Leach, E. v. Davis, P. ( 2015 )


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  • J-A31018-14
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    ERICA FLEAGLE LEACH                                IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant
    v.
    PEGGY A. DAVIS
    Appellee                   No. 760 MDA 2014
    Appeal from the Order April 8, 2014
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Franklin County
    Civil Division at No(s): 2011-437
    BEFORE: BOWES, J., OTT, J., and STABILE, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY OTT, J.:                             FILED FEBRUARY 05, 2015
    Erica Fleagle Leach appeals from the order entered April 8, 2014, in
    the Franklin County Court of Common Pleas, granting summary judgment in
    favor of defendant, Peggy A. Davis.            In this action, Leach sought to
    invalidate an inter vivos transfer of a deed to a 110-acre farm1 from her
    grandfather,2 Ira M. Fleagle (herein “the decedent”) to Davis, who is Leach’s
    aunt and the decedent’s daughter. On appeal, Leach argues the trial court
    abused its discretion in granting summary judgment to Davis because the
    ____________________________________________
    1
    Throughout the proceedings, the acreage of the farm was referred to as
    110, 125 or 137 acres. For purposes of this appeal, we will refer to the total
    acreage as 110 acres, as that is the amount that appears in Leach’s
    amended complaint, and Davis’s answer.           See Plaintiff’s Amended
    Complaint, 3/22/2013, at ¶ 4; Answer to Amended Complaint, 4/17/2013, at
    ¶ 4.
    2
    Leach’s father, who was the decedent’s son, died in 1978.
    J-A31018-14
    deed transfer (1) constituted an invalid inter vivos gift; (2) was the result of
    undue influence; (3) created a constructive trust; or (4) created a resulting
    trust.     For the reasons set forth below, we reverse, in part, the order
    granting summary judgment, and remand for further proceedings.
    The facts underlying this appeal are as follows. Davis and Leach are
    the decedent’s sole legal heirs.3 The decedent owned a 110-acre farm about
    a mile from his house.        Shortly after his wife’s death, the decedent began a
    relationship with Mary Hoover. The decedent routinely stayed at his home
    during the week, and spent the weekends with Hoover. In 2004, he moved
    into Hoover’s home full-time. He lived with her until his final hospitalization
    in October of 2010.
    During all but 11 years of her life, Davis lived at the decedent’s home. 4
    Sometime in the mid-1980’s, the decedent set up a joint bank account with
    Davis and relied on her to write checks and pay his bills. 5 Davis stated the
    decedent told her how much money he wanted each month and she
    ____________________________________________
    3
    See 20 Pa.C.S. §§ 2103, 2104. Davis is the decedent’s only surviving child
    and Leach is the only daughter of the decedent’s son. The decedent’s wife
    died in 1968.
    4
    Davis did not live at the home while she was married. In 1978, after she
    divorced, she and her sons moved into the decedent’s home and lived there
    rent-free until his death.
    5
    Hoover testified the decedent was semi-literate. See Deposition of Mary
    Hoover, 2/17/2012 (“M. Hoover Deposition”), at 11.
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    withdrew the cash for him. Deposition of Peggy Davis, 1/20/2012 (“Davis
    Deposition”), at 20.   When the decedent lived at the home, Davis cooked
    meals for him, did his laundry and drove him to appointments, as needed.
    Id. at 43.
    Leach described her relationship with the decedent as “somewhat
    distant due to our circumstances.”         Deposition of Erica Fleagle Leach,
    1/20/2012 (“Leach Deposition”), at 8.       She lived about an hour from the
    decedent’s home, and saw him approximately four to five times a year. She
    stated that she sent him cards for special occasions, and called him “once
    every couple of months” when he lived with Hoover.       Id. Leach admitted
    that “toward the end” she spoke more with Hoover because her grandfather
    had difficulty hearing. Id.
    In October of 2010, the decedent suffered a heart attack and was
    hospitalized. Davis was initially informed by hospital staff that the decedent
    would be sent to a nursing home for rehabilitation.       Concerned that the
    decedent could lose the family farm in order to pay for his stay in a nursing
    home, Davis asked him if he would sign the property over to her.          She
    described their conversation as follows:
    [B]asically I told him that they were going to be sending him to
    a nursing home and I said about sometimes, you know, the
    property is attached if you run out of insurance money and
    would he be willing to sign the property over to me but it would
    still be his and he said, yes.
