Turja v. Turja ( 1997 )


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  • PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    JOHN A. TURJA; RICHARD H. TURJA,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    No. 96-2413
    STEPHEN F. TURJA, Individually and
    as executor of the estate of Marion
    A. Turja,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Alexandria.
    James C. Cacheris, Chief District Judge.
    (CA-95-1178-A)
    Argued: May 7, 1997
    Decided: July 8, 1997
    Before MURNAGHAN and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and STAMP,
    Chief United States District Judge for the Northern District of
    West
    Virginia, sitting by designation.
    _________________________________________________________________
    Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Motz wrote the opinion, in
    which Judge Murnaghan and Chief Judge Stamp joined.
    _________________________________________________________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Jeffrey Scott Larson, Angelo I. Castelli, Greenbelt, Mary-
    land, for Appellants. James Carlton Howard, Jr., BEAN, KINNEY &
    KORMAN, P.C., Arlington, Virginia, for Appellee.
    _________________________________________________________________
    OPINION
    DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge:
    The appeal involves the venerable, but infrequently discussed, pro-
    bate exception to a federal court's diversity jurisdiction. Two
    brothers
    brought this action against a third brother alleging that he
    exercised
    undue influence over their mother, which led her to execute a will,
    a
    trust agreement, and related documents in his favor. After a bench
    trial, the district court concluded that the mother lacked the
    requisite
    mental capacity and was unduly influenced in executing the trust
    doc-
    uments, and so voided them. The district court, finding that it
    lacked
    jurisdiction because of the probate exception, refused to exercise
    jurisdiction over the will or rule on the mother's capacity to
    execute
    it. The contesting brothers appeal, asserting that the district
    court
    erred in refusing to exercise jurisdiction over the will, and in
    not
    awarding them attorneys' fees under the trust agreement. We affirm.
    I.
    John, Richard, and Stephen Turja are the only children of Dick and
    Marion Turja. John, a resident of Hawaii, and Richard, a resident
    of
    Utah, brought this suit, based on diversity of citizenship, against
    Ste-
    phen, a Virginia resident.
    The family originally understood that the Turja estate (primarily
    the family home with a stipulated present value of $301,000) would
    go to the surviving parent, and after that parent's death, be split
    among the three sons. Since 1978, Stephen has lived with his
    parents,
    and in more recent years spent a substantial portion of his time
    caring
    for their needs. Indeed, in 1983, Stephen quit his full time job to
    assist
    his parents, who were becoming disabled. By 1986 Marion Turja,
    who had been close to all of her children and grandchildren, had
    become increasingly disoriented, confused, and drew away from
    them. At the time her husband died in 1991, Marion was quite
    disori-
    ented and likely suffering from Alzheimer's disease.
    2
    On August 5, 1992, Marion executed a will bequeathing her china
    to John, forgiving a $10,000 loan to Richard, and leaving her house
    and residuary estate to Stephen. Later in the same month, Stephen
    took his mother to see a trusts and estates lawyer, Warren
    Grossman;
    Grossman was told that Marion wished to establish a living trust in
    which she would place most of her property, and at her death leave
    her china to John, forgive Richard's debt, and leave the house and
    her
    residuary estate to Stephen. Concerned that Marion was incompetent,
    Grossman contacted Marion's doctor and asked him to assess her tes-
    tamentary capacity. After several visits, that doctor determined
    that
    Marion suffered from dementia and lacked the capacity to execute
    legal documents. Grossman then refused to create the trust.
    However,
    Stephen managed nonetheless to have a trust created that would mir-
    ror the distribution set out in the August 5 will; Marion executed
    the
    trust in November 1992 and additional related documents in January
    1993, apparently again at Stephen's urging.
    Marion died in August 1993. Stephen did not contact his brothers
    or his mother's sisters to inform them of his mother's death, and
    was
    the only person who attended her burial. A month later, he conveyed
    the family residence to himself pursuant to the trust agreement.
    Rich-
    ard first learned of his mother's death through one of his wife's
    friends, who worked for the insurance company that handled Mari-
    on's death benefits.
    After discovering what had happened, on November 1, 1993, John
    and Richard brought suit in the Circuit Court of Arlington County,
    Virginia. On December 30, 1993, Stephen offered Marion's will for
    probate in that court. Subsequently, John and Richard nonsuited
    their
    state action and, on August 24, 1995, filed this action in federal
    court
    against Stephen, individually and as executor of their mother's
    estate.
    The complaint alleged six counts: Count I, lack of testamentary
    capacity; Count II, undue influence; Count III, fraud; Count IV,
    action to set aside deed and other transfers; Count V, constructive
    trust; and Count VI, unjust enrichment. The district court
    dismissed
    the first two counts without prejudice insofar as they involved
    Mari-
    on's will; the court reasoned that it had no subject matter
    jurisdiction
    over those claims because "federal courts may not hear probate mat-
    ters as part of their diversity jurisdiction."
