in Re Mortimore Estate ( 2012 )


Menu:
  • Order                                                                     Michigan Supreme Court
    Lansing, Michigan
    May 25, 2012                                                                    Robert P. Young, Jr.,
    Chief Justice
    143307                                                                          Michael F. Cavanagh
    Marilyn Kelly
    Stephen J. Markman
    Diane M. Hathaway
    _________________________________________                                           Mary Beth Kelly
    Brian K. Zahra,
    In re Estate of ARNOLD E. MORTIMORE,                                                           Justices
    Deceased.
    _________________________________________
    RENEE HANNEMAN and DEAN
    MORTIMORE,
    Appellees,
    v                                                     SC: 143307
    COA: 297280
    Shiawassee CC: 09-034102-DA
    HELEN M. FISER,
    Appellant.
    _________________________________________/
    On order of the Court, leave to appeal having been granted and the briefs and oral
    arguments of the parties having been considered by the Court, we VACATE our order of
    October 26, 2011. The application for leave to appeal the May 17, 2011 judgment of the
    Court of Appeals is DENIED, because we are no longer persuaded that the question
    presented should be reviewed by this Court.
    YOUNG, C.J. (dissenting).
    We granted leave to appeal in this case to address the quantum of proof necessary
    to rebut a presumption of undue influence in a will contest. The majority today vacates
    that order granting leave to appeal, thereby leaving in place a decision of the Court of
    Appeals that erroneously concluded that there was a “mandatory presumption” of undue
    influence and that the proponent of the will bore the burden of overcoming it. Because
    this is not, and has never been, the law of this state, I dissent.
    I would reverse the Court of Appeals and clarify that the proponent of a will does
    not have to prove the absence of undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence in
    order to rebut a presumption of undue influence. Instead, consistently with well-
    established law providing that the burden of proof always remains with the contestant of
    2
    a will,1 the proponent need only introduce substantial evidence sufficient to create a
    question of fact regarding undue influence, at which point the trier of fact weighs the
    totality of the evidence and all permissible inferences therefrom to determine whether the
    will was a product of undue influence. It is inconsistent and illogical to conclude that the
    burden of proof rests with the contestant of a will, but then require the proponent of a
    will to rebut a presumption of undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence—
    which is the precise standard that satisfies a party’s ultimate burden of proof in a civil
    case.
    I. BACKGROUND
    The doctrine of undue influence exists in the law of donative transfers as a tool to
    protect susceptible individuals from improper influences that unduly alter a donor’s true
    intent. A donative transfer is procured by undue influence if the wrongdoer exerted such
    influence over the donor to overcome the donor’s free will and cause the donor to make a
    transfer that the donor otherwise would not have made. To establish undue influence, “it
    must be shown that the grantor was subjected to threats, misrepresentation, undue
    flattery, fraud, or physical or moral coercion sufficient to overpower volition, destroy free
    agency and impel the grantor to act against his inclination and free will.”2 However, not
    all influence is undue, as this Court has explained:
    “[I]nfluences to induce testamentary disposition may be specific and
    direct without becoming undue as it is not improper to advise, persuade,
    solicit, importune, entreat, implore, move hopes, fears, or prejudices or to
    make appeals to vanity, pride, sense of justice, obligations of duty, ties of
    friendship, affection, or kindred, sentiment of gratitude or to pity for
    distress and destitution, although such will would not have been made but
    for such influence, so long as the testator’s choice is his own and not that
    of another[.]”[3]
    Our caselaw provides that the burden of proof for establishing undue influence is
    borne by the contestant of a will,4 and that burden does not shift, but remains with the
    contestant throughout the entirety of the proceedings.5 This standard is in accord with
    1
    See MCL 700.3407(c); In re Cooch Estate, 
    367 Mich. 445
    , 451 (1962).
    2
    Kar v Hogan, 
    399 Mich. 529
    , 537 (1976); see also Nelson v Wiggins, 
    172 Mich. 191
    ,
    199-200 (1912).
