and Laura Dunkel, who was the closing
    agent at the property sale, both testified about their interactions with Mary in
    ____________________________________________
    3 The remaining sibling, Timothy, was unable to attend the hearing due to
    financial hardship. See N.T., 7/19/21, at 190. Jill’s counsel presented an
    affidavit from Timothy to the court, in which he averred that he joined Jill and
    Trish in their concerns that Bob be removed as a co-executor. Id. at 190-91.
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    those final months. Thereafter, the court denied Jill’s petition to disqualify
    Bob as co-executor. See Order, 8/6/21. The court also entered an order,
    disposing of numerous objections made by Jill during the Abrahamson
    deposition. See Order Disposing of Objections, 8/6/21, at 1-3. This appeal
    followed.4
    Jill raises the following issues on appeal.
    A. Did the [orphans’ c]ourt abuse its discretion in misapplying the
    law, and/or exhibiting manifest bias in holding a hearing on issues
    not before it?
    B. Did the [orphans’ c]ourt . . . abuse its discretion in failing to
    remove [Bob] as co-executor of [Mary]’s estate?
    C. Did the [orphans’ c]ourt abuse its discretion in denying [Jill]’s
    “Omnibus Discovery Motion?”
    D. Did [orphans’ c]ourt abuse its discretion in denying [Jill]’s
    request that her two (2) sibling beneficiaries testify remotely[?]
    E. Did the [orphans’ c]ourt abuse its discretion in denying [Jill]’s
    “Petition for Protective Order – Pa.R.C.P. 4012?”
    ____________________________________________
    4 Though not ordered to do so, Jill filed a Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statement
    of errors complained of on appeal on September 8, 2021. The court issued a
    Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion on September 20, 2021.
    Notably, Jill’s concise statement contained eight errors. See Jill’s
    Concise Statement of Errors Complained of on Appeal, 9/8/21, at 2-4
    (unpaginated). But on appeal, she has abandoned two of those claims
    (burden shifting and weight). Accordingly, we need not address those issues.
    See Commonwealth v. Briggs, 
    12 A.3d 291
    , 310 n.19 (Pa. 2011) (declining
    to address claim raised with trial court in concise statement but subsequently
    abandoned in brief).
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    F. Did the [orphans’ c]ourt err as a matter of law in admitting
    Hospice Records without the authors thereof being available for
    Cross[-]Examination?
    Jill’s Brief at 4 (italics in original).5
    At first blush, there appears to be a timeliness issue with the filing of
    Jill’s notice of appeal. Specifically, her appeal was taken from the August 6th
    order. Jill’s notice was docketed on September 8th, more than 30 days after
    the entry of the order. See Pa.R.A.P. 903(a). This Court issued a rule to
    show cause why the appeal should not be quashed as untimely filed. See
    Order, 11/10/21. Counsel for Jill filed a response, stating that Jill “sent the
    instant appeal to Jefferson County with a courier on 3 September, 2021. . . .
    He filed the above-referenced pleadings on that date, and was told by
    Orphans’ Court staff that [Jill]’s counsel would be a sent a receipt.” Letter
    from J. Lansing Hills, Esquire, to Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 11/11/21, at
    1.   Counsel apparently issued an incorrect amount on the check that was
    attached to the notice of appeal, and shortly before close of business on
    September 3rd, “Jefferson County Orphans’ Court notified by phone of the
    oversight and requested a new check.”                Id. at 1-2.   Counsel stated he
    immediately mailed the check and “[a]dditionally discussed . . . an assurance
    by Orphans’ Court staff that the timeliness of the filing would not be affected.”
    ____________________________________________
    5 Based on the nature of Jill’s claims, we have renumbered them for ease of
    disposition.
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    Id. at 2.6 Based on these circumstances, we will treat the events concerning
    the filing as constituting a breakdown in the orphans’ court’s process, and,
    therefore, we will review the merits of Jill’s issues. See Sass v. Amtrust
    Bank, 
    74 A.3d 1054
    , 1063 (Pa. Super. 2013) (a reviewing court is “unable to
    deem an appeal timely except under the narrowest of circumstances in which
    counsel for the offending party can establish either a breakdown in the
    operations of the judicial support system or extenuating circumstances that
    rendered him incapable of filing the necessary notice.”).
    Our standard of review regarding the matter is limited:
    “The removal of an executrix is a matter vested in the sound
    discretion of the trial court, and thus we will disturb such a
    determination only upon a finding of an abuse of that discretion.”
    In re Estate of Mumma, 
    41 A.3d 41
    , 49 (Pa. Super. 2012). The
    grounds for removal of a personal representative are delineated
    in 20 Pa.C.S. § 3182. That statute allows the orphans’ court to
    replace a personal representative when he or she “is wasting or
    mismanaging the estate, is or is likely to become insolvent, or has
    failed to perform any duty imposed by law” as well as “when, for
    any other reason, the interests of the estate are likely to be
    jeopardized by his continuance in office.”          20 Pa.C.S. §
    3182(1)(5).
    In re Estate of Andrews, 
    92 A.3d 1226
    , 1230 (Pa. Super. 2014) (footnote
    omitted).7 “An executor is required to exercise the same degree of judgment
    that a reasonable person would exercise in the management of his own estate.
    ____________________________________________
    6After receiving Jill’s response, this Court discharged the rule to show cause
    but referred the matter to the merits panel. See Order, 11/17/21.
    7See also Scientific Living, Inc. v. Hohensee, 
    270 A.2d 216
    , 223-24 (Pa.
    1970).
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    This duty includes the responsibility to distribute the estate promptly.” In re
    McCrea's Estate, 
    380 A.2d 773
    , 775-76 (Pa. 1977) (citations omitted).
    Moreover, we note:
    [Where a]n executor . . is chosen by the testator himself, . . . his
    appointment represents an expression of trust and confidence by
    the testator. Hence, his removal is a drastic action which should
    be undertaken only when the estate within the control of such
    personal representative is endangered. To justify the removal of
    a testamentary personal representative the proof of the cause for
    such removal must be clear.