    3
    The court tried the remainder of the case. After a two-day bench
    trial, the court found: that Marion lacked the mental capacity to
    exe-
    cute the trust documents, that Stephen exercised undue influence
    over
    his mother in order to get her to execute them, and"[t]hat the
    amend-
    ment to the Turja trust and other related legal documents . . .
    should
    be set aside as null and void." The court did not reach the other
    causes
    of action, finding resolution of them unnecessary to its holding.
    John and Richard moved for attorneys' fees, under a provision in
    the trust agreement that provided for attorneys' fees to a
    prevailing
    party in the case of "any dispute arising out of this trust." The
    district
    court denied fees, holding that because it had invalidated the
    trust
    agreement, the provision in it regarding attorneys' fees could not
    be
    enforced.
    John and Richard appeal; Stephen filed no cross appeal.
    II.
    John and Richard assert that the district court erred in refusing
    to
    exercise jurisdiction over their claims that Marion lacked
    testamen-
    tary capacity and was unduly influenced in executing her will.
    They concede that this court has recognized the"probate excep-
    tion" as a jurisprudential limit on diversity jurisdiction. See
    Foster v.
    Carlin, 
    200 F.2d 943
    (4th Cir. 1952). However, they contend that
    the
    probate exception does not apply here because the relief they seek
    in
    connection with the will, which at the time the suit was filed only
    controlled personal property worth $100, was "incidental" to the
    other
    relief sought here. John and Richard rely on recent, out-of-circuit
    cases limiting the probate exception and argue that it would be a
    waste of judicial resources, as well as prejudicial to them, as
    non-
    Virginia residents, to relitigate questions as to the validity of
    the will
    in the state probate court.
    It is hardly clear that the relief they seek with regard to the
    will is
    "incidental" to the other relief requested. True, if the district
    court had
    upheld the trust documents, most of Marion's assets would have
    passed through the trust. However, now that the district court has
    4
    invalidated the trust documents, indisputably all of Marion's
    property
    will pass through her will. Thus, as soon as John and Richard
    accom-
    plished the very result they sought as to the trust, Marion's will
    and
    their claim that she lacked testamentary capacity and was unduly
    influenced by Stephen in its execution became central -- rather
    than
    incidental -- to this litigation.
    Moreover, a federal court does not gain jurisdiction to determine
    a will's validity merely because the issue is "incidental" to other
    claims.1
    Instead, we must look at the contours of the "probate exception,"
    for
    if John and Richard's claims regarding their mother's will fall
    within
    this exception to federal diversity jurisdiction, the district
    court may
    not address them no matter how close their connection to claims
    (like
    those involving creation of the trust) over which a federal court
    does
    have jurisdiction.
    The leading Supreme Court precedent is Markham v. Allen, 
    326 U.S. 490
    (1946). In Markham, the Court determined that although "a
    federal court has no jurisdiction to probate a will or administer
    an
    estate . . . federal courts of equity have jurisdiction to
    entertain suits
    ``in favor of creditors, legatees and heirs' and other claimants
    against
    a decedent's estate ``to establish their claims' so long as the
    federal
    court does not interfere with the probate or assume general
    jurisdic-
    tion of the probate or control of the property in the custody of
    the
    state court." 
    Id. at 494
    (citations omitted).
    In 
    Foster, 200 F.2d at 947
    , we further explained that:
    _________________________________________________________________
    1 Notwithstanding the arguments of John and Richard, 
    Foster, 200 F.2d at 948
    , is not to the contrary. There we simply noted that "[t]he
    fact that
    complainant prays for incidental relief which the federal court is
    without
    jurisdiction to grant does not prevent an adjudication by the
    federal court
    of the rights of the respective parties in an estate." 
    Id. The district
    court
    followed that principle here and did not hold that the probate
    exception
    prevented adjudication of the rights of the parties under the trust
    docu-
    ments. Nothing in Foster suggests that a federal court can ignore
    the pro-
    bate exception and assume jurisdiction over a claim over which it
    would
    otherwise not have jurisdiction, if the relief sought is
    "incidental" to the
    principal remedy requested in the litigation.
    5
    The law is well settled that the federal courts have no
    jurisdiction over matters within the exclusive jurisdiction of
    state probate courts. However, as to matters which do not
    involve administration of an estate or the probate of a will,
    but which may be determined in a separate action inter
    partes in the courts of general jurisdiction of the state, the
    federal courts do have jurisdiction if the requisite diversity
    of citizenship exists.
