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~ gE; : IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
:CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
ESTATE OF .
GEORGE F. DIXON, JR. :ORPHANS' COURT DIVISION
DECEASED No.21-1994-0754
~ ~; : IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
ESTATE OF
LOTTIE IVY DIXON :ORPHANS' COURT DIVISION
DECEASED NO. 21-07-0686
OBJECTION OF MARSHALL DIXON,
EXECUTOR OF THE ESTATE OF LOTTIE IVY DIXON
TO THE AUDITOR'S REPORT AND RECOMMENDATIONS
TO THE HONORABLE, THE JUDGES OF THE CUMBERLAND COUNTY,
PENNSYLVANIA, ORPHANS' COURT DIVISION:
Pursuant to C.C.O.C.R. 8.7-2, Marshall Dixon, in his capacity as Executor of the Estate
of Lottie Ivy Dixon ("Marshall"), files the following objection to the Auditor's Report and
Recommendations dated September 19, 2011.'
' Pursuant to a stipulation of counsel and approval of the auditor, the deadline for filing
objections was extended to October 20, 2011.
I. Objection
Marshall objects to those portions of the Auditor's Report and Recommendations that
provide that the Estate of Lottie Ivy Dixon (the "Estate"), rather than Richard E. Dixon and
George F. Dixon, III (collectively "the Brothers"), should be required to pay the auditor's fees.
Those portions are reflected in the following paragraphs:
Conclusion of Law, ¶ 24:
Although the Brothers have wholly failed to sustain their burden of proof of
misconduct on the part of Marshall, the auditor does not see any persuasive
authority, upon similar facts, that the nature and manner of the Brothers' pursuit of
their contentions has risen to the level of vexatiousness or to the level of bad faith
that would equate with gross negligence, concealment of assets, and misuse of
assets that would be necessary to contravene the general rule that the costs of the
audit be paid by the Estate. (citing In re Estate of Vaughn, 315 Pa. Super. 354,
461 A.2d 1318 (1983)).
Conclusion of Law, ¶ 28:
With the required reimbursements to the Estate, payment of the costs of the audit
by the Estate will not be materially different than payment of a portion of the
costs of the audit by the Estate and a portion by the QTIP Trust, particularly
where the great majority of the costs of the audit are attributable to the issues that
are contested in the Estate.
Recommendation, ¶ 9:
The auditor recommends that, within forty days from the date of this report, the
fees of the auditor be paid to the auditor by the Estate in accordance with the
attached, itemized statement therefor.
The auditors' conclusion and recommendations in this regard misapplies existing law and makes
a manifestly unreasonable judgment.
II. Argument
A. Applicable Leal Standards
Pennsylvania law provides that the compensation of any auditor shall be paid from such
source as the court shall direct, unless there is general rule that provides otherwise. 20 Pa. C.S. §
752. The allocation of the payment of fees is subject to the court's discretion, and will stand
absent an abuse of discretion. In re Estate of Vaughn, 461 A.2d 1318 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1983). An
abuse of discretion occurs when the court misapplies existing law, makes a manifestly
unreasonable judgment or rules with partiality, prejudice or ill will. Id. at 1320 (citing M.
Longer, Inc. v. Fedder Corn., 452 A.2d 2356 (Pa. Super. 1982).
While the costs of the audit are usually home by the fiduciary estate, in certain
circumstances, the costs can be shifted to another party. Id. Where an objector's claims are not
supported by probable cause, he should bear the cost of the audit. In re Bennett's Estate, 30 Pa.
D.&.C. 148 (Pa. Orph. Northampton 1937); In re King's Estate, 7. A.2d. 297 (Pa. 1939).
Probable cause consists of a contention started and conducted in good faith. Bennett, 30 Pa.
D.&C. at 153-53. The estate should not bear the burden of increased expense resulting from the
unsuccessful objections pursued by the Brothers. See, In re Price's Estate, 8 Leg. Gaz. 108 (Pa.
1876). The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has noted that where expensive litigation is caused by
the conduct of the objectors to an account, then it is proper to place the costs of the auditor on the
objectors. King's Estate, 7 A.2d at 3-4.
3
B The Brothers Should Be Repaired To Pav The Auditor's Fees Because Their
Obeections Were Not Raised and Pursued In Good Faith.
In the present case, the Brothers' objections were not started and pursued in good faith.