    In re Estate of Lux, 
    389 A.2d 1053
    , 1059 (Pa. 1978) (citations & quotation
    marks omitted). Lastly, “[t]he orphans’ court’s factual findings receive the
    same deference accorded factual findings of a jury, but we must ensure that
    the decision of the court is free from legal error.”          In re Estate of
    Rosengarten, 
    871 A.2d 1249
    , 1253 (Pa. Super. 2005).
    Jill first claims that the orphans’ court misapplied the law by holding a
    hearing that addressed Mary’s mental capacity and other issues that were not
    directly raised in her petition.   See Jill’s Brief at 16.   She states that her
    petition solely raised a prima facie case for Bob’s purported conflict of interest
    as to the sale of the property at issue. Id. at 12-15. Relying on Estate of
    Andrews and other case law, Jill complains the court ignored the applicable
    law as to the burden of proof in “conflict of interest” cases. Id. at 17-20.
    Moreover, for the first time, she alleges that the court abused its discretion in
    exhibiting manifest bias and hostility towards her. Id. at 20-27. She states:
    Put in the clearest terms, the [orphans c]ourt eagerly embraced
    [Bob]’s errant position on the issues raised within [her] Petition,
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    thereafter simply changed sua sponte the focus thereof from
    [Jill]’s raising ─ and thus bearing the burden to prove ─ the conflict
    of interest found in [Bob] investigating possible improprieties
    [regarding] the sale of [Mary]’s home to him to the nonsensical
    burden of [Jill] having to prove that those improprieties, in fact,
    occurred in order to undertake the investigation of them as a
    fiduciary of [Mary]’s estate. . . .
    Id. at 21. Jill further alleges the court “had a hard time containing its animus”
    towards her case and
    that animus was at least ostensibly based in an errant belief that
    [she], in filing her Petition, had cast baseless and unproven
    aspersions against members of a small community, and should
    have rather already had in hand proof of self dealing, fiduciary
    breach, undue influence, lack of [Mary]’s capacity, etc. prior to
    filing her Petition and/or requesting the instant hearing. . . .
    Id. at 24. She claims that she had no discovery powers, had lost all access
    to Mary’s medical and financial records once her mother passed away, and
    was not informed of the sale until a few day earlier ─ therefore, her only
    options were to open the estate with Bob or bring the instant action, and she
    chose the latter “in order to guarantee her unimpeded access to the very
    materials the [orphans’ c]ourt took animated exception to her not having at
    the [July 19th] hearing, and after denying her request for discovery a week
    prior.” Id. at 24-25.
    A review of the record reveals that the basis of Jill’s petition to disqualify
    Bob as co-executor focused on allegations that: (1) Bob “inexplicably” had
    Mary’s home appraised by a colleague of his wife’s and the value of the
    property was determined to be $315,000; and (2) shortly before her death,
    Mary, “through the haze of illness, old age, and morphine – managed to sign
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    a deed for her home” for $255,000.00. Jill’s Petition for Rule to Show Cause
    at 2-3 (unpaginated). Jill further pled that Bob
    engaged in self-dealing as [Mary]’s POA and thus violated his
    fiduciary duty to maximize [her] financial estate by essentially
    selling himself [Mary]’s home at an approximate twenty percent
    (20%) discount, and/or exercised undue influence over [Mary]
    regarding the sale of her home, and/or that [Mary] did not have
    adequate capacity to fully participate as a party to said
    sale.
    Id. at 3-4 (unpaginated) (emphases added).
    In addressing the issue, the orphans’ court found the following:
    [Jill] did not allege in a vacuum that her brother should be
    removed as co-executor on account of a conflict.          He was
    conflicted, she said, because he did or may have breached a
    fiduciary duty as [Mary]’s POA, exerted undue influence over the
    decedent while she was too weak to exert her own will, and
    thereby secured for himself a property deal beneficial to him and
    detrimental to the estate. In order to render an informed and
    appropriate decision on the ultimate issue, therefore, it was
    necessary for the Court to assess the validity of the facts upon
    which [Jill] sought [Bob]’s removal. As the case law unequivocally
    states, a court may not remove a named executor without clear
    evidence that his or her involvement will prove harmful to the
    estate, which means that [Jill] herself put directly at issue the
    ancillary questions the Court addressed in its opinion. [Bob]
    apparently recognized the evidentiary implications of [Jill]’s
    petition and came to the hearing prepared to counter her claims
    of undue influence, breach of fiduciary duty, etc., and that she
    was not equally prepared to advance her own position did not
    make the Court wrong for rendering the findings necessary to
    decide the ultimate issue.
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 9/20/21, at 1.
    We agree with the court’s sound reasoning. Contrary to Jill’s argument,
    she did raise the question as to whether Mary had the capacity to participate
    in sale of the property she owned. Indeed, in her petition, she alleged that
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    J-A25036-22
    Mary was elderly, ill, and on morphine at the time she signed the deed. This
    issue needed to be addressed as it was the prerequisite to her main question
    – whether Bob exerted undue influence in his capacity as Mary’s power of
    attorney with regard to the property sale. Therefore, Jill’s contention that the
    court misapplied the law by assessing Mary’s capacity is without merit.
    Moreover, to the extent that Jill alleges the orphans’ court was biased, we
    note that this issue is waived. See Jordan v. Pennsylvania State Univ.,
    
    276 A.3d 751
    , 762 (Pa. Super. 2022) (“It is well settled that a party may not
    raise the issue of judicial prejudice or bias for the first time in post[-]trial
    proceedings. On the contrary, a party seeking recusal or disqualification on
    the basis of judicial bias or impartiality [is required] to raise the objection at
    the earliest possible moment, or that party will suffer the consequence of
    being time barred.”) (citations & quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, Jill’s
    first claim fails.
    Next, Jill argues the court abused its discretion by failing remove Bob
    as co-executor.      See Jill’s Brief at 49. She states that since Bob had “an
    inexorable personal interest in the propriety of the sale . . . to him being
    upheld[,] his fiduciary duty to objectively investigate his own potential
    impropriety presents an undeniable conflict of interest with his personal
    interest in being cleared of that very potential impropriety.”        Id. at 51.