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    Davis Deposition at 36. Davis stated that the decedent wanted her to have
    the farm because he did not “want his land split up” and he knew she would
    “not do anything with it.” Id. at 29.
    On October 27, 2010, while still hospitalized, the decedent executed a
    deed conveying the 110-acre farm to Davis for $1.00 consideration.        The
    transaction was completed and notarized at the decedent’s hospital bedside
    by Heather Miller, a settlement agent for a title company. Thereafter, the
    hospital staff informed Davis the decedent would not be sent to a nursing
    home, but rather, would be sent home with hospice care. Two months later,
    on December 20, 2010, the decedent died, intestate, at the age of 86.6
    On May 19, 2011, Leach filed a complaint for deed avoidance, seeking
    to invalidate the October 27, 2010, deed transfer of the decedent’s farm.
    After deposing the relevant parties and all relevant witnesses, Leach filed an
    amended complaint on March 22, 2013. Thereafter, on June 12, 2013, she
    filed a motion for summary judgment, and followed by an amended motion
    on July 10, 2013.        Davis subsequently filed a cross-motion for summary
    judgment on August 7, 2013. By order entered April 8, 2014, the trial court
    denied Leach’s motion for summary judgment and granted Davis’s motion
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    6
    Letters of administration were issued to Davis on March 23, 2011.
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    for summary judgment.          Further, the court dismissed Leach’s action with
    prejudice. See Order, 4/8/2014. This timely appeal followed.7
    Although Leach lists 16 issues in the Statement of Questions Involved
    section of her brief, she raises only four claims in the Argument section. All
    of her contentions originate from the underlying claim that the trial court
    erred in granting Davis’s motion for summary judgment.
    When reviewing a motion for summary judgment, we “may disturb the
    order of the trial court only where it is established that the court committed
    an error of law or abused its discretion.” Murphy v. Duquesne U. Of The
    Holy Ghost, 
    777 A.2d 418
    , 429 (Pa. 2001), citing Capek v. Devito, 
    767 A.2d 1047
    , 1048, n.1 (Pa. 2001).
    As with all questions of law, our review is plenary. In evaluating
    the trial court’s decision to enter summary judgment, we focus
    on the legal standard articulated in Pa.R.C.P. 1035.2. The rule
    states that where there is no genuine issue of material fact and
    the moving party is entitled to relief as a matter of law,
    summary judgment may be entered. Where the nonmoving
    party bears the burden of proof on an issue, he may not merely
    rely on his pleadings or answers in order to survive summary
    judgment.
    Keystone Freight Corp. v. Stricker, 
    31 A.3d 967
    , 971 (Pa. Super. 2011)
    (internal citations omitted). See also Pa.R.C.P. 1035.2.
    ____________________________________________
    7
    On May 5, 2014, the trial court ordered Leach to file a concise statement of
    errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P 1925(b).             Leach
    complied with the trial court’s directive and filed a concise statement on May
    20, 2014.
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    Thus, our responsibility as an appellate court is to determine
    whether the record either establishes that the material facts are
    undisputed or contains insufficient evidence of facts to make out
    a prima facie cause of action, such that there is no issue to be
    decided by the fact-finder. If there is evidence that would
    allow a fact-finder to render a verdict in favor of the non-
    moving party, then summary judgment should be denied.
    Jones v. Levin, 
    940 A.2d 451
    , 453-454 (Pa. Super. 2007) (internal
    citations and footnote omitted) (emphasis supplied).            In making this
    determination, we will “view the record in the light most favorable to the
    non-moving party, and all doubts as to the existence of a genuine issue of
    material fact must be resolved against the moving party.”             Keystone
    Freight Corp., 
    supra,
     
    31 A.3d at 971
    .
