HomeMy WebLinkAbout21-12-271
IN RE: ESTATE OF : IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
FLORENCE M. FASICK, : CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
DECEASED :
:
:
: 21-12-0271 ORPHANS’ COURT
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER OF COURT
Masland, J., December 17, 2012:--
Before the court is the Petition of Elizabethtown College for Discovery
Relating to Decedent’s Prior Wills. The College contends that near the end of
her life, the Decedent, Florence M. Fasick, promised the College a bequest of
approximately 97% of her estate. However, upon her death, her will left only
10% of her estate to the College and left 50% of the estate to the son of one of
the Decedent’s friends who served as the Decedent’s agent under a power of
attorney. In light of the large disparity between the Decedent’s promised gift and
what the College ultimately would receive under the will, the College is
requesting the Executor to provide copies of any prior wills executed by the
Decedent. Essentially, the College seeks to discover whether there is some
basis for a will challenge because of undue influence.
Executor objects to the College’s discovery request on several grounds.
He first argues that the request must be denied because the College has not filed
a will contest. He contends that a will challenge is the exclusive means to attack
the validity of a will and to permit the College to engage in the requested
discovery would amount to an impermissible collateral attack. We disagree.
21-12-0271 ORPHANS’ COURT
If the College were to file a will contest, it would only have standing to do
so as a beneficiary of a prior will whose share in the estate is smaller in the
probated will. 20 Pa. C.S. §980(a); In re Lazar Estate, 37 Pa. D. & C. 2d. 680
(Phila. Co. 1965). The basic pleading requirements of such a will contest may be
summarized as follows:
Moreover, the broad generalities contained in the
petition, with respect to prior wills executed by
decedent, do not meet the requirements of our
practice. The petitioner must specifically set forth
under which instrument she claims to be an interested
party and attach a copy of it and other relevant
testamentary writings to her petition.
Lazar, 37 Pa. D. & C.2d at 684 (emphasis added).
Clearly, without copies of any prior wills executed by the Decedent
wherein the College received a greater share of the estate, the College cannot
satisfy the threshold pleading requirements to maintain a will contest. The
Executor demands the College file a premature will contest before it has access
to the predicate documents necessary to maintain such an action. As such,
Executor’s objection on this basis places a procedural checkmate on the College
that is simply inequitable and therefore presents no barrier to the Petition for
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Discovery of Prior Wills.
The Executor next opposes discovery of prior wills on the basis that those
documents are shielded by the attorney-client privilege. We disagree. To the
extent that the attorney-client privilege attaches at all to a decedent’s prior wills,
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We view this matter as analogous to precomplaint discovery in civil cases which is to be
“restrictively allowed, narrowly drafted, and permitted only when a complaint capable of surviving
preliminary objections cannot be filed without aid of the requested discovery." McNeil v. Jordan,
894 A.2d 1260, 1274 (Pa. 2006). As stated, the College’s will contest cannot survive objections
without access to the prior wills and the discovery request presents only a minor burden of
production on the Executor.
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21-12-0271 ORPHANS’ COURT
we conclude that the testamentary exception to that privilege renders the prior
wills discoverable.
We find persuasive the reasoning of the Court of Common Pleas of Centre
County in the case of In re Thevaos Estate, 10 Pa. D. & C. 5th 481 (2010).
There the court stated:
[T]he testamentary exception applies in this case. The
court believes that any documentation related to the
change in [the decedent’s] estate near the end of his
life and after suffering a series of medical setbacks
can only go to show what [the decedent’s] intent was,
and whether he was able to clearly communicate
what he desired for his estate. Additionally, it is
possible that any documentation provided by [the
executor] will either eliminate or affirm caveator's
belief that [the decedent] may have been unduly
influenced to make changes to his estate which
eliminated his natural heir completely.
Id. at 488.
We face similar circumstances in this matter. The College merely seeks
to discover what the Decedent’s intent was and why her ultimate bequest to the
College was dramatically less than she had promised during her lifetime. A
review of the prior wills may very well offer all the explanation the College needs
and eliminate the need for an expensive and protracted will contest. And, as
previously noted, the College’s discovery request is narrowly tailored and
minimally burdensome. For these reasons, the prior wills are not protected from
discovery by the attorney-client privilege and the College’s petition will be
granted in accordance with the following order.
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21-12-0271 ORPHANS’ COURT
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this day of December, 2012, upon consideration of
the Petition, Response, briefing and argument before the court, the Petition of
GRANTED
Elizabeth College for Discovery Relating To Decedent’s Prior Wills is .
Within twenty (20) days of this order, the Estate of Florence M. Fasick, through
SHALLPROVIDE
its Executor, the College with copies of all prior wills of
Florence M. Fasick.
By the Court,
Albert H. Masland, J.
James D. Bogar, Esquire
Executor of the Estate of Florence M. Fasick
Kendra McGuire, Esquire
For Elizabethtown College
Michael T. Foerster, Esquire
For the Commonwealth
:sal
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IN RE: ESTATE OF : IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
FLORENCE M. FASICK, : CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
DECEASED :
:
:
: 21-12-0271 ORPHANS’ COURT
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this day of December, 2012, upon consideration of
the Petition, Response, briefing and argument before the court, the Petition of
GRANTED
Elizabeth College for Discovery Relating To Decedent’s Prior Wills is .
Within twenty (20) days of this order, the Estate of Florence M. Fasick, through
SHALLPROVIDE
its Executor, the College with copies of all prior wills of
Florence M. Fasick.
By the Court,
Albert H. Masland, J.
James D. Bogar, Esquire
Executor of the Estate of Florence M. Fasick
Kendra McGuire, Esquire
For Elizabethtown College
Michael T. Foerster, Esquire
For the Commonwealth
:sal