    Moreover, she contends that Bob “has literally proven to be the impediment
    to adequate investigation of the potential claims [Jill] alleged he would be in
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    J-A25036-22
    his refusal to allow an independent appraisal of the subject home.”          Id.
    Moreover, she points to the following as proof for Bob’s disqualification: (1)
    he purchased the home for $60,000 less than its market value per the
    appraisal; (2) he was Mary’s POA while she was “ill and ostensibly medicated
    under hospice care;” (3) the sale of the property took place mere days before
    Mary’s death via a sales agreement drafted by Bob’s wife and done without
    notifying Jill, Trish and Timothy of the sale; and (4) there was a long-standing
    conflict among the siblings.    Id. at 52.    Jill further described “the enmity
    between the various siblings” as being “palpable” and therefore, “indicia” of
    Bob’s conflict of interest. Id. at 54-55. She concludes, “It simply cannot be
    asserted that significant ‘ill feelings” do not exist[ ] between [Bob] and the
    majority of his beneficiary siblings, including [Jill] with whom he is ostensibly
    to work collaboratively as co-executor of [Mary]’s estate.” Id. at 56.
    In addressing this issue, we are guided by the following caselaw
    regarding an allegation of undue influence and the removal of an executor or
    personal representative.
    Undue influence is a “subtle, intangible and illusive thing, generally
    accomplished by a gradual, progressive inculcation of a receptive mind.” In
    re Estate of Fritts, 
    906 A.2d 601
    , 607 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citation omitted).
    To prove undue influence, a contestant must establish
    (1) the testator suffered from a weakened intellect at the time the
    will was executed; (2) there was a person in a confidential
    relationship with the testator; and (3) the person in the
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    J-A25036-22
    confidential relationship received a substantial benefit under the
    challenged will.
    In re Estate of Nalaschi, 
    90 A.3d 8
    , 14 (Pa. Super. 2014). “Once these
    three elements are established by the contestant, the burden shifts back to
    the proponent to prove the absence of undue influence by clear and convincing
    evidence.” In re Bosley, 
    26 A.3d 1104
    , 1108 (Pa. Super. 2011).
    Regarding “weakened intellect,” this Court has previously explained:
    Although our cases have not established a bright-line test
    by which weakened intellect can be identified to a legal certainty,
    they have recognized that it is typically accompanied by persistent
    confusion, forgetfulness and disorientation. In a case of undue
    influence, a trial court has greater latitude to consider medical
    testimony describing a decedent’s condition at a time remote from
    the date that the contested will was executed. However, if the
    court’s decision rests upon legally competent and sufficient
    evidence, we will not revisit its conclusions. Our review of the
    court’s factual findings is limited to considering whether those
    findings have support in the record.
    Fritts, 
    906 A.2d at 607
     (citations, brackets and quotation marks omitted).
    Moreover, with respect to “a confidential relationship, this Court has stated:
    A confidential relationship exists whenever one person has
    reposed a special confidence in another to the extent that the
    parties do not deal with each other on equal terms, either because
    of an overmastering dominance on one side, or weakness,
    dependence or justifiable trust, on the other. . . . Although no
    precise formula has been devised to ascertain the existence of a
    confidential relationship, it has been said that such a relationship
    is not confined to a particular association of parties, but exists
    whenever one occupies toward another such a position of advisor
    or counselor as reasonably to inspire confidence that he will act in
    good faith for the other’s interest. Further, the existence of a
    power of attorney given by one person to another is a clear
    indication that a confidential relationship exists between the
    parties. In fact, no clearer indication of a confidential relationship
    can exist than giving another person the power of attorney over
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    J-A25036-22
    one’s entire life’s savings. This is particularly true when the
    alleged donee is shown to have spent a great deal of time with the
    decedent or assisted in decedent’s care.
    Estate of Lakatosh, 
    656 A.2d 1378
    , 1383 (Pa. Super. 1995) (citations,
    brackets, quotation marks & paragraph break omitted).
    In In re Rafferty’s Estate, 
    105 A.2d 147
     (Pa. 1954), the Pennsylvania
    Supreme Court held: “The personal interest of a fiduciary being in conflict with
    that of the estate and the unfriendly feeling between the heirs constitute
    sufficient cause for removal.” Id. at 148.
    Subsequently, in In re Estate of DiMarco, 
    257 A.2d 849
     (Pa. 1969),
    the Supreme Court distinguished Rafferty, noting that that the personal
    representative removed in that case was an administrator ─ not an executor
    chosen by the testator. Id. at 855. The DiMarco Court ultimately concluded
    that "ill-feeling, per se, would not, in the absence of a showing of injury by
    reason thereof to the best interests of the estate, serve as a ground for [the
    co-executor]’s removal." DiMarco, 257 A.2d at 854.
    More recently, In re Estate of Westin, 
    874 A.2d 139
     (Pa. Super.
    2005), the executor of the estate was an attorney, and one of his firm’s
    employees had embezzled estate funds.         
    Id. at 142
    .    The attorney was
    removed as executor and, on appeal, a panel of this Court determined that
    the grounds for removal had been established based on the fact the attorney
    would be in a position of representing the estate in a claim against himself
    and his law firm. 
    Id. at 142-43
    . The Court stated: “Sufficient reason for
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    J-A25036-22
    removal of a fiduciary has been found when the fiduciary’s personal interest
    is in conflict with that of the estate, such that the two interests cannot be
    served simultaneously.”    
    Id. at 143
    .   The Court further construed that “a
    conflict of interest [was] readily apparent from the circumstances,” and
    therefore, the attorney’s removal as executor was necessary. 
    Id.
    Lastly, in Andrews, which Jill relies on, it was alleged that the executrix
    was dissipating estate assets by disposing of various items of
    personality contrary to the terms of the will, that she was acting
    in contravention to the estate interests by failing to acknowledge
    to the attorney for the estate the significant indebtedness which
    the Personal Representative has to the decedent, and that she had
    failed to disclose other estate assets to the petitioners.