    In her first issue on appeal, Leach argues the trial court erred in
    rejecting her claim that the deed transfer constituted an invalid inter vivos
    gift.   The two elements necessary to prove a valid inter vivos gift are (1)
    donative intent and (2) delivery.      Hera v. v. McCormick, 
    625 A.2d 682
    ,
    686 (Pa. Super. 1993).        “Donative intent is the ‘intention to make an
    immediate gift.’”     Wagner v. Wagner, 
    353 A.2d 819
    , 822 (Pa. 1976)
    (quotation omitted). To prove adequate delivery of a gift, the conveyance
    “must not only divest donor of all dominion and control over the property,
    but also must invest donee with complete control over the subject matter of
    the gift.” Hera, 
    supra,
     
    625 A.2d at 686
     (citation omitted).
    Initially, the burden is on the alleged donee to prove a gift inter
    vivos by clear, precise and convincing evidence. Once prima
    facie evidence of a gift is established, a presumption of validity
    arises and the burden shifts to the contestant to rebut this
    presumption by clear, precise and convincing evidence.
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    Id.
     (citations omitted).
    Relevant to the facts of this case, we note that
    a conveyance of real property by way of deed is presumptively
    valid and will not be set aside unless it is shown by clear and
    convincing evidence that the transfer was improperly induced by
    fraud or other misconduct on the part of the transferee or that
    the deed was ineffective to pass title, as, for example, where the
    deed was not delivered.
    Wagner, supra, 353 A.2d at 823-824 (Pa. 1976) (emphasis supplied). “[I]t
    is well-settled that by showing a confidential relationship between the donor
    and donee existed at the time of the gift, the burden then shifts to the
    donee to show that the gift was free of any taint of undue influence or
    deception.” In re Clark's Estate, 
    359 A.2d 777
    , 781 (Pa. 1976).
    Here, Leach argues the transfer of the deed lacked both donative
    intent and delivery.       She contends that because Davis admitted the
    decedent’s motive for transferring the deed was not to gift the farm to her,
    but rather to avoid a future attachment on the property by a nursing home,
    the transfer lacked the requisite intent to make an immediate gift.
    Moreover, Leach also claims that because Davis told the decedent the
    property would still be his, the transfer did not constitute a valid delivery.
    Indeed, Leach states, “[a]t most [the decedent] viewed [Davis] as a trustee
    or conservator.” Leach’s Brief at 33.
    The trial court rejected Leach’s argument, finding that the requisite
    elements of donative intent and delivery were both satisfied upon transfer of
    the deed. The court explained:
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    Upon execution of the deed, the Decedent was divested of all
    dominion and control giving such control to [Davis]. Further,
    donative intent was present upon signing on the deed, as such
    action evinces a manifestation of intent to convey the farm at
    the time of execution on October 27, 2010. [Leach] has not
    rebutted the presumption that the deed was a valid transfer of
    the farm. Therefore, the deed is prima facie evidence of a valid
    inter vivos transfer of property from the Decedent to [Davis].
    Trial Court Opinion, 4/9/2014, at 24.
    We agree with the trial court’s determination that the execution of the
    deed constituted prima facie evidence of a presumptively valid gift from the
    decedent to Davis.    Wagner, supra.        The terms of the deed are clear:
    “Grantor [decedent] … does grant, bargain and sell, release and confirm
    unto said Grantee [Davis], as sole owner[,]” the farm property, described
    therein. Deed, 10/27/2010, at 1 (emphasis supplied). Moreover, the deed
    also provided that the land was “granted … unto the said Grantee, her heirs
    and assigns, forever.”   Id. at 3.      Accordingly, under the deed’s explicit
    terms, the decedent granted all his interest in the land to Davis, which
    became enforceable upon execution of the deed.       Nevertheless, our inquiry
    does not end here, since, as noted above, a presumptively valid gift may be
    set aside upon clear and convincing evidence of undue influence.      Clark’s
    Estate, supra.
    If a party contesting an inter vivos gift can demonstrate a confidential
    relationship existed between the grantor and grantee, “the burden shifts to
    the donee to show that the alleged gift was free of any taint of undue
    influence or deception.” Hera, 
    supra,
     
    625 A.2d at 690
    .         Although, here,
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    the trial court found Leach failed to produce sufficient evidence to
    demonstrate either that a confidential relationship existed between the
    decedent and Davis or that Davis asserted undue influence over the
    decedent,8 Leach challenges those determinations in her second issue on
    appeal.