    3
    In re Spillette Estate, 
    352 Mich. 12
    , 18 (1958), quoting In re Jennings’ Estate, 
    335 Mich. 241
    , 247-248 (1952) (emphasis added).
    4
    Cooch 
    Estate, 367 Mich. at 451
    .
    5
    See, e.g. 
    Kar, 399 Mich. at 538-539
    (“The ultimate burden of proof in undue influence
    cases does not shift; it remains with the plaintiff throughout the entire trial. . . . A
    3
    MCL 700.3407(1), which provides the burdens of proof applicable in contested estate
    cases:
    All of the following apply in a contested case:
    * * *
    (c) A contestant of a will has the burden of establishing lack of
    testamentary intent or capacity, undue influence, fraud, duress, mistake, or
    revocation.
    (d) A party has the ultimate burden of persuasion as to a matter with
    respect to which the party has the initial burden of proof.
    Ordinarily, undue influence “is not to be presumed, but must be proved by the
    person seeking to have the will declared invalid.”6 However, Michigan law recognizes
    an initial presumption of undue influence applicable in situations in which the testator has
    a confidential or fiduciary relationship with a person who receives a benefit under the
    testator’s will.7 The presumption of undue influence is created upon the introduction of
    evidence that would establish “(1) the existence of a confidential or fiduciary relationship
    between the grantor and a fiduciary, (2) the fiduciary or an interest which he represents
    benefits from a transaction, and (3) the fiduciary had an opportunity to influence the
    grantor’s decision in that transaction.”8
    MRE 301 governs presumptions in civil actions; it provides:
    In all civil actions and proceedings not otherwise provided for by
    statute or by these rules, a presumption imposes on the party against whom
    it is directed the burden of going forward with evidence to rebut or meet the
    presumption, but does not shift to such party the burden of proof in the
    sense of the risk of nonpersuasion, which remains throughout the trial upon
    the party on whom it was originally cast.
    plaintiff has the burden of proof (risk of nonpersuasion) for all elements necessary to
    establish the case. This burden never shifts during trial. Therefor, plaintiffs, who alleged
    the existence of undue influence, bore the ultimate burden of persuading the trier of fact
    that undue influence was used to procure the deed.”).
    6
    In re Anderson Estate, 
    353 Mich. 169
    , 172 (1958); see also In re Reed’s Estate, 
    273 Mich. 334
    , 344 (1935) (“Undue influence cannot be presumed, but must be proved and in
    connection with the will and not with other things.”).
    7
    Pritchard v Hutton, 
    187 Mich. 346
    , 358-359 (1915).
    8
    
    Kar, 399 Mich. at 537
    .
    4
    Thus, once a presumption is created, that presumption is a “procedural device which
    regulates the burden of going forward with the evidence and is dissipated when
    substantial evidence is submitted by the opponents to the presumption.”9 In the case of a
    contested will, the presumption establishes a prima facie challenge to the will—thereby
    protecting the challenge from dismissal—and requires the proponents of the will to
    submit substantial evidence in rebuttal. However, as MRE 301 carefully notes,
    presumptions do not shift the ultimate burden of persuasion.
    If the will’s proponent fails to produce sufficient rebuttal evidence, then the
    presumption remains intact and establishes a mandatory inference of undue influence that
    should be weighed by the fact-finder with the evidence generally to determine whether
    undue influence in fact exists in the case. However, if rebutted, the presumption is
    eliminated and the fact-finder must assess all the evidence to determine whether undue
    influence has been proved by the will’s contestant.10 Because undue influence must not
    be presumed, this Court has explained:
    “It is now quite generally held by the courts that a rebuttable or
    prima facie presumption has no weight as evidence. It serves to establish a
    prima facie case, but if challenged by rebutting evidence, the presumption
    cannot be weighed against the evidence. Supporting evidence must be
    introduced, and it then becomes a question of weighing the actual evidence
    introduced, without giving any evidential force to the presumption
    itself.”[11]
    Ultimately, whether the testator’s free will was overcome is still the crucial question for
    the determination of undue influence, and that fact must be proved to, and resolved by,
    the finder of fact.