    Andrews, 
    92 A.3d at 1229
     (quotation marks omitted).             The petitioners
    claimed the executrix had a conflict of interest in that she was the largest
    debtor of the estate and that she was self-dealing “by purchasing estate assets
    for less than fair market value and by removing personality without
    distributing it in accordance with the terms of the will.” 
    Id.
     The successor
    executrix promoted support of the prior executrix’s position that the money
    did not have to be repaid to the estate. The orphans’ court refused to appoint
    the successor executrix as representative of the estate upon the removal of
    the prior executrix. On appeal, this Court concluded that the orphans’ court
    did not abuse its discretion, stating: “The fact that [the executrix] has . . .
    insisted that the money is not an estate asset and belongs to her establishes
    a clear and direct conflict of interest. While [she] may have good faith and
    reasonable basis to assert that the funds do not have to be repaid, this fact
    - 21 -
    J-A25036-22
    fails to obviate her direct and substantial conflict.”    
    Id. at 1232
     (citation
    omitted). As for the removal of the successor executrix, the Court decided
    that also was not an abuse of discretion because she would “neglect[ ] her
    duty to collect [the] estate debt” and would act contrary to the estate’s
    interests. 
    Id. at 1233
    .
    Turning to the present matter, the orphans’ court explained its rationale
    for denying Jill’s request to remove Bob as co-executor as follows:
    One of the reasons a personal representative may be
    removed is because of ill feelings between him and a co-executor.
    Absent clear proof that those feelings actually endanger the
    estate, however, their mere existence is not sufficient. Similarly,
    a conflict of interest, though a recognized cause for removal, must
    be of such a nature that the personal representative cannot serve
    his own and the estate’s interests simultaneously. Even where a
    conflict plainly exists, moreover, it does not necessitate removal
    if the personal representative, though having once taken actions
    adverse to the estate, is nonetheless willing to comply with the
    orphans’ court’s directives and rectify any prior self-dealing.
    The ultimate issue to be decided here, as Jill points out, is
    whether Bob must be disqualified as a co-executor due to a
    conflict of interest. The Court cannot decide that question in a
    vacuum, though; it cannot accept her legal conclusions without
    reference to the facts she has alleged. It thus cannot decide the
    ultimate issue without first deciding whether the evidence shows
    clearly that Bob breached his fiduciary duty as Mary’s POA relative
    to the sale of the farm. Whereas Jill asserts that Bob secured the
    farm at a $60,000.00 discount by exerting undue influence on a
    woman rendered mentally infirm on account of her physical
    ailments and the medication she was taking to address them,
    moreover, whether Mary had the capacity to enter into the sale is
    indeed a central consideration. The evidence, though, does not
    support the allegations.
    Though in possession of a document granting him broad
    POA powers over his mother, Bob did not exercise them in relation
    to the property transaction. He believed, in fact, that his authority
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    J-A25036-22
    to act as her POA inhered only if she became incapacitated. He
    thus acted solely on his own behalf when he signed the sales
    agreement on September 1, 2020[,] and watched while Mary did
    the same. He then was not even present when she executed the
    closing documents. Relative to the sale, therefore, Bob could only
    have breached his fiduciary duty as [Mary]’s POA if he used his
    position to unduly influence her decision to sell him the property
    and equipment for $255,000.00. The credible evidence says he
    did not.
    To prove undue influence, Jill must establish at a minimum
    that Mary suffered from a weakened intellect and that she and
    Bob were in a confidential relationship.         The evidence is
    insufficient on both points.
    The proposition that Mary suffered from a weakened
    intellect on or before September 14, 2020[,] was little more than
    conjecture. Even Trish affirmed that her mother was engaging in
    lucid conversation between August 12 and September 16, 2020,
    which means that her conclusory assertion that Mary lacked
    capacity at any time prior to completion of the sale was
    contradicted by her own factual testimony.       It was further
    contradicted by Abrahamson, who knew Mary as a patient for
    seven years, consulted with her just three days after the sales
    agreement was signed, and saw no evidence of mental incapacity.
    As demonstrated by the hospice records, moreover, her mental
    status did not change between then and September 14, 2020.
    Most telling, though, was Darlene’s testimony.
    Among the five siblings, Darlene was closest with Mary, and
    while she clearly did not share everything with her daughter, e.g.,
    she withheld information about her latest cancer diagnosis, Mary
    relied on Darlene as a confidante, an ally, and ultimately her
    primary end-of-life caretaker. Darlene, therefore, was in the best
    position to gauge on a day-to-day basis whether her mother’s
    physical ailments were negatively affecting her cognitive abilities
    and, more specifically, to ascertain whether she understood the
    documents she was signing on September 1, 2020[,] and
    September 14, 2020.          Accordingly, the Court finds most
    persuasive her assessment that Mary, uninfluenced by Bob,
    dictated the terms of purchase and fully grasped the effectuating
    documents she executed in September.
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    J-A25036-22
    The strength of Mary and Darlene’s relationship further
    bolster’s [sic] the latter’s credibility on account of the reasonable
    inferences it invites, one being that Mary surely would have
    confided in Darlene had Bob been pressuring her to sell him the
    farm on terms with which she was not comfortable. More
    importantly, the Court can readily surmise that Darlene’s loyalty
    lay with her mother and, therefore, that she would have tried to
    stop the sale or notified her other siblings, with whom she was on
    speaking terms at the time, had she entertained any reservations
    about its legitimacy. She did not have any reservations, though.
    On the contrary, she knew it was Mary’s idea to sell the farm and
    equipment to Bob for $255,000.00; she knew that was what her
    mother, acting of her own free will, wanted to do.
    In total, therefore, the evidence fails to establish that Mary
    suffered from a weakened intellect such that she was susceptible
    to pressure from her son with respect to the sale. It fails,
    moreover[,] to establish that Mary and Bob were in a confidential
    relationship.