    A presumption of undue influence arises when evidence of three
    elements is present: “(1) … a person … in a confidential relationship with a
    testator or grantor has (2) received a substantial portion of the grantor’s
    property, and (3) that the grantor suffers from a weakened intellect.”
    Owens v. Mazzei, 
    847 A.2d 700
    , 706 (Pa. Super. 2004) (citations omitted).
    “Once the presumption has attached, the burden of proof shifts to the
    defendant to disprove undue influence by clear and convincing evidence that
    one of the foregoing criteria is not established.” 
    Id.
    This Court has explained that “[a] confidential relationship exists
    where the circumstances ‘make it certain that the parties did not deal on
    equal terms; where, on the one side there is an overmastering influence, or
    on the other, weakness, dependence or trust, justifiably reposed.’”   Hera,
    
    supra,
     
    625 A.2d at 690
     (citation omitted and emphasis supplied). Both an
    “overmastering influence” and “weakness, dependence or trust” need not be
    present. Basile v. H & R Block, Inc., 
    777 A.2d 95
    , 101 (Pa. Super. 2001).
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    8
    See Trial Court Opinion, 4/9/2014, at 16-21.
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    “Th[is] Court has recognized … that ‘[t]he essence of [a confidential]
    relationship is trust and reliance on one side, and a corresponding
    opportunity to abuse that trust for personal gain on the other.’”             
    Id.
    (emphasis supplied).
    In the present case, Leach contends a “confidential relationship”
    existed between Davis and the decedent.               She emphasizes that Davis
    controlled “the bulk” of the decedent’s finances, providing him with an
    allowance and, in certain circumstances, withholding that allowance. Leach
    Brief at 37.     Moreover, Leach argues Davis “spawned and designed the
    deeding” of the farm, “retained, directed and paid the scrivener, and was
    present when the deed was executed” while the decedent was “bedfast with
    dementia and other serious afflictions in the Intensive Care Unit of a
    hospital.” Id. at 38.
    The trial court found, however, “there [was] simply not enough
    evidence to evince a confidential relationship between the [d]ecedent” and
    Davis.      Trial Court Opinion, 4/9/2014, at 18.             Although the court
    acknowledged the decedent “trusted and relied on [Davis] to handle his
    money,” it noted that “such a relationship is not out of the ordinary in a
    father-daughter relationship.”         Id.     Moreover, the court discounted two
    disagreements about money the decedent had with Davis,9 finding that
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    9
    These two disagreements are discussed in more detail infra.
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    those two instances did “not amount to [Davis] having an overmastering
    influence on the [d]ecedent.” Id. Furthermore, the court concluded:
    The modicum of evidence favorable to [Leach] regarding a
    confidential relationship does not “make it certain that the
    parties did not deal on equal terms” when the [d]ecedent
    executed a deed in [Davis’s] favor. Therefore, [Leach] cannot
    establish the existence of a confidential relationship between
    [Davis] and the [d]ecedent.
    Id. at 19-20.
    Viewing the evidence, as we must, in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party,10 we are constrained to disagree with the trial court’s
    conclusion.      Rather, we find Leach produced sufficient evidence of a
    confidential relationship between Davis and the decedent to survive
    summary judgment, and establish a genuine issue of material fact.
    The evidence demonstrated that Davis lived in the decedent’s home
    since 1978, and had a joint bank account with the decedent since the mid-
    1980’s.    Davis Deposition at 12, 14.             Davis testified she “wrote all the
    checks” on the account to pay his bills, and that the decedent permitted her
    to use the account to pay her own grocery bill as well. Id. at 15, 19. She
    also provided him with spending money from that account. Id. at 20-21.
    Hoover, the     decedent’s longtime          girlfriend,   testified   that   Davis
    controlled the decedent’s finances, and provided him with a monthly
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    10
    Keystone Freight Corp., 
    supra,
     
    31 A.3d at 971
    .