The extensive involvement of the auditor was necessitated from the Brothers' dilatory and
vexatious conduct. The Brothers were largely unsuccessful on their objections. As a result the
Estate should not bear the burden of the increased expense that resulted from the Brothers'
conduct.
On August 22, 2008, the Brothers filed several objections to the Estate Account
including:
(a) an objection to the appraisals of personal property and jewelry;
(b) an objection to the allocation of the Unified Tax Credit;
(c) an obj ection to the Estate's retention of the portion of the federal tax refund
related to the QTIP Trust;
(d) an objection that the attorneys' fees billed to the Estate were excessive;
(e) an objection that the Executor's commissions were excessive;
(f) an objection to certain payments for expenses related to the real estate that had
been bequeathed to Charlotte Dixon and Marshall Dixon;
(g) an objection to certain losses in value of securities during the administration
of the Estate; and
(h) an objection that "substantial assets includable in the Estate are not accounted
for."
Many of these objections were eventually withdrawn or simply not pursued by the Brothers.
Two of them were conceded, at least in part. The Brothers pursued one objection through a
4
hearing, but they presented no cogent legal theory and virtually no evidence in support of that
objection.
The objection related to payments related to the real estate devised to Mazshall and his
sister Chazlotte were partially withdrawn by the Brothers, although Marshall conceded that
approximately $10,800 in those expenses should be reimbursed to the Estate. Likewise,
Mazshall conceded the Brothers' objection regazding a loss arising from marketable securities in
the amount of $9,933.96. Thus, approximately $20,000 was recovered to the Estate. The rest of
the Brothers' objections however were unsuccessful and/or withdrawn.
One of the objections that the Brothers asserted and that they later withdrew asserted that
the appraisals of the Decedent's personal property and jewelry "grossly undervalued" the value of
those items. The objection was not asserted in good faith because the Brothers had no interest in
the valuation of the personal property and jewelry. None of those items were bequeathed to the
Brothers or to the QTIP Trust for which the Brothers served as co-trustees, with M&T Bank.
Further, the Brothers did not pursue that objection in good faith. They never identified any
reason to question the professional appraisals that Mazshall had obtained, and they never
bothered to obtain other appraisals. In fact, the Brothers took absolutely no discovery
whatsoever in support of their objection. The objection was finally withdrawn by the Brothers
on February 9, 2010, just 15 days before the hearing. In sum, the Brothers had no interest in
pursuing the objection, stated no basis for the objection, sought no discovery in support of the
objection, and only withdrew the objection shortly before the hearing. This conduct
demonstrates that the objection was not started or pursued in good faith.
5
Similazly, the Brothers withdrew their objection to the allocation of the Unified Tax
Credit fifteen days before the hearing. Despite repeated requests from Marshall's counsel, the
Brothers' and their counsel never provided a legal basis for this objection. In fact, the Unified
Tax Credit was allocated as required by the applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code.
Furthermore, consistent with the requirements of the IRC, the Decedent's will required that:
if any property held in any testamentary or inter vivos trust created by my late husband,
GEORGE F. DIXON, JR., is includable in my estate for purposes of any Death Tax, then
any Death Tax attributable to the inclusion of any such property in my estate for the
purposes of that Death tax shall be paid out of such property or by the recipients of such
property. If any Death taxes aze paid by my Executor, I direct my Executor to obtain
reimbursement or contribution for any such taxes paid by my Executor.
Because of the provisions of federal and state law, as well as the direction of the Decedent
herself, the amount of tax apportioned to the QTIP Trust was determined by taking the amount of
federal estate tax imposed on the entire gross estate and deducting therefrom the amount of
federal estate tax that would have been imposed had the QTIP Trust not been included in Mrs.
Dixon's federal gross estate. As a result of this calculation, the benefit of the unified credit was
properly shared only among non-QTIP assets, and it could not have been allocated in any other
way. The Brothers' objection to the allocation of the Unified Tax Credit was completely
contrary to law, and therefore not raised or pursued in good faith.
Additionally, the Brothers agreed, shortly before the hearing, to withdraw their objection
to the Estate's retention of the portion of the federal tax refund that was due to the QTIP Trust.
Mazshall had made clear that the tax refund was retained by the Estate as an offset against
income owed to the Estate by the QTIP. Throughout the audit process, the Brothers never
provided evidence to dispute the basis or calculation of the Estate's set-off, nor did they cite any
law that undermined the Estate's right to the set-off, which was necessitated by the Brothers' own
conduct in refusing to properly distribute the income due to the Estate. Thus, their objection to
the withholding of the federal tax refund never had any support in fact or law, and was therefore,
not pursued in good faith.