    As provided in In re Estate of Smaling[, 
    80 A.3d 485
     (Pa.
    Super. 2013) (en banc)], a confidential relationship only exists
    where one party, whether because of his superior position, e.g.,
    attorney versus client, or because of the other’s weakened
    physical, intellectual, or moral state, dominates or manipulates
    the other to the end that he effectively imposes his own will on
    her. Whether the parties at issue are parent and child, principal
    and agent, or even husband and wife, the evidence must show
    clearly that the stronger party effectively imposed his will on the
    weaker party.       With limited exceptions not relevant here,
    therefore, the existence [or] non-existence of a confidential
    relationship is a fact-based determination . . ., and in this case,
    the facts do not favor Jill’s position.
    As discussed above, what the evidence reveals about Mary
    is that she was fully possessed of her faculties and acting of her
    own volition when she sold the farm to Bob. What it reveals,
    moreover, is that Bob only proposed to buy it after Mary decided
    she was going to sell it and after she received Reed’s appraisal.
    Even then, he did not pressure her to do so and was not involved
    in deciding the selling price. As Darlene credibly testified, Mary
    was an independent thinker who did not allow anyone besides her
    husband tell her what to do, and Jill did not present sufficient
    evidence from which the Court might reasonably conclude that
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    J-A25036-22
    Bob was an exception. She thus did not present sufficient
    evidence from which the Court might reasonably conclude that he
    and his mother were in a confidential relationship.
    “[T]he exercise of undue influence, at its core, indicates that
    an individual so influenced has lost the ability to make an
    independent decision.” Yenchi v. Americprise Fin., Inc., 
    161 A.3d 811
    , 822 (Pa. 2017). So says our Supreme Court. Whereas
    Jill has failed to prove either that Bob purposed to influence Mary’s
    decision to sell him the farm and equipment for $255,000.00 or
    that she was susceptible to his influence, therefore, she has failed
    to establish that the sale was occasioned by undue influence.
    Finally, while Jill and Bob may be estranged, the evidence
    does not sustain the conclusion that they are so adverse to one
    another that their co-executorship will compromise the estate.
    Thus far, each has told the other that she or he is ready and willing
    to serve, and though Jill makes much of the fact that her brother
    has yet to advance a date for them to meet and open the estate,
    the fact is that she is equally culpable in that regard. Additionally,
    that Bob allowed Jill to come to the farm with an appraiser for
    Mary’s personal property indicates that he is indeed willing to act
    in the best interests of the estate. At the same time, the Court
    does not interpret as evidence to the contrary his refusal to allow
    her to secure an independent appraisal of the property. Bob did
    not recognize the farm as an estate asset, but as his home, which
    he knew had been the subject of an unbiased and independent
    appraisal only a few months earlier. That being the case, the
    Court does not deem his unwillingness to indulge his sister’s
    unfounded suspicions to be indicative of an unwillingness to
    dispose of Mary’s estate in accordance with her stated wishes.
    Furthermore, the manner in which Bob conducted himself at the
    hearing on July 19, 2021[,] gave the Court no reason to believe
    that he would not comply with its instructions should its
    subsequent intervention become necessary.
    In the end, then, Jill has not produced sufficient evidence to
    support any of the factual bases upon which she alleges that Bob
    has a conflict of interest that warrants his disqualification as co-
    executor of Mary's estate. That being the case, the Court will not
    disregard the testator’s express wish that the two serve together
    to dispose of her estate’s assets in accordance with her last will
    and testament.
    - 25 -
    J-A25036-22
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 8/6/21, at 5-8 (italics in original; some citations omitted).
    Keeping our standard of review in mind, we find no abuse of discretion
    in the orphans’ court’s decision to deny Jill’s request to remove Bob as co-
    executor. We affirm on the basis of its rationale while adding these additional
    comments.       The record refutes Jill’s unsupported claims8 as there was
    substantial credible evidence, which established that:            (a) Mary had the
    capacity to enter into the sales agreement; (b) Mary independently made the
    decision to lower the sales price despite the appraisal; (c) Bob did not exert
    pressure on Mary to sell the farm to him and he was not involved in deciding
    the selling price; and (d) there was no conflict of interest on Bob’s part with
    respect to his duty as power of attorney. See N.T. at 101-03 (James Reed’s
    testimony),     114-16      (Laura    Dunkel’s     testimony),   137-42   (Darlene’s
    testimony). Furthermore, the evidence established Mary was not of weakened
    intellect ─ meaning she was not persistently confused, forgetful and
    disoriented ─ at the time of the sale. See Fritts, 
    906 A.2d at 607
    . Likewise,
    while Bob was one of Mary’s POAs and as such, a confidential relationship
    existed, he was not living with Mary or assisting in her care at the time of the
    sale. See Lakatosh, 
    656 A.2d at 1383
    . Thus, the record was deficient of
    ____________________________________________
    8 In fact, Jill even testified that in the preparation of her petition, she did not
    talk to any of Mary’s physicians, her physician’s assistant, the hospice nurses,
    or the appraiser. N.T. at 52-54. She also indicated that she was not present
    when the appraisal was conducted, the agreement of sale was completed, and
    the deed and closing documents were signed. Id. at 55.
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    J-A25036-22
    any evidence to support the inference that Bob acted with undue influence
    over Mary.
    Moreover, we recognize that while there was some animosity among the
    siblings, we reiterate the DiMarco conclusion that "ill-feeling, per se, would
    not, in the absence of a showing of injury by reason thereof to the best
    interests of the estate, serve as a ground for [a co-executor’s] removal."
    DiMarco, 257 A.2d at 854. Here, in the absence of any other proof besides
    Jill’s unsupported allegations, there was no showing of injury to the best
    interests of Mary’s estate. Accordingly, her second argument fails.
