Court Opinion

ID: 9928764
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-01-31 22:02:56.839287+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:53:35.887492
License: Public Domain

COURT OF CHANCERY
                                           OF THE
                                     STATE OF DELAWARE
LOREN MITCHELL                                                         LEONARD L. WILLIAMS JUSTICE CENTER
MAGISTRATE IN CHANCERY                                                   500 NORTH KING STREET, SUITE 11400
                                                                                WILMINGTON, DE 19801-3734

                                       January 31, 2024

     Kathleen DeLacy, Esquire                    Jason C. Powell, Esquire
     Martin D. Page, Esquire                     Thomas J. Reichert, Esquire
     Reger Rizzo & Darnall LLP                   The Powell Firm, LLC
     1521 Concord Pike, Suite 305                1813 N. Franklin Street
     Wilmington, DE 19803                        Wilmington, DE 19802

            RE:     Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
                    C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM

   Dear Counsel & Parties:

            Pending before me is Respondent’s motion to dismiss the petition for removal

   of the personal representative of the Estate of Sharif Kihill Green. Briefing on the

   motion concluded on September 6, 2023. I heard arguments regarding the motion

   on October 20, 2023, and during the telephonic hearing, the parties requested to

   submit supplemental arguments on the single issue of the Full Faith and Credit

   Clause of the United States Constitution. As explained herein, after consideration

   of the parties’ briefs and oral argument, I recommend the motion be granted and this

   action dismissed. This is my final report.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 2 of 14

I.      BACKGROUND 1

        On June 18, 2022, 43-year-old Sharif Kihlil Green died at Deborah Heart and

Lung Center in Burlington County, New Jersey. 2 According to the death certificate,

The Delaware Register of Wills (“ROW”) granted letters of administration regarding

Green’s Estate on August 26, 2022 to Rone Everett, his wife pursuant to a marriage

certificate issued in Pennsylvania on June 6, 2022.3

        On December 14, 2022, Green’s mother, Angela Okafor Carlisle wrote the

ROW disputing the grant of letters administration to Everett based on her claim that

the marriage to her son was “impossible”.4 On the same day, the Chief Deputy of

1
  Unless otherwise noted, the facts recited herein are taken from the Complaint and integral
Register of Wills (“ROW”) documents, case no. ROW 181736, to which the Court takes
judicial notice. See Fortis Advisors LLC v. Allergan W.C. Holdings, Inc., 2019 WL
5588876, at *3 (Del. Ch. Oct. 30, 2019) (“On a motion to dismiss, the Court may consider
documents that are integral to the complaint, but documents outside the pleadings may be
considered only in particular instances and for carefully limited purposes. Whether a
document is integral to a claim and incorporated into a complaint is largely a facts-and
circumstances inquiry. Generally, a document is integral to the claim if it is the source for
the . . . facts as pled in the complaint.”) (citations and quotation marks omitted). ROW
documents will be cited from the ROW docket as ROW Docket Item (“ROW D.I.”) and
items from the docket in this case cited as “D.I”. The Complaint here is cited as D.I. 1.
The transcript of the hearing has not been finalized. Citations in the form Draft Tr. – refer
to a rough copy of the transcript.
2
    ROW D.I. 1.
3
    ROW D.I. 3.
4
    ROW D.I. 5.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 3 of 14

the Register of Wills contacted several relevant parties to investigate her claim. 5 The

ROW contacted Tiffany Gordon, the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, County of

Philadelphia Orphan’s Court Clerk who signed the marriage certificate.6 The ROW

asked the Clerk to confirm the authenticity of the marriage certificate, explaining

that Green’s mother claimed that Green was “hospitalized in the State of New Jersey

from June 3 until his death on June 18.” 7 The ROW further questioned the

Pennsylvania Seal’s placement on the marriage certificate, noting that “[t]he bottom

half (license portion)” included the Orphan’s Court seal but the top half (certificate

portion) did not. 8 The following day the ROW sent an additional letter to Gordon,

confirming that the Philadelphia County office had the actual marriage certificate,

not produced to the ROW, on file with them. 9 The ROW also sent a separate letter

5
 ROW D.I. 6-8; The ROW contacted several parties since being made aware of Petitioner’s
assertion and objection to the marriage and the authenticity of the certificate.
6
    ROW D. I. 6.
7
  Id. (Request to Philadelphia County clerk for confirmation of authenticity of marriage
certificate of decedent).
8
    Id.
9
 ROW D. I. 8 (Inquiry to the Philadelphia County marriage clerk on filing of certificate of
solemnization of the decedent's marriage).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 4 of 14

to Mr. Lewis Rutherford, the officiant listed on the certificate, requesting written

confirmation of personally witnessing the decedent's marriage.10

         Reasonably, Philadelphia County responded to the ROW’s inquiries a few

weeks after receiving the letters. 11 In a letter dated December 22, 2022, and received

on December 28, uploaded on January 3, 2023, Philadelphia County confirmed

receipt of the communications from the ROW stating:

