WILLIAM CRESCENZO v. IRENE SIMPSON, AS PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF THE HERMINIA M. QUINONES ESTATE ( 2018 )


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  •                NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO FILE REHEARING
    MOTION AND, IF FILED, DETERMINED
    IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
    OF FLORIDA
    SECOND DISTRICT
    WILLIAM CRESCENZO,                            )
    )
    Appellant,                      )
    )
    v.                                            )          Case No. 2D16-5649
    )
    IRENE SIMPSON, as personal                    )
    representative of the Estate of Herminia      )
    M. Quinones, deceased,                        )
    )
    Appellee.                       )
    )
    Opinion filed March 9, 2018.
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for
    Hillsborough County; Artemus E. McNeil,
    Acting Circuit Judge.
    Ann M. Allison of Allison Law Group,
    Temple Terrace, for Appellant.
    Rory B. Weiner of Rory B. Weiner, P.A.,
    Brandon, for Appellee.
    SALARIO, Judge.
    William Crescenzo appeals from an order of the probate court that
    admitted the will of Herminia M. Quinones to probate. He argues that before it could
    admit the will, the probate court had to decide a challenge to the will's validity that was
    contained in an answer he filed. Ms. Quinones' estate, however, says that because Mr.
    Crescenzo's challenge was not contained in a caveat under Florida Probate Rule 5.260,
    the court did not have to decide that challenge before admitting the will to probate. We
    hold that Mr. Crescenzo's answer was the functional equivalent of a caveat and reverse.
    Ms. Quinones passed away on August 12, 2011. About five years later,
    Irene Simpson filed a petition for administration of Ms. Quinones' estate and sought to
    appoint herself as personal representative. The petition stated that the sole asset of the
    estate was a parcel of real property in Hillsborough County. It did not indicate that any
    other person had an interest in that property. The petition stated that Ms. Quinones had
    a will, identified Ms. Quinones' sister and niece as the beneficiaries of that will, and
    sought to have the will admitted to probate.
    Mr. Crescenzo retained counsel, who filed an appearance in the probate
    court on his behalf. Counsel also filed a pleading styled "Answer and Affirmative
    Defenses to Petition for Administration." That pleading contained a caption stating that
    it was being filed "In re: The Estate of Herminia Quinones," identified the correct case
    number, and stated that Mr. Crescenzo had an interest in the estate because he was a
    fifty-percent owner of the real property that was its sole asset. The answer contained
    the name and address of Mr. Crescenzo's lawyer. It also contained "affirmative
    defenses" in which Mr. Crescenzo disputed the validity of the will, alleging that it was
    procured through fraud and undue influence, and raised objections to the administration
    of the estate and the appointment of Ms. Simpson as personal representative.
    Without conducting a hearing or otherwise considering the issues raised
    by Mr. Crescenzo's pleading, the probate court entered an order admitting the will to
    probate and appointing Ms. Simpson as personal representative. The order found that
    the will had been validly executed and stated, contrary to Mr. Crescenzo's answer, that
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    there had been no objection to the will being admitted to probate. Mr. Crescenzo timely
    appeals that order, arguing that the probate court was required to consider his
    challenges to the will's validity and the appointment of a personal representative before
    admitting the will to probate.
    The disputed issue in this appeal is whether Mr. Crescenzo sufficiently
    presented his challenges to the probate court such that it was required to rule on them
    before entering its order. Ms. Quinones' estate says that the answer is no because Mr.
    Crescenzo did not file a caveat and that his only remedy now is to file a petition to
    revoke probate. See § 733.109, Fla. Stat. (2016); Fla. Prob. R. 5.270.
    Section 731.110, Florida Statutes (2016), governs the filing of caveats in
    probate proceedings. The statute provides that an interested person concerned that an
    estate may be administered or a will probated without his or her knowledge may file a
    caveat with the court.1 § 731.110(1). A caveat may be filed either before or after the
    death of the person whose estate is to be administered, with the exception of caveats of
    creditors, who may only file after death. Id.
    If a caveat [is] filed by an interested person other than a
    creditor, the court may not admit a will of the decedent to
    probate or appoint a personal representative until formal
    notice of the petition for administration has been served on
    the caveator or the caveator's designated agent and the
    caveator has had the opportunity to participate in
    proceedings on the petition, as provided by the Florida
    Probate Rules.
    § 731.110(3) (emphasis added).
    1There appears to be no dispute, at least insofar as this appeal is
    concerned, that Mr. Crescenzo is an interested person within the meaning of the
    statute.
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    Thus, when an interested person other than a creditor files a caveat and
    challenges the decedent's will, "the probate court [is] obliged to make a determination
    on [the] challenge to the will prior to appointing a personal representative and admitting
    the will to probate." In re Estate of Hartman, 
    836 So. 2d 1038
    , 1039 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2002); see also Rocca v. Boyansky, 
    80 So. 3d 377
    , 381 (Fla. 3d DCA 2012). The filing
    of a caveat has "the effect of precluding the admission of the will to probate" until the