The Brothers never pursued their objections that the attorneys' fees and executor's
commissions chazged to the Estate were excessive. The Brothers sought no discovery regarding
either of these issues during the discovery period. Approximately two weeks before the hearing,
the Brothers' filed an Amended Pre-Trial Statement that indicated that they would call no
witnesses and introduce no exhibits. Even at that point, however, the Brothers still had not
withdrawn their objection to the Estate's attorneys' fees and the executors' fees. At the hearing,
the Brothers provided no evidence whatsoever to support their objection that the attorneys' fees
chazged for the administration of the Estate were excessive. Likewise, the Brothers provided no
evidence that the executor's commissions were excessive. Where a party has no evidence to
present in support of an objection, the pursuit of the objection is not in good faith.
While the Brothers' objections that were withdrawn and not pursued show that the
Brothers failed to act in good faith, the most obvious evidence of their lack of good faith arises
from their conduct in the one objection that they did pursue. As noted above, the Brothers
objected that "substantial assets includable in the Estate are not accounted for." The Brothers'
conduct in pursuing that objection was marked by intransigence, unwillingness to set or adhere
to discovery deadlines, failure to comply with the auditor's directives and court orders, and
multiple last minute attempts to derail the audit process, take up a new theory of the case, make
factually and mathematically unsupportable allegations and pursue a new legal remedy. In fact,
7
the Brothers' bad faith conduct on this objection alone provides a sufficient basis for the Court to
charge the auditor's fess to the Brothers.
Within three months after Decedent's death, the Brothers' counsel requested that Marshall
provide documents related to her financial affairs, which Marshall promptly did. In June 2008,
the Brothers, through their counsel, requested that Mazshall provide written authorization for the
Brothers to obtain account statements and cancelled checks directly from the financial
institutions with whom Mrs. Dixon had accounts during the last yeazs of her life. The Executor
promptly did so, thereby ensuring that the Brothers could obtain every single document related to
the Decedent's financial matters directly from the financial institutions. In fact, by September
2008, the Brothers had received the monthly account statements and cancelled checks for the
checking account that Mrs. Dixon had held at M&T Bank, and its predecessor banks and account
statements for the Decedent's brokerage account at Legg Mason.
The Court ordered that discovery was to be completed by August 31, 2009, and that
deadline was later extended to September 30, 2009. The Brothers finally served interrogatories
upon Mazshall on June 18, 2009, and Mazshall timely responded to the interrogatories. The
Brothers never asserted that Marshall's interrogatory responses were incomplete or that any of
the objections asserted therein were improper. Marshall's deposition was scheduled for
September 23, 2009 (seven days before the end of the discovery period, which had been
extended), and Mazshall fully cooperated in the deposition, answering all of the questions posed
to him. Thus, by the close of the discovery period, the Brothers had had more than a yeaz to
obtain and review the Decedent's financial information directly from the financial institutions,
8
they had had full and complete responses to their discovery requests from Marshall, and they had
fully deposed Marshall.
In fact, in October 2009, the Brothers sought an extension of the discovery deadline, and
contended that Mrs. Dixon had a brokerage account worth approximately $500,000 that was not
accounted for in the estate administration. Although the Brothers had had more than a year to
obtain all financial information from any financial institution, they did not explain their failure to
pursue evidence of the alleged $500,000 brokerage account during the discovery period. 'The
Auditor recommended that Marshall be required to produce his personal brokerage statements
and that the motion to extend discovery be denied. Marshall subsequently produced years of his
past brokerage statements, which showed that he had not received a $500,000 brokerage account,
or anything of the like, from the Decedent.
At the October discovery conference, the Brothers' counsel conceded that they were
unable to prove that Mrs. Dixon had been subject to incapacity or undue influence during her
lifetime. T'he Brothers' counsel also took the position that, if transfers were made by Mrs. Dixon
to Marshall as gifts, the cumulative amounts of the gifts was relevant to the allocation of death
taxes among the beneficiaries. For example, in their first pre-trial memorandum, submitted well
over a yeaz after they had received all of their mother's financial records, the Brothers stated,
"Objectors now believe that in order to fully appreciate how much money in gifts Marshall was
receiving from his mother, they will need access to [Marshall's financial records]" and
"Objectors request Mazshall's financial records so that they can better determine the full extent of
gifts received by Marshall for which no tax has been paid."