    See also Farrell v. O'Brien, 
    199 U.S. 89
    , 112 (1905) (asking
    whether
    "a will contest under the laws of Washington[is] an ordinary action
    or suit between parties [in which case the federal court has
    jurisdic-
    tion] or a special probate proceeding directly ancillary to or
    concern-
    ing the probate of the will," in which there is no federal
    jurisdiction).
    Thus we must examine the nature of John and Richard's undue influ-
    ence and lack of testamentary capacity claims under Virginia law.
    In Virginia, the probate court has jurisdiction to determine
    "whether the writing, or any part of it, is the true will of the
    deceased
    and whether the writing is testamentary in character." Smith v.
    Mustian, 
    234 S.E.2d 292
    , 296 (Va. 1977). A "proper" issue "to be
    decided during probate," is whether "the decedent possessed testa-
    mentary capacity at the time the writing was executed." 
    Id. See also
    Redford v. Booker, 
    185 S.E. 879
    , 884-85 (Va. 1936) (exercising pro-
    bate jurisdiction over undue influence claim). This jurisdiction is
    exclusive. See Tate v. Chumbley, 
    57 S.E.2d 151
    , 157 (Va. 1950)
    ("The issue of whether or not a testator had mental capacity to
    make
    a particular will can be rendered res adjudicata in a probate
    proceed-
    ing and none other."). We have previously recognized this feature
    of
    Virginia law, holding that federal courts have no jurisdiction over
    a
    suit brought to set aside a will based on claims of undue influence
    and
    mental incompetence. See Guilfoil v. Hayes, 
    86 F.2d 544
    , 545-46
    (4th
    Cir. 1936) (finding claim brought "to impeach or establish the
    will"
    was "but supplementary to, and a continuation of, the original pro-
    ceeding in probate," and thus the federal court lacked
    jurisdiction).2
    _________________________________________________________________
    2 In view of this well established law and the district court's
    clear pre-
    trial ruling, John and Richard's argument that the court wrongly
    amended its memorandum order post-trial to exclude mention of the
    will
    is meritless. When the court originally included"wills" among the
    legal
    documents that Marion "lacked testamentary capacity" to execute in
    its
    order, it essentially made a clerical error which could be
    corrected by the
    court sua sponte. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(a).
    6
    Recent out-of-circuit precedent suggests that the probate exception
    to federal diversity jurisdiction may lack strong historical roots,
    see
    Dragan v. Miller, 
    679 F.2d 712
    , 713 (7th Cir. 1982), and limits its
    reach in certain circumstances. See Glickstein v. Sun Bank/Miami
    N.A., 
    922 F.2d 666
    , 672-73 (11th Cir. 1991); Ashton v. Josephine
    Bay
    Paul & C. Michael Paul Found. , 
    918 F.2d 1065
    , 1071-72 (2d Cir.
    1990). However, the parties have not cited, and we have not
    located,
    a single case in which a federal court has found jurisdiction to
    invali-
    date a will due to lack of testamentary capacity or undue
    influence,
    much less a case involving Virginia law. Rather, all of the
    precedent
    is to the contrary. See, e.g., Michigan Tech Fund v. Century Nat'l
    Bank, 
    680 F.2d 736
    , 739 (11th Cir. 1982) (concluding that "[a]
    chal-
    lenge to the validity of a will is not within the jurisdiction of
    the fed-
    eral courts under the probate exception"); 
    Dragan, 679 F.2d at 714-17
    (finding probate exception bars jurisdiction to hear action to
    declare
    will invalid "because of undue influence" and to have decedent's
    property pass through state intestacy statute); Kausch v. First
    Wichita
    Nat'l Bank, 
    470 F.2d 1068
    (5th Cir. 1972) (finding federal district
    court had no diversity jurisdiction in suit to set aside will on
    grounds
    of lack of testamentary capacity and undue influence).
    There are good reasons for the probate exception's limit on federal
    jurisdiction. As Judge Posner explained in one of the cases upon
    which John and Richard principally rely, reserving probate matters
    to
    state courts generally promotes legal certainty, judicial economy,
    and
    resolution by a court expert in those matters. 
    Dragan, 679 F.2d at 714-16
    . Although in this case, honoring the probate exception will
    result in a somewhat inefficient use of judicial resources, in most
    law-
    suits that will not be the case. Furthermore, we note that John and
    Richard could have avoided the duplication here by pursuing their
    case where they originally initiated it -- in state court. Finally,
    we are
    confident that the Virginia probate court will take into account
    the
    district court's factual findings regarding the trust documents
    when
    evaluating Marion's testamentary capacity to execute her will. 3
    _________________________________________________________________
    3 Throughout this case, Stephen has unequivocally asserted that the
    probate of his mother's will has not been closed, but simply has
    "re-
    mained dormant depending on the outcome of th[e federal]
    litigation."
    Brief of Appellee at 6. In his appellate brief he further asserted
    that
    7
    III.