    Regarding her third claim, Jill asserts that the orphans’ court abused its
    discretion by denying her discovery-related continuance request, after it sua
    sponte decided that it would hear argument on issues not properly before it,
    i.e. Mary’s capacity. See Jill’s Brief at 28. She states that “when it became
    clear that obtaining discovery from [medical] providers/financial institution[s]
    . . . was not practicable,” she requested the court continue the July 19th
    hearing and establish a 90-day discovery period. Id. at 29. Jill contends the
    court “struck out a reference to a period for depositions” in her proposed order
    and that
    once the [orphans’ c]ourt scheduled, and subsequently
    rescheduled, the hearing, given the requirements of, and temporal
    limitations set forth within, Pa.R.C.P. 4007.1, 4009.12 and
    4009.21 vis-à-vis the dates the . . . [c]ourt set for the evidentiary
    hearing, successful discovery was rendered entirely impracticable.
    Let alone [Jill]’s ability to retain any expert to testify based on any
    documents or testimony obtained via such discovery.
    - 27 -
    J-A25036-22
    Id. at 32. Jill reiterates her allegation of purported judicial bias, stating:
    [The court’s] abuse becomes all the more starkly evident, and
    indicative of it[s] manifest bias against [her], when one considers
    it[s] decision the very next day to literally guarantee, over [her]
    strenuous objection, [Bob]’s deposition in lieu of testimony of the
    sole medical care provider presented as a witness at the instant
    hearing, and with less than [48] hours’ notice to [Jill]’s counsel.
    Id. at 34.
    Jill also alleges the court abused its discretion by denying her request
    to enter onto the property for purposes of having her own appraisal conducted.
    Jill’s Brief at 34. She contends that because she is asserting Bob engaged in
    self-dealing, “it makes absolute practical and equitable sense that [she] be
    allowed to obtain the proverbial ‘second opinion’ as to the actual market value
    of the subject property.” Id. at 36. Jill maintains that in denying her request
    based on the theory that she had speculated the results were skewed in Bob’s
    favor, the court “simply inferred that [she] was asserting that the appraisal
    was ‘skwewed’ [sic] despite her not stating that opinion at all” and that the
    court seemed “to have arrived at that pejorative assumption merely upon
    [her] pleading facts later borne out as true.”        Id. at 38.     Notably, Jill
    “concedes” the “reasonability” of the court’s “assumption,” stating: “All the
    facts surrounding this appraisal and sale do inexorably lead an objective
    observer to just such conclusions as to potential impropriety; or at the least
    significant questions which, in turn, would bind any fiduciary to undertake an
    unbiased and unimpeded investigation of them.” Id. at 39. Nevertheless, Jill
    asserts Bob’s “outright refusal to allow even an independent appraisal of the
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    J-A25036-22
    subject home, is not only emblematic of the very conflict of interest which
    [she] claims should disqualify him as executor, but also emblematic of the fact
    that he will act in his own interest when faced with that conflict.” Id.
    We apply an abuse of discretion standard of review when considering
    the denial of a continuance request. See In the Interest of D.F., 
    165 A.3d 960
    , 965 (Pa. Super. 2017).
    With respect to its order denying Jill’s request, the orphans’ court
    explained:
    Denying [Jill] a 90-day continuance so that she could
    conduct discovery was not an abuse of discretion. As the record
    discloses, she was prepared to prove her claim on June 21, 2021,
    errantly believing that the matter was scheduled for a hearing
    rather than an argument. She was also ready to make her case
    on July 6 but did not have the chance because her attorney had a
    scheduling conflict the Court accommodated by moving the
    hearing to July 19. Nonetheless, [Jill] knew on both June 21 and
    July 6 that [Bob], who had filed his answer and new matter on
    Mary 24, 2021, was denying her allegations and affirmatively
    claiming that [Mary] was lucid at all relevant times pertinent to
    the sale of the farm; that she alone had decided its selling after
    receiving an independent appraisal; and that he had not sought
    to influence her decision. Just [one] week before the hearing for
    which the Court had reserved an entire day, however, she asked
    the Court for a discovery-related continuance, indicating that she
    had just learned of [Bob]’s intention to call witnesses whose
    purpose would be “to rebut the specific allegations of [her]
    petition.” Far from establishing “good cause” for the continuance,
    what [Jill]’s pleading thus indicated was that she had simply failed
    to appreciate the evidentiary implications of her own petition and
    thus was no[t] prepared to meet evidence specifically designed to
    counter allegations she had leveled [three] months earlier.
    Surprise and lack of preparedness are two very different things,
    and the Court did not abuse its discretion by denying [Jill]’s
    discovery-related request for continuance when it was occasioned
    by the latter.
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    J-A25036-22
    Be that as it may, most of the facts [Jill] sought to learn
    through discovery were in fact established at the hearing.
    [Mary]’s hospice records, supplemented by Darlene Kersey’s
    testimony, detailed [Mary]’s diagnoses, what medications she was
    taking, and the specific care she was receiving the last few weeks
    of her life, while James Reed’s survey established the actual
    market value of the home. [Darlene] and [Bob] also testified
    regarding [Mary]’s finances, asserting that she alone was deciding
    how to spend her money. [Jill] may still question what was
    happening with [Mary]’s financial affairs, of course, but once
    installed as co-executor, she will have access to [Mary]’s account
    records and will be able to challenge any suspicious activity she
    might discover; her inability to see those records prior to the July
    hearing did not preclude her from doing so later should she find
    evidence of impropriety. It is plain from the record, therefore,
    that [Jill] was not prejudiced by the Court’s denial in any event.
    [ ] Nor did the Court abuse its discretion when it denied
    [Jill]’s request to enter the subject property to secure a second
    appraisal. As of July 12, 2021 — the date she filed her omnibus
    discovery motion — [Bob] held legal title to the property, which
    had been the subject of a professional appraisal the year before.
    [Jill] suspected based solely on her perception that Mr. Reed was
    “a colleague of [Bob’s] real estate agent wife[ ]” that he skewed
    the results of the appraisal so as to favor [Bob]. Unsupported
    even in the pleadings by facts from which the Court could
    reasonably infer Mr. Reed’s bias, though, her suspicion did not
    warrant an order authorizing one or more uninvited persons to
    enter property [Bob] had presumptively acquired lawfully. The
    Court thus acted well within its discretion in denying her request.