9
Contrary to the requirements of the Court's June 17 Order, the Brothers' pre-hearing
pleadings filed in October and November, 2009 failed to itemize the assets that the Brothers
contended were not included in the estate that should have been included, and failed to provide
any supporting rationale and legal authority for their contentions. In fact, although the Brothers
had access to all of the Decedent's financial information for more than a year and a half, the
Brothers' pre-hearing memorandum stated only that, "Objectors believe that substantial assets
that should be accountable in the estate ...are not accounted for" without any specificity as to
what assets they believed were not accounted for.
On February 9, 2010, the Brothers' counsel filed a pretrial memorandum that contended,
for the first time, that Marshall used Mrs. Dixon's credit cards and funds to benefit himself
without Mrs. Dixon's knowledge or permission, and also asserted that he "procured gifts using
undue influence." That statement of the Brothers' legal theory was made more than three months
after it was due and just eleven days before the hearing and was specifically contrary to the
concession that the Brother's counsel had made in November 2009 that they did not have the
evidence to pursue a charge of undue influence. In addition, and for the first time, the Brothers
contended that Marshall "may well have fraudulently transferred over $1,500,000 of the
decedent's assets to himself for his benefit during her lifetime." The Brothers still failed to
provide an itemized list of the alleged missing assets, and they also still failed to provide any
legal authority for their contention that assets should have been included in the estate, but were
not. The memorandum also indicated that the Brothers would present no witnesses and no
exhibits in support of their objection. "
10
The allegation that Marshall had defrauded his mother of $1.5 million dollars was not
only new and unsupported by any evidence obtained by the Brothers in discovery, it was
mathematically impossible, as the Brothers should have been well aware. As Co-Executors of
their father's Estate and Co-trustees of the QTIP Trust created for their mother's benefit, the
Brothers had personal and specific knowledge of their mother's assets and income from 1993
until her death. Given that the income being distributed to Mrs. Dixon from the QTIP Trust was
substantially reduced by the failure of the Brothers to pay interest on the lazge loans they had
received from the trust, Mrs. Dixon could not have received enough in income to have been
defrauded of a sum as large as $1.5 million by anyone, as the Brothers should have been well
awaze. The Brothers very late and unsupported assertion in that regard is very neazly prima facie
evidence of the lack of good faith with which their objections were pursued.
On February 13, 2009 (a Saturday), the Brothers' counsel served an addendum to their
supplemental pre-hearing memorandum. That addendum alleged that Mazshall had "procured
gifts through theft, deception, fraud and misrepresentation" and repeated the new contention that
"Marshall may have defrauded the decedent of at least $1,500,000.00" without any factual basis
for such a contention. The addendum also failed to provide any legal authority for their
contention that assets should have been included in the estate, but were not. In a very belated
attempt to comply with the directive requiring the Brothers, by October 21, to itemize the list of
assets that they contended should have been included in the estate, the addendum included lists
of checks written from the joint checking account, the vast majority of which were written by
Mrs. Dixon to persons and companies to pay for her Gaze and her maintenance of her household.
11
At the hearing, the Brothers called Marshall Dixon as their first and only witness. The
Auditor ruled that the Brothers had not established the relevance of checks drawn on the joint
checking account, so the Auditor precluded the Brothers from introducing any evidence
regazding the checks drawn on the joint checking account. The Brothers made no offer of proof
regarding what the evidence would have shown if the Auditor had permitted it to be presented.
The Brothers submitted no exhibits in their case in chief.
The Brothers presented no evidence that identified any assets that the Brothers contended
were improperly excluded from the estate and no evidence in support of their allegation that
Mazshall used assets of Mrs. Dixon without her knowledge or permission. The Brothers
presented no evidence in support of their contention that Mazshall had procured gifts through
theft, deception, fraud and misrepresentation. There was no evidence showing that Mazshall
wrote any checks from the joint checking account without Mrs. Dixon's knowledge and
permission. There was no evidence that Marshall used the funds in the joint checking account to
purchase goods and services benefitting himself without Mrs. Dixon's knowledge and
permission. There was no evidence that Mrs. Dixon either objected to Marshall writing checks
from the joint checking account or that she ever took any action to remove him as a signatory on
the account. There was no evidence that any payments out of the joint checking account were
the result of theft, fraud, deception, or misrepresentation. There was no evidence that Mazshall
used any funds in Mrs. Dixon's brokerage account for his own benefit, and in fact, no evidence
regazding Mrs. Dixon's brokerage account, at all. There was no evidence showing that Marshall
transferred assets to or for his benefit without Mrs. Dixon's knowledge.