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    allowance until June of 2010. M. Hoover Deposition at 8-9. She described
    two instances in which the decedent and Davis disagreed about money. The
    first occurred in June 2010, when Hoover took the decedent to get money
    from Davis. Hoover explained that Davis asked to see the decedent’s wallet
    and, upon finding a significant amount of cash, took $1300 from him, and
    returned the wallet stating he “[didn]’t need it.”           Id. at 14.       The second
    incident occurred sometime during the summer of 2010, when the decedent
    asked Davis for money to buy new clothes for Leach’s September, 2010
    wedding. Id. at 13. Davis gave him only $200 and told him “he didn’t need
    a suit.” Id. at 14.11
    Furthermore,      Davis    admitted     that   she   initiated   the    discussion
    regarding the deed transfer at a time when the decedent was hospitalized, in
    ill health, and believed he would be discharged to a nursing home.                   She
    asked him if he would deed the farm to her, purportedly to prevent its
    attachment by a nursing home, and told him that the farm would, in any
    event, still be his. Id. at 36. While Davis acknowledged the transaction was
    rushed, she testified she “just wanted the property, you know, taken care of
    before he went to a nursing home.” Id. at 39.
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    11
    However, Hoover also acknowledged she and the decedent had another
    banking account, in their joint names, from which he wrote a $2,000 check
    as a gift to Leach for her September 2010 wedding. M. Hoover Deposition at
    28.
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    While the evidence may not, ultimately, be of sufficient quality and
    quantity to support a verdict for Leach, that determination is a question for
    the fact finder.   Here, the trial court prematurely weighed the evidence
    presented by Davis and Leach, and made credibility determinations
    regarding Davis’s intentions.   Rather, the court was required to view the
    evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party, here Leach, in
    an effort to determine whether Leach presented sufficient evidence for a jury
    to find that Davis and the decedent had a “confidential relationship,” and
    whether there existed a genuine issue of material fact.      See Keystone
    Freight Corp., 
    supra,
     
    31 A.3d at 967
    ; Jones, supra, 940 A.2d at 453-454.
    Based on our review of the record, there is a genuine issue of material fact
    as to whether Davis had an overmastering influence over the decedent, or
    whether the decedent trusted and depended on Davis.
    The same is true of Leach’s evidence concerning the decedent’s
    “weakened intellect.”    When considering whether a decedent had a
    “weakened intellect,”
    [o]ur Supreme Court has cautioned that “weakened mentality as
    relevant to undue influence need not amount to testamentary
    incapacity.” Consequently, the grantor’s mental condition at the
    moment he authorized the transfer of his property is “not as
    significant when reflecting upon undue influence as it is when
    reflecting upon testamentary capacity. [When the challenge is
    based on undue influence,] more credence and weight may be
    given to the contestant’s remote medical testimony.” 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.
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    Owens v. Mazzei, 
    847 A.2d 700
    , 707 (Pa. Super. 2004) (internal citations
    omitted). However, it is axiomatic that “[e]vidence of physical infirmities …
    is not enough, alone, to establish weakened intellect.”      In re Estate of
    Glover, 
    669 A.2d 1011
    , 1015 (Pa. Super. 1996) (finding will contestants
    failed to produce any evidence that decedent “suffered from spells of
    confusion, forgetfulness or disorientation” and, in fact, court found “[a]lmost
    every witness testified that [decedent] was extremely strong-willed, lucid
    and sharp”).
    Leach contends the evidence demonstrated the decedent had a
    weakened intellect.   Specifically, she emphasizes that the decedent was
    semi-literate, and in a “dire mental and physical condition on the days
    surrounding the deeding.” Leach’s Brief at 38.
    Conversely, the trial court found that the evidence presented by Leach
    may have “touch[ed] upon confusion, forgetfulness, or disorientation, but
    [did] not establish that the [d]ecedent was of less than sound mind[.]” Trial
    Court Opinion, 4/19/2014, at 20. Moreover, the court emphasized Leach’s
    lack of medical testimony supporting the decedent’s purported weakened
    mental state. 
    Id.
     In fact, the only medical document of record appears to
    contradict Leach’s claim.   That document, a report of a doctor’s interview
    with the decedent two days before the decedent executed the deed transfer,
    indicates the decedent was “alert and oriented to person, time and place.