                     A Marriage Licensing application was completed
               and approved by our office for [Sharif Kihill Green and
               Rone Nyiesha Everett] on June 1, 2022, during a Zoom
               meeting. The applicants indicated that Mr. Green was
               hospitalized at the time and provided proper
               documentation for the Marriage License Clerk to conduct
               a Zoom Sick Call.
                     Proper documentation would have included a
               completed application and a Doctor’s Note from the
               attending physician indicating the hospitalized applicant is
               of sound mind and body to make their own decision and
               has a diagnosis of a terminal illness. The Doctor’s Note
               must be on the physician’s letterhead and signed by the
               physician.

10
  ROW D.I. 7 (Letter to officiant requesting written confirmation of personally witnessing
the decedent's marriage).
11
     See ROW D. I. 11.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 5 of 14

                      We are searching for our paper file on this matter so
                that we may confirm the exact documentation that was
                provided.12
A week later, a Philadelphia Assistant Solicitor confirmed by email that “[t]he Clerk

of Orphans’ Court did receive and accept the fully executed marriage

certificate…between Sharif Kihill Green and Rone N. Everett.”13

          On January 24, 2023, Angela Okafor Carlisle filed this petition for removal

of Everett as Personal Representative on the basis that the marriage certificate is

invalid.14 On March 6, 2023, Carlisle filed a Petition for a Preliminary Injunction,

seeking an order directing Everett to cease performing any actions regarding Green’s

Estate until an adjudication on the merits of the instant action.15 Finally, Petitioner

filed a Motion for Expedited Proceedings on March 21, 2023.16

          I held a hearing and granted the Motions to Expedite and for Injunction on

March 31, 2023.17 On May 5, 2023, Jason Powell entered his appearance on behalf

12
  ROW D. I. 11 (Letter from Philadelphia County confirming review of documentation
for decedent's marriage license issued during hospitalization).
13
  ROW D. I. 12 (Email from Philadelphia County Assistant Solicitor confirm that the
marriage certificate was accepted for filing).
14
     D. I. 1.
15
     D. I. 3.
16
     D. I. 8.
17
     D. I. 14-15.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 6 of 14

of Respondent, Everett,18 and about a month later, filed this Motion to Dismiss (the

“Motion”) on June 15, 2023.19 I granted the parties’ stipulated briefing schedule on

June 16.20         The Opening and Answering briefing on the Motion to Dismiss

concluded on August 22.21 The parties submitted a new briefing schedule on August

28, 2023.22 Following the briefing, I heard oral argument on the motion on October

20, 2023.23 At the hearing, the parties requested to submit additional briefing on an

issue the Court presented at oral argument. Supplemental briefing concluded on

November 20. 24

II.       Analysis

          The Respondent seeks dismissal under Court of Chancery Rule 12(b)(1). The

Court of Chancery will grant a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss “if it appears from

the record that the Court does not have jurisdiction over the claim.” 25 Under section

18
     D.I. 16.
19
     D.I. 17.
20
     D. I. 20.
21
     D.I. 20-22.
22
     D. I. 24.
23
     D. I. 29.
24
     D.I. 33.
25
     Medek v. Medek, 2008 WL 4261017, at *3 (Del. Ch. Sept. 10, 2008).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 7 of 14

342 of Title 10 of the Delaware Code, “[t]he Court of Chancery shall not have

jurisdiction to determine any matter wherein sufficient remedy may be had by

common law, or statute, before any other court or jurisdiction of this State.” 26 This

Court acquires subject matter jurisdiction over a case “in only three ways: (1) the

invocation of an equitable right; (2) the request for an equitable remedy when there

is no adequate remedy at law; or (3) a statutory delegation of subject matter

jurisdiction.” 27

         The burden is on the Petitioner to establish this Court’s jurisdiction over a

particular subject matter. 28 “When a party challenges this Court’s subject matter

jurisdiction over a particular case, the ‘[C]ourt must review the allegations of the

complaint as a whole to determine the true nature of the claim.’”29

                      Chancery jurisdiction is not conferred by the
                incantation of magic words. Neither the artful use nor the
                wholesale invocation of familiar chancery terms in a
                complaint will excuse the [C]ourt ... from a realistic
                assessment of the nature of the wrong alleged and the
                remedy available in order to determine whether a legal
26
     10 Del.C. § 342.
27
  Quarum v. Mitchell Int'l, Inc., 2019 WL 158153, at *2 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10, 2019) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
28
  Id. (quoting Scattered Corp. v. Chi. Stock Exch., Inc., 671 A.2d 874, 877 (Del. Ch.
1994)).
 Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Christiana Town Ctr., LLC v. New Castle Cty., 2003
29