12
In short, although the Brothers claimed from August 22, 2008 to February 24, 2010 that
substantial assets that should have been included in the estate were improperly excluded or
omitted from the administration of the estate, they provided no evidence to support that
objection. In fact, the auditor noted that the Brothers "wholly failed to sustain their burden of
proof of misconduct on the part of Marshall" and that the Brothers "failed to sustain their burden
of proof in all respects."
Additionally, on February 12, 2010, the Brothers sought to derail the audit process by
filing a petition seeking the appointment of an administrator pro tem. That petition included an
allegation that Marshall "may have defrauded" the decedent of at least $1.5 million and that
Marshall used the decedent's charge cards and funds as a means of investing in his business
ventures. The Brothers, however, knew that these allegations were not true, as they had spent
more than two and half years investigating the decedent's financial affairs. Furthermore, the
petition asserted that the decedent's annual income was at least $300,000 which the Brothers
knew was not true, because they had all of the decedent's financial information. As stated above,
the Brothers were the co-trustees of the QTIP Trust, were paid for their service as such, and their
account of the QTIP shows that its ability to make income distributions to the decedent during
her life was substantially hindered by the Brothers' own failure to re-pay loans that had been
made to them by the QTIP. In short, the petition made factual allegations that the Brothers
definitively knew were a mathematical impossibility. And, at the hearing just twelve days later,
when the Brothers had their opportunity to prove that $1.5 million was missing from the
decedent's estate, or even that any amount at all, had been improperly excluded from the estate
accounting by Marshall, they provided absolutely no probative evidence.
13
If ever there were a case where the objectors' conduct justified imposing the costs of the
audit upon them, it is this case. By the summer of 2008, the Brothers had direct access to all of
the decedent's financial information directly from the financial institutions, yet at the hearing
more than a yeaz and a half later, the Brothers were unable to prove that Marshall had improperly
excluded ~ assets from the Estate account. In the months leading up to the hearing, when the
Brothers were required by Court order to identify the alleged missing assets, they were unable to
do so, yet they continued to pursue their objection that assets were missing. Likewise, when the
Brothers were required to provide supporting rationale and legal authority for their contentions,
they were unable to do so. Eventually, many of the objections that they had asserted and pursued
were simply withdrawn. In the last month before the hearing, the Brothers asserted new legal
theories and sought to avoid their duty to prove their objections in their very tazdy petition for
the appointment of an administrator pro tem. Finally, at the hearing, the Brothers presented
virtually no evidence in support of their remaining objection and no cogent legal theory upon
which their objection could be sustained. Such conduct is cleazly demonstrative of bad faith.
The Auditor seemed to conclude that he should not shift his fees to the Brothers because
there aze no cases "upon similaz facts" where the auditor's fees were shifted. That conclusion
misapplies existing law. The shifting of an auditor's fees from an estate to an objector does not
require a factually similar case? Such fee shifting is proper when the objections aze not
supported by probable cause, that is, when they consist of contentions that were not started and
pursued in good faith. Bennett, 30 Pa. D.&C. at 153-53. Furthermore, shifting the auditor's fees
z Indeed, Mazshall submits that the Brothers conduct in this matter was so extraordinary, that it
is not surprising that there is no factually similar case.
14
to the objectors is appropriate when unsuccessful objections result in expensive litigation. Kim's
Estate, 7 A.2d at 3-4. Thus, the fact that the auditor found no case with facts similar to the facts
in this case is irrelevant. Instead of asking whether there were other cases with similar facts, the
Auditor should have considered whether the Brothers' acted in good faith or caused expensive
litigation in the pursuit of unsuccessful objections. Here, because the answer to both questions is
an unequivocal "yes," the Brothers should be required to bear the preponderance of the auditor's
fees.
Furthermore, the Auditor's finding that the Brothers' conduct did not rise to the level of
vexatiousness to shift the fees is a manifestly unreasonable judgment. As explained at length
above, the Brothers asserted and pursued objections that were completely unsupported by law.