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    He [was] able to answer our questions.” See Leach Deposition, Exhibit D-1,
    Initial Hospital/Consult RPT, 10/27/10, at 2.12
    Again, viewing the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving
    party, we conclude the trial court did not acknowledge evidence presented
    by Leach, which was sufficient to demonstrate, for purposes of summary
    judgment, that the decedent suffered from a weakened intellect.          For
    example, Leach testified that when she visited the decedent in the hospital
    on October 19, 2010, a week before he signed the deed transfer, he was “a
    very sick man.” Leach Deposition at 11. She explained their conversation
    was “[v]ery minimal” and the decedent “kind of just laid there and just
    looked at us.”     
    Id.
       More importantly, even Davis admitted that while the
    decedent was in the hospital, he would sometimes hallucinate, and see
    things on the wall, due to the medication he was given. Davis Deposition at
    37.   Both Hoover and her son, Roger, testified that during the last six
    months of his life, the decedent’s physical and mental health were declining.
    M. Hoover Deposition at 15; Deposition of Roger Hoover, 2/17/2012 (“R.
    Hoover Deposition”), at 9. Roger explained that “sometimes [the decedent
    would] be lucid, then the next minute he wouldn’t be[.]”          R. Hoover
    Deposition at 12.
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    12
    That same report, however, also indicates that “[a]ccording to [the
    decedent’s] family physician, …[the decedent] is also progressively more
    disoriented and demented.” Id. at 1.
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    Although the trial court emphasized the lack of medical evidence, none
    is required.     See In re Estate of Angle, 
    777 A.2d 114
    , 123 (Pa. Super.
    2001) (noting that “[a] doctor's opinion on medical incompetence is not
    given particular weight especially when other disinterested witnesses
    establish that a person with Alzheimer’s disease was competent and not
    suffering from a weakened intellect at the relevant time.”) (emphasis
    supplied). Indeed, Leach presented evidence, via two witnesses who had no
    interest in the farm, Hoover and her son, that the decedent’s mental health
    was progressively declining in the months prior to his hospitalization.
    Moreover, Davis herself admitted that the medications the decedent received
    while he was hospitalized were causing him to hallucinate. The fact that the
    settlement agent, who had not met the decedent prior to the deed transfer,
    testified that she thought he “knew what was going on around him” is not
    dispositive.13    Deposition of Heather Miller, 1/20/2012 (“Miller Deposition”)
    at 16. Rather, when a challenge is based upon “weakened intellect” rather
    than “testamentary capacity,” “more credence and weight may be given to
    the contestant’s remote medical testimony.”        Owens, supra, 
    847 A.2d at 707
     (citation omitted).
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    13
    Specifically, when asked if the decedent was alert at the time of the deed
    transfer, Miller testified: “I think he knew what was going on around him,
    yes. I wouldn’t say he was … bright-eyed and bushy tailed.” Miller
    Deposition at 16.
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    Accordingly, we conclude the trial court abused its discretion, and
    improperly weighed the evidence, when it concluded Leach failed to establish
    a prima facie case of undue influence. See Estate of Keiper, 
    454 A.2d 31
    ,
    34 (Pa. Super. 1982) (“Transactions by which a decedent shortly before his
    death practically strips himself of all his available property are naturally
    regarded with suspicion, and are to be scrutinized with a keen and
    somewhat incredulous eye.”) (citation omitted).           Therefore, we     are
    constrained to reverse the order granting summary judgment on this claim.
    In her next issue, Leach argues the trial court erred in concluding she
    failed to present sufficient evidence that the deed transfer created a
    constructive trust. She contends that, by Davis’s own words, the admitted
    motivation for the deed transfer was to prevent attachment of the property
    by a nursing home, which at best, constituted a unilateral mistake. Leach
    further asserts the decedent never intended to gift the farm to Davis.
    When considering whether a property transfer creates a constructive
    trust, we must bear in mind the following:
    The imposition of a constructive trust is an equitable remedy
    designed to prevent unjust enrichment. A constructive trust
    arises ‘(w)here a person holding title to property is subject to an
    equitable duty to convey it to another on the ground that he
    would be unjustly enriched if he were permitted to retain it. . . .’