WL 21314499, at *3 (Del. Ch. June 6, 2003), aff'd, 841 A.2d 307 (Del. 2004)).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 8 of 14

                remedy is available and fully adequate. If a realistic
                evaluation leads to the conclusion that an adequate legal
                remedy is available this [C]ourt, in conformity with the
                command of section 342 of title 10 of the Delaware Code
                will not accept jurisdiction over the matter.28

         Further, “[i]n deciding whether or not equitable jurisdiction exists, the Court must

look beyond the remedies nominally being sought, and focus upon the allegations of the

complaint in light of what the plaintiff really seeks to gain by bringing his or her claim.” 30

In other words, “the court must address the nature of the wrong alleged and the available

remedy to determine whether a legal, as opposed to an equitable remedy, is available and

sufficiently adequate.” 31    The court may consider evidence outside the pleadings in

resolving that issue. 32

         A.     This Court Lacks Subject Matter Jurisdiction

         Petitioner asserts that “[t]he entire scope of this question is under the exclusive

purview of the Court of Chancery, which has exclusive statutory and equitable

30
   Candlewood Timber Group, 859 A.2d at 997; see also Diebold Computer Leasing, Inc.
v. Commercial Credit Corp., 267 A.2d 586, 588 (Del. 1970).
31
     IMO Indus., Inc. v. Sierra Int'l, Inc., 2001 WL 1192201, at *2 (Del. Ch. Oct.1, 2001).
32
  Ct. Ch. R. 12(b)(1); Sloan v. Segal, 2008 WL 81513, at *6 (Del.Ch. Jan.3, 2008) (citing
Simon v. Navellier Series Fund, 2000 WL 1597890, at *5 (Del.Ch. Oct.19, 2000)); see also
Maloney-Refaie, 2008 WL 2679792, at *7 (citing NAMA Holdings, LLC v. Related World
Mkt. Ctr., LLC, 922 A.2d 417, 429 n. 15 (Del.Ch.2007)).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 9 of 14

jurisdiction over questions concerning a Delaware Estate. 33 Petitioner characterizes

the issue under Delaware’s scope of authority over the decedent’s estate. In turn,

Respondent argues that Petitioner’s claim is a disguised annulment action sought in

this Court, because the Petitioner failed to timely bring action in Family Court.34

         Under 12 Del. C. § 1505(b)(1),

                       The persons entitled to letters of administration
                 shall be those in the first of the following classes of
                 persons which shall have a member of that class living and
                 not under an incapacity: Spouse of the decedent; children
                 of the decedent; parents of the decedent; siblings of the
                 whole blood and half-blood of the decedent.

Here, the Petitioner seeks removal of Respondent as Personal Representative of the

decedent’s estate only because she believes that the marriage certificate used to

obtain the letters of administration was obtained fraudulently. She says the marriage

to her son was “impossible” because her son was hospitalized on June 6, 2022, in

New Jersey when the marriage certificate was issued from Philadelphia,

Pennsylvania. 35

33
     Ans Br. at 1.
34
     Op. Br. at D.I. 20.
35
     Ans. Br. at 7.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 10 of 14

       “[E]quity will take a practical view of the complaint, and will not permit a

suit to be brought in Chancery where a complete legal remedy otherwise exists but

where the plaintiff has prayed for some type of traditional equitable relief as a kind

of formulaic ‘open sesame’” to equity jurisdiction.36 It is clear that while this

petition challenges the appointment of the Respondent as the Personal

Representative, it is a thinly veiled disguise to challenge a Pennsylvania marriage in

a Delaware Court. This Court’s jurisdiction does not extend to the validity of

marriages, which are under the proper jurisdiction of Family Court. To the extent

that equity would require a review of a Pennsylvania marriage, the Philadelphia

Orphan’s Court handles matters of equity and would be best position to review and

interpret its own law.