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 9/20/21, at 2-3 (footnote omitted)
    We again agree with the orphans’ court’s rationale. Jill filed her petition
    on April 21, 2021, and then waited until July 12, 2021, to file the continuance
    request. At that time, Jill was fully aware of Bob’s position as he had filed a
    response on May 24th, and the parties had already met on June 21st and
    agreed to schedule the evidentiary hearing for July. Jill’s failure to appreciate
    the implications of the allegations set forth in her own petition and
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    J-A25036-22
    consequently, the failure to prepare evidentiary support are the result of her
    own doing. As the court pointed out, this was not a surprise attack, but rather,
    amounted to a lack of preparedness on her part.         See Orphans’ Ct. Op.,
    9/20/21, at 2.      Therefore, we conclude that the court did not abuse its
    discretion in denying her discovery-related continuance request.9 Moreover,
    Jill’s argument regarding the court’s denial of her request to enter the property
    does not persuade us otherwise. Jill already took issue with the fact that the
    amount Bob paid for the property was below the initial appraisal amount ─
    she does not explain why an additional appraisal would be necessary.
    Accordingly, this issue fails.
    In Jill’s next argument, she alleges the orphans’ court abused its
    discretion by denying her request that her two sibling beneficiaries testify
    remotely. Jill’s Brief at 40. Relying on a June 30, 2021, recommendation
    made by the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts and Pennsylvania
    Conference of State Trial Judges Remote Proceeding Task Force, Jill argues
    that Bob would not be prejudiced by having two of his siblings testify remotely
    and that they were exactly the type of witnesses referenced in the Task Force’s
    ____________________________________________
    9 See Kerns v. Methodist Hosp., 
    574 A.2d 1068
    , 1074 (Pa. Super. 1990)
    (affirming denial of a non-moving party’s request for a discovery continuance
    after a summary judgment motion was filed, where adequate time for
    discovery had already expired and the requesting party failed to show due
    diligence in seeking discovery and information material to their case).
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    J-A25036-22
    recommendation “who should be granted leave to testify remotely in an
    otherwise in-person proceeding.” Id. at 42-43.
    Here, the orphans’ court explained its denial of Jill’s request as follows:
    The Court did not abuse its discretion in disallowing the
    proposed witnesses to testify remotely. [Trish], as it turned out,
    was able to attend the rescheduled hearing, and there is nothing
    in the record to indicate that Timothy Beidl’s testimony was in any
    way essential for [Jill] to prove her allegations. [Jill] made no
    proffer, for instance, regarding what admissible, non-cumulative
    evidence he may have offered,1 and nothing she or Ms. Moore said
    suggested that their distant brother would have been able to
    speak more knowledgeably or authoritatively about any of the
    factual questions undergirding her request to have [Bob] removed
    as co-guardian.
    _________________________
    1 Because [Bob]’s attorney was vigilant about objecting to
    hearsay evidence and testimony rendered incompetent by
    the Dead Man’s Act, the Court can reasonably presume that
    [Timothy] would not have had the opportunity to share with
    the Court any statements [Mary] may have made to him.
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 9/20/21, at 1-2.
    We agree with the court there is no support for Jill’s remote testimony
    challenge. Indeed, Trish attended and testified at the July 19th hearing so Jill
    did not suffer any prejudice with respect to her testimony. Moreover, other
    than a bald assertion, Jill fails to explain how Timothy’s purported testimony
    would amount to any more than repetitive to the averment already made at
    the hearing that he joined Jill and Trish in their concerns that Bob be removed
    as a co-executor.   See N.T. at 190-91.       Jill’s reliance on the Task Force’s
    recommendation is misplaced where there was a considerable number of
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    J-A25036-22
    witnesses and testimony regarding the issue, and Timothy’s testimony would
    have been cumulative. Accordingly, this claim fails.
    In her penultimate assertion, Jill complains the court abused its
    discretion in denying her petition for a protective order pursuant to Rule 4012.
    See Jill’s Brief at 44. Jill first reiterates her assertion that the court “crossed
    out the portion of [her] initial proposed order appended to her Petition
    referring to the timeframe for depositions to take place as a part of its very
    first order in the instant case[,]” but then notes that Bob was able to depose
    Abrahamson. Id. She states that she filed the petition for the protective
    order
    raising therein the de facto burden of [Bob]’s failure to provide
    her the requisite ‘reasonable notice’ per Pa.R.C.P. 4007.1, her
    counsel’s inability to attend upon such short notice, the fact that
    the requested testimony was inappropriate even under Pa.R.C.P.
    4020(a)(5) due to the inclusion of hearsay, the issue that the
    [orphans’ c]ourt’s first order . . . included its crossing out of a
    provision for a period of depositions, and that literally the day
    prior[,] the [orphans’ c]ourt had denied [her] request to establish
    a discovery period wherein depositions could take place.
    Id. at 45. By allowing Abrahamson’s deposition to take place based on a pre-
    planned vacation excuse, Jill states that the court’s action constituted “the
    quintessential example of manifest bias, and misapplication of the applicable
    law.” Id. at 46.
    Rule 4012 provides, in pertinent part:
    (a) Upon motion by a party or by the person from whom discovery
    or deposition is sought, and for good cause shown, the court may
    make any order which justice requires to protect a party or person
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    J-A25036-22
    from unreasonable annoyance, embarrassment, oppression,
    burden or expense, including one or more of the following:
    (1) that the discovery or deposition shall be prohibited[.]
    Pa.R.C.P. 4012(a)(1).
    Here, the orphans’ court found the following:
    [Bob] deposed and presented Ms. Abrahamson, [Mary]’s treating
    physician assistant, as a fact witness, not an expert medical
    witness. That being the case, [Jill] was not denied the opportunity
    to learn the substance of her testimony via a written report or to
    review any documents upon which she relied ahead of time, her
    only right being to cross-examine Ms. [Abrahamson] and review
    those records at the time she testified. What occurred at an off-
    site location [three] days before the hearing, therefore, was fully
    equivalent to what would have occurred in the courtroom on July
    19. Whereas there was nothing improper about the deposition
    itself, moreover, it was no more error for the Court to consider
    Ms. [Abrahamson]’s testimony as transcribed by the court
    reporter than it would have been had she appeared live in court.