    A transferee is under such an equitable duty to reconvey
    property to the transferor if the transfer was induced by
    fraud, duress, undue influence, or mistake, or if the
    transfer was the result of an abuse of a confidential
    relationship.
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    Yohe v. Yohe, 
    353 A.2d 417
    , 421 (Pa. 1976) (internal citations omitted and
    emphasis supplied).
    As we noted supra, we find Leach presented sufficient evidence of
    Davis’s “undue influence” over the decedent to survive summary judgment.
    Accordingly, that same evidence, if credited by the fact finder, is sufficient to
    demonstrate that the deed transfer established a constructive trust. Indeed,
    by her own words, Davis assured the decedent that after the transfer, the
    property “would still be his.” Davis Deposition at 36. Accordingly, this claim
    also survives summary judgment.
    Lastly, Leach argues the deed transfer established a resulting trust.
    She contends that by Davis’s own words, “any reasonable person would
    have to conclude that this was a trust type arrangement.” Leach’s Brief at
    45.    Leach argues the circumstances surrounding the deed transfer
    demonstrate that the decedent did not intend Davis to have a beneficial
    interest in the farm. Id. at 44.
    A party must demonstrate the establishment of a resulting trust with
    clear and convincing evidence. Chambersburg Trust Co. v. Eichelberger,
    
    588 A.2d 549
    , 551 (Pa. Super. 1991).          “A resulting trust arises when a
    person makes a disposition of property under circumstances which raise an
    inference that he does not intend that the person taking or holding the
    property should have a beneficial interest in the property.” Fenderson v.
    Fenderson, 
    685 A.2d 600
    , 604 (Pa. Super. 1996) (citations omitted). “A
    resulting trust must arise at the time title is transferred.” 
    Id. at 605
    .
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    J-A31018-14
    Here, the trial court found that the circumstances on the date of the
    deed transfer did not raise an inference that “the [d]ecedent did not intend
    for [Davis] to have a beneficial interest in the farm at the time when he
    conveyed it to her.”        Trial Court Opinion, 4/9/2014, at 21.        Indeed, he
    signed over the deed to her, exclusively.            See Deed, 10/27/2010, at 1
    (stating “Grantor … does grant, bargain and sell, release and conform unto
    said Grantee, as sole owner” the farm property) (emphasis supplied). We
    find no reason to disagree. Although there was some evidence that, at one
    time, the decedent intended to sell the property to his nephew,14 there was
    no indication on the day of the title transfer, that the decedent intended to
    transfer less than a full beneficial interest in the property to Davis.
    Accordingly, the trial court properly granted summary judgment in favor of
    Davis on this claim.
    Because we conclude the trial court abused its discretion in granting
    summary      judgment      on   Leach’s    claims   of   undue   influence   and   the
    establishment of a constructive trust, we reverse, in part, the order granting
    summary judgment, reinstate counts II and III of Leach’s amended
    ____________________________________________
    14
    See R. Hoover Deposition at 6-9; Deposition of Arthur Beidel, 2/17/2012,
    at 8; Deposition of Joseph Umbrell, 2/17/2012, at 5-6.
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    J-A31018-14
    complaint, and remand for further proceedings.     In all other respects, we
    affirm the order of the trial court.15
    Order affirmed in part and reversed in part.     Case remanded for
    proceedings consistent with this Memorandum. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 2/5/2015
    ____________________________________________
    15
    Leach presented the following eight counts in her amended complaint: (I)
    Lack of Testamentary Capacity and Incompetence; (II) Undue Influence;
    (III) Constructive Trust as to Real Estate; (IV) Resulting Trust as to Real
    Estate; (V) Bank Account Constructive Trusts; (VI) Bank Accounts Resulting
    Trusts; (VII) Accounting to Franklin County; and (VIII) Application of the
    Clean Hands Doctrine. See Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, 3/22/2013. In
    its April 9, 2014, order and opinion, the trial court disposed of all eight
    counts and dismissed Leach’s complaint with prejudice. Therefore, with the
    exception of counts II and III, we affirm the court’s order.
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