      B.     Register of Wills Investigation

      In addressing the nature of the wrong alleged and the availability of a remedy,

the Court may consider evidence outside the pleadings to resolve the issue. To do

this, I must consider what steps the ROWs took in investigating the initial claim of

fraud, since the claim was properly presented to them. The ROWs contacted the

36
  Quarum v. Mitchell Int'l, Inc., 2019 WL 158153, at *3 (Del. Ch. Jan. 10, 2019) (quoting
Int'l Bus. Machs. Corp. v. Comdisco, Inc., 602 A.2d 74, 78 (Del. Ch. 1991)).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 11 of 14

Philadelphia Orphan’s Court, who issued the marriage certificate, and informed the

Orphan’s Court of the allegation of fraud and revealed decedent’s location on the

date the marriage certificate was issue.37 The ROWs also informed the Court of the

nature of the inquiry and that decedent’s marriage, and ultimately, his wife’s

appointment as Personal Representative, was under scrutiny.38 As a Court handling

similar inquiries daily, the Court confirmed its procedure for handling parties who

get married via zoom due to hospitalization. 39 They confirmed that the Attending

Physician submitted a verification that the decedent was of sound mind when the

ceremony occurred. 40

           The Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas Orphans’ Division shares

similarities with this Court in that it is a Court of equity. They adjudicate cases

involving the personal and property rights of individuals incapable of handling their

own affairs, such as minors, incapacitated person, trusts, and decedents.41 Similarly

situated to the Court of Chancery, the Orphans' Court has the authority to appoint

37
     ROW D.I. 6.
38
     Id.
39
     See ROW D.I. 11.
40
     Id.
41
     https://exhibits.temple.edu/s/civil-rights-in-a-northern-cit/page/orphans--court.
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 12 of 14

guardians for both minors and incapacitated persons and adjudicate disputes over

the administration of decedents’ estates, including approving accounts of

administrators and/or executors and resolving appeals from the Register of Wills. It

handles inheritance and estate tax disputes, approves civil settlements involving

minor plaintiffs and/or estates, and operates the Marriage License Bureau.42

           Accordingly, it appears that not only was an Assistant Solicitor of the

Orphan’s Court best situated to confirm the validity of the marriage, but the fact also

that the Orphan’s Court handles these issues related to Pennsylvania’s marriages

confirms the existence of a competent Court to address Respondent’s issue.

           C.    Full Faith & Credit Clause

           Under the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the United States Constitution, “Full

Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and judicial

Proceedings of every other State.” 43 As a matter of Delaware law, marriages that

are valid in another state will be upheld and recognized in Delaware. 44 Under this

42
     Id.
43
     U.S. Const. Art. IV. § 1.
44
  Matter of Estate of Necastro, 1990 WL 105620 (Del. Ch. 1990) (Upholding a Nevada
common-law marriage decree which could not have been entered into under Delaware law.
Stating, “a common-law marriage that is valid in another state will be upheld and
recognized in Delaware.”).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 13 of 14

provision, a Delaware Court must recognize the actions of a court in another state.45

Here, The Pennsylvania Orphan’s Court performed an investigation at the request of

the Delaware Register of Wills. The Pennsylvania Orphan’s Court concluded that

the proper protocols were followed on their end and the required documentation was

provided by the parties to obtain a valid marriage certificate.

         To the extent that Respondent claims the Full Faith and Credit Clause of the

U.S. Constitution requires this Court to hear her claim because of the allegation of

fraud, I decline to address it and recommend dismissal of the claim. Even if I had

considered the claim, I find the complaint fails to state a claim of fraud with the

requisite specificity needed to overcome the record developed with the ROWs. For

example, the record shows the parties applied for the marriage application on June

1st—which is five days before Petitioner alleges that the decedent was hospitalized.

Further, decedent’s death certificate indicated that his death was associated with a

long-term illness of cardiomyopathy.          Rather than an allegation of fraud, the

information alleged appears to show that decedent made a personal decision that

Petitioner was unaware of, therefore had I considered it, the complaint would fail for

45
     See Pyott v. La. Mun. Police Emps. Ret. Sys., 74 A.3d 612, 615-16 (Del. 2013).
Angela Okafor Carlisle v. Rone Everett,
C.A. No. 2023-0077-LM
January 31, 2024
Page 14 of 14

lack of specificity. Thus, the Full Faith and Credit Clause supports this Court’s

acknowledgement of the Pennsylvania marriage.

III.   Conclusion

       For the foregoing reasons stated, Petitioner’s claim is hereby dismissed. This

is my final report and exceptions may be filed under Court of Chancery Rule 144.

                                             Respectfully submitted,

                                             /s/ Loren Mitchell

                                             Magistrate in Chancery