    party filing it has the opportunity to litigate his challenge. Barry v. Walker, 
    137 So. 711
    ,
    714 (Fla. 1931); see also Rocca, 
    80 So. 3d at 381
     (holding that "will contests and the
    rights of caveators must be determined" prior to the letters of administration being
    issued).
    Rule 5.260 sets forth the procedural requirements for filing a caveat. With
    respect to the form of the document, the rule provides that
    [t]he caveat shall contain the name of the person for whom
    the estate will be, or is being, administered, the last 4 digits
    of the person's social security number or year of birth, if
    known, a statement of the interest of the caveator in the
    estate, and the name and specific mailing address of the
    caveator.
    Fla. Prob. R. 5.260(b).
    Mr. Crescenzo filed a pleading styled "Answer and Affirmative Defenses"
    and did not file a pleading styled "caveat." But we are quite comfortable under the
    circumstances of this case concluding that the pleading he filed was the functional
    equivalent of the form of caveat the rule contemplates. It identified the estate to which it
    applied (Ms. Quinones' estate), it identified Mr. Crescenzo's interest in the estate (half-
    owner of the estate's sole asset), and it provided the name and mailing address of his
    authorized representative (his lawyer). Although the caveat did not provide Ms.
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    Quinones' social security number or year of birth, our record contains no indication that
    Mr. Crescenzo or his counsel knew that information. Furthermore, we are not dealing
    with a petition filed before death or before any probate proceedings had been
    commenced, where the absence of that identifying information might be expected to
    cause confusion. Here, Ms. Simpson filed a petition for administration of Ms. Quinones'
    estate that contained the last four digits of Ms. Quinones' social security number. Mr.
    Crescenzo's answer referenced the petition and identified the case number assigned to
    it, such that anyone who needed it could have found it.
    In sum, any differences between the pleading Mr. Crescenzo filed and the
    caveat contemplated by rule 5.260 were matters of form that had no effect on the
    substance of the proceedings. Our court's decision, In re Guth's Estate, 
    374 So. 2d 1098
     (Fla. 2d DCA 1979), demonstrates that a probate court should consider an
    interested person's will contest even where it has been pleaded with imperfect form.
    There, an interested person filed a caveat with the probate court on the same day that
    the court entered an order admitting the will to probate. 
    Id. at 1099
    . After the court
    denied the caveat as untimely, he filed a motion for reconsideration; the probate court
    also denied that motion. 
    Id.
     Finally, the interested person filed a petition for revocation
    of probate, but that was also denied as untimely because it was beyond the ninety-day
    window allowed by statute. 
    Id.
    Although we affirmed the probate court's determination that the interested
    person's caveat was untimely, we reversed the denial of the motion to reconsider. 
    Id. at 1100
    . We held that the trial court should have considered his challenge to the
    decedent's will because his motion "clearly stat[ed] his interest in the estate and
    specifically challeng[ed] the validity of his father's will." 
    Id.
     Because the probate court
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    and all parties were apprised of the nature of his challenge, we reasoned, the interested
    person was entitled to a hearing on his will contest. 
    Id.
    As in Guth's Estate, here we think any variance in form between Mr.
    Crescenzo's answer and a true caveat is immaterial. There is no question that his
    answer identified his interest in the estate; there is no question that his answer put the
    court and the parties on notice of a will contest; there is no question that his answer
    precisely identified the decedent and will to which his challenge pertained; and there is
    no question that he was looking for a decision on his will contest before the will was
    admitted to probate. This is a case in which the substance of what Mr. Crescenzo was
    doing is obvious and any defect in form is inconsequential. See, e.g., Fla. Prob. R.
    5.020(a) ("No defect of form impairs substantial rights . . . ."); In re Estate of Koshuba,
    
    993 So. 2d 983
    , 986 (Fla. 2d DCA 2007) ("We agree . . . that Mr. Zilewicz's written
    statements, made within his Petition for Administration and the Amended Petition for a
    Guardian ad Litem, were substantially sufficient to place interested persons on notice of
    his claim. The documents filed in the probate proceeding . . . are defective as to form,
    but they sufficiently state the character and extent of his claim."); Harbour House
    Props., Inc. v. Estate of Stone, 
    443 So. 2d 136
    , 137 (Fla. 3d DCA 1983) ("The creditor's
    response to the motion to strike its claim became the functional equivalent of a motion
    to excuse the untimely filing of a claim against the estate.").
    Because Mr. Crescenzo's "Answer and Affirmative Defenses" was the
    functional equivalent of a caveat on the facts of this case, we conclude that the probate
    court erred in entering its order without first addressing Mr. Crescenzo's will contest.
    We reverse and remand with instructions for the probate court to vacate the order
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    admitting Ms. Quinones' will to probate and appointing Ms. Simpson as personal
    representative and to conduct further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    Reversed and remanded.
    NORTHCUTT and CASANUEVA, JJ., Concur.
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Document Info

Docket Number: 16-5649

Filed Date: 3/9/2018

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/9/2018