STEELE, Chief Justice:
Archibald, "Archie," W. Lingo appeals from a Court of Chancery judgment ordering restitution from and requiring his sister, Dinah Lingo, to return funds she misappropriated as their mother's (Eleanor) attorney-in-fact.
William and Eleanor Lingo owned and operated Lingo's Market, a Rehoboth Beach landmark located on Baltimore Avenue. During their marriage, the couple acquired numerous properties in or near Rehoboth Beach and managed the properties as part of a rental business known as Lingo Brothers. William and Eleanor
William Lingo died in 1981. In accordance with his testamentary plan, his one-half interest in the rental property and other assets transferred into a trust. Eleanor owned the residual one-half interest in the property. Although the instrument named Archie and Dinah as trustees, Eleanor managed the rental properties alone until 2000. In 2001, Dinah moved into her mother's home and began assisting her with the rental properties. In August 2002, Eleanor contacted her attorney and instructed him to create a new will that disinherited Archie and named Dinah sole beneficiary. Eleanor also instructed him to prepare a power of attorney, naming Dinah her attorney-in-fact. After Eleanor signed the power of attorney, Dinah assumed control of Lingo Bros. and ultimately transferred property and hundreds of thousands of dollars from Eleanor's personal estate either into her own name or into joint accounts with right of survivorship.
During this time, Eleanor developed health problems requiring hospitalization. Eleanor's medical records noted that at times she appeared confused. Over time, several doctors opined that Eleanor suffered from dementia and/or Alzheimer's disease. Archie initiated guardianship proceedings and alleged that Dinah took advantage of Eleanor's diminished mental capacity and violated her fiduciary duties as attorney-in-fact by engaging in self-dealing transactions that resulted in an enormous shift of wealth from Eleanor to Dinah. Archie also challenged the validity of Eleanor's 2002 will disinheriting him.
During the proceedings, Archie conceded, and a Master in Chancery ultimately concluded, that insufficient evidence existed to establish that Eleanor lacked the requisite mental capacity at the time she signed the 2002 will. The Master also invalidated Dinah's power of attorney and appointed an attorney to serve as guardian of Eleanor's property and a professional agent to serve as Eleanor's personal guardian. After hearing oral argument on the issues raised in the action, the Master concluded that Dinah had acted as a faithless fiduciary and, as a result, voided numerous transactions in which Dinah had engaged. The Master ordered an accounting of the income and management of the rental property business and directed Dinah to return the amounts she converted through the power of attorney.
On March 5, 2009, Archie filed a Notice of Exceptions to the Master's Final Report. Archie requested that the Court of Chancery amend the report and order Dinah to return the misappropriated assets to the Trust—not to Eleanor. Archie also requested that Dinah's portion of the Trust be decreased by the amount of those assets. The Vice Chancellor, declining to modify the remedy, affirmed the Master's report and entered a final order consistent with the report. This appeal followed.
"Whether or not an equitable remedy exists or is applied using the correct standards is an issue of law and reviewed de novo. Determinations of fact and application of those facts to the correct
A person who signs a power of attorney creates a common law fiduciary relationship. To honor that relationship, the attorney-in-fact must observe the duty of loyalty by acting in the best interest of the principal.
Delaware courts have long recognized that restitution is the appropriate remedy to meet those objectives and to redress a breach of fiduciary duty where a party is unjustly enriched at the expense of another.
Because equitable forfeiture may disincentivize the disloyal conduct of a fiduciary by preventing him from becoming the ultimate beneficiary of the fruits of his transgressions, under different circumstances Archie's requested remedy might have merit. Here, however, no Delaware precedent exists for using such an extraordinary remedy to rectify the bad behavior of an attorney-in-fact who is also the sole beneficiary under a will. Recognizing the lack of Delaware precedent, Archie claims that persuasive authority exists elsewhere that justifies the relief he seeks. To support this contention, Archie relies primarily on two cases: Johnson v. Johnson
In Johnson, a mother executed a will that provided for equal distribution of her estate to her children: Janet, Jean, Scott, and Elizabeth.
Although Archie correctly contends that both cases support an equitable forfeiture remedy, he overlooks that the trial judge in Johnson purposely fashioned that remedy to honor the mother's testamentary intent. If retaining the $63,000 had not operated as an equitable forfeiture, Jean would have inherited twice as much as the other three children. That outcome would have directly conflicted with the testatrix's wish that each of her children receive one-fourth of her estate. Furthermore, in In re Estate of Newman, the trial judge awarded equitable forfeiture under A.R.S. § 46-456, an Arizona statute that, given its plain meaning, mandates an automatic forfeiture of all benefits in the decedent's estate once a breach of fiduciary duty occurs.
Even if we could fashion such a remedy at common law, we—not unlike the trial judge in Johnson—must also consider the impact of that remedy on Eleanor's testamentary intent.
Archie further contends that equitable forfeiture strikes a better balance between wrongdoing and testamentary intent because restitution fails to address Eleanor's lost mental capacity to appreciate and remedy Dinah's improper conduct. The Vice Chancellor aptly observed that despite Eleanor's previous history of disinheriting Archie for less than exemplary behavior, no evidence suggests that Eleanor would have reversed her testamentary intent to address Dinah's behavior. Indeed, in Eleanor's mind, Dinah's role as Eleanor's caregiver may have countered Dinah's faithless conduct.
One can speculate that Eleanor might have disinherited Dinah and designated
Because restitution and disgorgement adequately remedy Dinah's faithless conduct without disturbing Eleanor's testamentary intent, the Vice Chancellor did not err by refusing to impose equitable forfeiture. Accordingly, we uphold the remedy crafted by the Master and affirmed by the Vice Chancellor.
For the foregoing reasons, we