    John and Richard also appeal the district court's order denying
    them attorneys' fees. Under Virginia law, "[o]rdinarily, in the
    absence
    of a statutory or contractual provision to the contrary, attorneys'
    fees
    are not recoverable by the prevailing litigant." Gilmore v. Basic
    Indus., Inc., 
    357 S.E.2d 514
    , 517 (Va. 1987).
    The trust agreement provided:
    In any dispute arising out of this trust, the losing party
    shall
    pay to the prevailing party reasonable costs and expenses
    incurred in connection with any suit . . . including
    attorneys'
    fees . . . .
    John and Richard assert that this clause provides them with a con-
    tractual right to fees since they were undisputably prevailing
    parties
    _________________________________________________________________
    "when this litigation is final, there will be active probate issues
    to deal
    with in Arlington County [probate court]." 
    Id. At oral
    argument,
    how-
    ever, Stephen suggested for the first time that he would argue in
    probate
    court that the two-year statute of limitations in Va. Code Ann. §
    64.1-90
    (Michie 1995) (governing actions by out of state residents to
    impeach
    wills) had now expired and barred John and Richard from asserting
    their
    claims of undue influence and lack of testamentary capacity. The
    probate
    court will, of course, have to address this argument. However, it
    may be
    meritless, in view of Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-229(E)(1) (Michie Supp.
    1996), which provides that a limitations period is tolled by an
    action
    "commenced within the prescribed limitation period" and "dismissed
    without determining the merits." Stephen offered Marion's will for
    pro-
    bate on December 30, 1993; John and Richard instituted the present
    action (which was dismissed "without determining the merits" of all
    challenges to the will) on August 24, 1995, well within the
    two-year lim-
    itations period in § 64.1-90. Apparently, John and Richard also
    filed an
    earlier action in state court on November 1, 1993, see Turja v.
    Turja, Ch.
    No. 93-950 (Cir. Ct. Arlington County filed November 1, 1993),
    which
    they subsequently nonsuited; however, since that action was filed
    prior
    to the time the will was offered for probate, it presumably has no
    effect
    at all on the limitations period for challenging the will. Cf. Va.
    Code
    Ann. § 8.01.229(E)(3) (Michie Supp. 1996).
    8
    in their suit to invalidate the trust.4       The district court,
    however, con-
    cluded that since it had declared the trust agreement "null and
    void,"
    this clause in the trust agreement could not provide a contractual
    basis
    for attorneys' fees.
    The clause providing for attorneys' fees is not severable from the
    voided trust agreement. As John and Richard note, under Virginia
    law, a contract that is invalidated can sometimes be enforced
    against
    a breaching party. Cohen v. Mayflower Corp., 
    86 S.E.2d 860
    (Va.
    1955). However, a testamentary instrument created by an individual
    who lacks testamentary capacity is void in its entirety. See 1
    William
    J. Bowe & Douglas H. Parker, Page on the Law of Wills § 12.46
    (1960) ("If the testator lacks mental capacity, the will is void .
    . . . It
    cannot be valid in part and void in part.") (footnotes omitted).
    John
    and Richard do not argue that Marion's incapacity only affected a
    portion of the trust documents. Absent such a showing, the district
    court was correct to find that the attorneys' fees provision, like
    the
    remainder of the trust agreement, was void and could not provide a
    contractual basis for attorneys' fees.
    _________________________________________________________________
    4 On appeal, John and Richard assert two additional arguments.
    First,
    they claim that under Virginia law, a trustee must bear the costs
    of litiga-
    tion when he is its cause. See Wiglesworth v. Taylor, 
    391 S.E.2d 299
    ,
    303-304 (Va. 1990) (finding trustee may not be reimbursed for
    attorneys'
    fees from trust when he causes litigation). However, they cite no
    Virginia
    case holding that a trustee is liable for fees incurred by
    challengers to a
    trust, absent a contractual or statutory provision. Second, they
    urge us to
    make an exception to Virginia's rule of no attorneys' fees absent
    statu-
    tory or contractual authority for "public policy" reasons. See
    generally
    American-LaFrance & Foamite Indus., Inc. v. Arlington County , 
    192 S.E. 758
    , 763-64 (Va. 1937). Again they cite no Virginia case on
    point
    -- or indeed a case from any jurisdiction supporting a public
    policy
    exception in a situation similar to that at hand. Since John and
    Richard
    made neither of these arguments before the district court and since
    they
    have offered no persuasive authority for either argument, we
    decline to
    address them on appeal. See United States v. Bornstein, 
    977 F.2d 112
    ,
    115 (4th Cir. 1992) (finding this court can not address issue
    raised for
    the first time on appeal absent plain error or miscarriage of
    justice).
    9
    Thus the judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.
    10