    See also “Order Disposing of Objections,” 08/06/2021, ¶ 1 (ruling
    on [Jill]’s objection to the deposition’s occurrence).
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 9/20/21, at 3.
    We concur with the orphans’ court’s conclusion.       First, we note Jill
    appears to misinterpret the court’s act of crossing out the timeframe for
    depositions in her proposed order, which was attached to her petition, as a
    sign that she, herself, could not take any depositions or that discovery was
    not permitted in this matter. In reviewing the April 22, 2021, order, one can
    infer that the court was concerned with scheduling oral argument. See Order,
    4/22/21. The court’s order did not signify that Jill could not pursue any type
    of evidentiary investigation. Second, as the court explained when it disposed
    of Jill’s objections, it permitted the deposition pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 4007.2
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    J-A25036-22
    (relating when a deposition may be taken without leave of court) due to
    Abrahamson’s scheduling conflict, and Jill did not establish “unreasonable
    annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, burden, or expense . . . so as to
    justify requiring Ms. Abrahamson’s appearance in Court.” Order Disposing of
    Objections, 8/6/21, at 1.       Moreover, Jill’s counsel was present at the
    deposition and was provided with the opportunity to cross-examine
    Abrahamson and raise objections. Id. One cannot conclude that Jill or her
    counsel was unprepared for the deposition or that the court’s actions could be
    construed as a manifest bias or misapplication of the law. Accordingly, we
    find this claim has no merit.
    Lastly, Jill contends the court erred by admitting Mary’s records from
    Penn Highlands Community Nurses Hospice without the authors of those
    documents being available for cross-examination. Jill’s Brief at 46. Jill states
    that while the parties stipulated “that the custodian of said records [need not]
    appear to testify in person to authenticate same as the records kept by the
    provider[,]” the records are “voluminous,” and contain “complex and opaque
    medical jargon not within the ken of a layperson. . . .” Id. at 46-47. She
    further alleges “it is entirely unclear . . . as to how assessments of [Mary]
    were made, and who actually provided answers to treatment providers’
    questions regarding [Mary]’s status.” Id. at 47. Relying on Walsh v. Kubiak,
    
    661 A.2d 416
     (Pa. Super. 1995) (en banc), she contends that the testimony
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    J-A25036-22
    of the authors of the records is necessary to explain their medical opinions,
    and the court erred by admitting them. Jill’s Brief at 48.
    We consider the relevant standard of review:
    [I]t is well settled that the admissibility of evidence is a
    determination left to the sound discretion of the trial court, and it
    will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion or
    misapplication of law. For a ruling on the admissibility of evidence
    to constitute reversible error, it must have been harmful or
    prejudicial to the complaining party.
    In re Fiedler, 
    132 A.3d 1010
    , 1025 (Pa. Super. 2016) (en banc) (citation &
    quotation marks omitted).
    [H]earsay is defined as an out-of-court statement, which is offered
    in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted. For hearsay
    purposes, the declarant is defined as the person who makes the
    out-of-court statement, not the person who repeats it on the
    witness stand. Generally, hearsay is inadmissible because it is
    deemed untrustworthy since it was not given under oath and
    subject to cross-examination. However, the law recognizes that
    there are some circumstances attendant to the making of out-of-
    court statements that provide sufficient guarantees of their
    trustworthiness to depart from the requirement that the declarant
    be subject to cross-examination.           That is the rationale
    underpinning exceptions to the hearsay rule. Thus, it is burden of
    the proponent of hearsay evidence to convince the court of the
    admissibility of the evidence under an exception before such
    testimony will be admitted.
    Adams v. Rising Sun Med. Ctr., 
    257 A.3d 26
    , 35-36 (Pa. Super. 2020)
    (citations & quotation marks omitted).
    “Hospital records are generally admitted at trial as an exception to the
    hearsay rule under the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act.”
    Commonwealth v. Seville, 
    405 A.2d 1262
    , 1264 (Pa. Super. 1979)
    (footnote omitted). The Walsh Court stated: “Although hospital records are
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    J-A25036-22
    admissible under the business records exception to the hearsay rule to show
    the fact of hospitalization, treatment prescribed, and symptoms found,
    medical opinion contained in such records is not admissible where the doctor
    who offered the opinion is not available for cross examination.” Walsh, 
    661 A.2d at 421
     (citations omitted).
    Turning to the present matter, the orphans’ court explained its rationale
    for admitting the records as follows:
    The Court did not err either in admitting or considering [Mary]’s
    hospice records. They were plainly admissible as substantive
    evidence pursuant to Pa.R.Evid. 803(6) and, having been properly
    certified, were self-authenticating. The only question, therefore,
    was how much weight the Court should give them without having
    heard explanatory testimony. [Jill] suggested — and still
    maintains — that they were too technical to possess any real
    evidentiary value independently, but the Court did not and does
    not agree. On the contrary, [Mary]’s condition and progress were
    largely recorded in plain English, and the “medical jargon” upon
    which the Court relied, e.g., the terms “alert” and “oriented x 4,”
    were so commonly understood as to render interpretive testimony
    superfluous. The Court thus did not err or abuse its discretion in
    relation to the hospice records.
    Orphans’ Ct. Op., 9/20/21, at 3-4.
    We conclude that the orphans’ court did not err by admitting Mary’s
    hospice records for the limited purpose of assessing Mary’s condition. The
    language used in records referenced facts as to Mary’s condition, not the
    treating physician’s opinion, and could easily be understood by a layperson.
    Hence, the orphans’ court properly considered the records as admissible
    evidence. Accordingly, Jill’s final claim fails.
    Order affirmed.
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    J-A25036-22
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/29/2022
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