The Brothers delayed their discovery requests until the very end of the (extended) period set for
discovery and then complained that they needed a further extension of that period. The Brothers
had years to develop facts in support of their objection regarding alleged missing estate assets,
yet they produced no evidence in support of that claim. In fact, at the hearing, the Brothers made
almost no effort to submit evidence in support of that objection. Meanwhile, virtually up to the
eve of trial, and months after discovery had been completed, the Brothers continued to submit
papers to the Auditor and the Court claiming that Marshall had defrauded Mrs. Dixon of
substantial funds and making countless unsupported ad hominem attacks. Moreover, the
Brothers flaunted the Court's order requiring them to itemize the alleged missing assets, provide
supporting rationale and legal authority, and identify their witnesses and exhibits. As a result, in
the last few weeks before the hearing, the Brothers were continually shifting their positions on
their legal theory and the basis of their objections. Furthermore, after the parties had invested
15
over a yeaz and a half in the audit process in order to address the Brothers' objections, the
Brothers sought to disrupt that process by pursuing an alternative remedy. If a party's pursuit of
invalid legal claims, knowing assertion of inaccurate facts, disregard of Court-ordered disclosure
obligations, and efforts to undermine an ongoing proceeding does not constitute vexatious
conduct worthy of fee-shifting, then it is difficult to imagine under what circumstances a court
would shift an auditor's fees to the objectors.
C. Payment of the Costs of the Audit by the Estate is Punitive to Marshall and
to Charlotte Dixon.
The Auditor was incorrect in stating that payment of the costs of the audit by the Estate
would not be materially different than payment of those costs in part by the Estate and in part by
the QTIP Trust. Because of this litigation, the Estate has no residuary assets to pay the costs of
the audit, so if the costs are imposed on the Estate, that liability will necessazily abate the
specific devises of real property to Mazshall and his sister, Chazlotte. In other words, imposing
the costs of the audit on the Estate is equivalent to imposing such costs on Marshall and
Charlotte Dixon alone and allowing the Brothers to avoid any such burden. Given that the
litigation was brought entirely at the Brothers' behest and direction and was pursued in such bad
faith as set forth above, such an allocation is manifestly unfair to Marshall, who has born the sole
burden of the estate's costs of litigation, and to Chazlotte Dixon, who alone amongst her siblings
is not even a party to the litigation.
D. The Determination of the Allocation of the Coats of Audit should be deferred
and Decided with a Determination on the Motion for Attorneys' Fees.
Concurrent with these Objections, Marshall submits a Motion for Attorney's Fees that
requests that the Estate be permitted to recover its counsel fees expended in defending against
16
the Brother's Objections, based on the very same analysis set forth above. As a hearing will be
required for a ruling on that Motion, Marshall proposes that the final determination of the
allocation of the Auditor's fees and costs be deferred until the resolution of the Motion for
Attorneys fees, as the two matters arise from the same factual and similar legal analysis, i.e., the
Brothers' vexatious and dilatory nature and manner of the pursuit of their Objections.
III. CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the Auditor's determination that the Auditor's fees should
be home by the Estate and not by the Brothers is in error. Therefore, that determination should
be rejected, and the Court should order that the Brothers pay the Auditor's fees in full.
McNEES WALLACE & NURICK LLC
By: ~ ~~
Elizabe . Mullaugh
I.D. No. 76397
Kimberly M. Colonna
I.D. No. 80362
100 Pine Street, P.O. Box 1166
Harrisburg, PA 17108-1166
717-232-8000
Counsel for Marshall Dixon as Executor of
the Estate of Lottie Ivy Dixon
Date: October 19, 2011
17
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
The undersigned hereby certifies that on this date a true and correct copy of the forgoing
document was served by first class mail, postage prepaid, addressed as follows:
Walter W. Cohen, Esquire
Kevin J. Kehner, Esquire
Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell &Hippel LLP
200 Locust Street, Suite 400
Harrisburg, PA 17101
Paul C. Heintz, Esquire
Nina B. Stryker, Esquire
Erin E. McQuiggan, Esquire
Obermayer Rebmann Maxwell &Hippel LLP
One Penn Center, 19~' Floor
1617 JFK Boulevazd
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Mazk Bradshaw, Esquire
Stevens & Lee, P.C.
17 N. Second St., 16`x' Floor
Harrisburg, PA 17101
Daniel L. Sullivan, Esq.
Saidis, Sullivan & Rogers
26 West High Street
Carlisle, PA 17013
Wayne F. Shade, Esquire
53 W. Pomfret St.
Cazlisle, PA 17013
Charlotte Ivy Dixon
323 Bayview Street
Camden, ME 04843
Kimber y . Colonna
Dated: October 19, 2011