    II. ANALYSIS AND APPLICATION
    Applying these principles, I believe that the Court of Appeals erred in its analysis
    and conclusions. The Court of Appeals held that, once established, there was a
    “mandatory presumption” of undue influence that the proponent of the will bore the
    burden of overcoming.12 The Court reasoned that because the probate court, sitting as
    9
    Widmayer v Leonard, 
    422 Mich. 280
    , 286 (1985) (emphasis added).
    10
    See 
    id. at 289. 11
      In re Cotcher’s Estate, 
    274 Mich. 154
    , 159 (1936), quoting Gillett v Mich United
    Traction Co, 
    205 Mich. 410
    , 414 (1919).
    12
    In re Mortimore Estate, unpublished opinion per curiam of the Court of Appeals,
    issued May 17, 2011 (Docket No. 297280), p 1. First and foremost, Michigan law has
    5
    fact-finder, found that the evidence for and against undue influence was essentially
    evenly split, the will’s proponent had not met her burden to disprove the presumption of
    undue influence.
    By instituting a “mandatory presumption” of undue influence, the Court of
    Appeals, in effect, shifted the ultimate burden of persuasion to Helen Fisher—the
    proponent of the will. It is erroneous and illogical to state that the burden of proof
    always remains with the contestant of a will, but then require the proponent of a will to
    rebut a presumption of undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence. The
    preponderance standard is the very same level of evidence that satisfies the ultimate
    burden of proof in a civil case. I therefore cannot agree with the statement in Kar, upon
    which the Court of Appeals primarily relied for its ultimate conclusion, that
    [i]f the trier of fact finds the evidence by the defendant as rebuttal to be
    equally opposed by the presumption, then the defendant has failed to
    discharge his duty of producing sufficient rebuttal evidence and the
    “mandatory inference” remains unscathed. This does not mean that the
    ultimate burden of proof has shifted from plaintiff to defendant, but rather
    that plaintiff may satisfy the burden of persuasion with the use of the
    presumption, which remains as substantive evidence, and that the plaintiff
    will always satisfy the burden of persuasion when the defendant fails to
    offer sufficient rebuttal evidence.[13]
    Key to the analysis of this issue is that the burden of proof of undue influence always
    rests on the contestant of the will. Because Kar states that the proponent of the will must
    disprove the claim of undue influence by a preponderance of the evidence at the rebuttal
    stage, how can it be said that this scheme has not shifted the burden of persuasion onto
    the proponent? Although Kar disclaimed this conclusion—stating that “[t]his does not
    mean that the ultimate burden of proof has shifted from plaintiff to defendant”—I am
    unable to read Kar in any other way. This is particularly true where, as Kar provides, the
    failure to rebut the presumption means that the contestant receives a mandatory inference
    of undue influence that will “always satisfy” the burden of persuasion.
    never recognized a “mandatory presumption” of undue influence. As discussed earlier,
    when sufficient rebuttal evidence does not exist, at most the presumption of undue
    influence becomes only a “mandatory inference” to be weighed with the other evidence
    by the fact-finder. The use by the Court of Appeals of this unprecedented phrase only
    serves to confuse further this complex area of the law.
    13
    
    Kar, 399 Mich. at 542
    (emphasis added); see Mortimore Estate, unpub op at 6 (“The
    trial court’s statements recognize that [defendant] presented evidence to rebut the
    presumption of undue influence but when weighed against opposing evidence in favor of
    the presumption, the trial court essentially found the evidence equally convincing. As
    such, [defendant] did not overcome her duty to rebut the presumption.”).
    6
    I believe that requiring evidence that equals the ultimate burden of proof at the
    initial rebuttal stage sets too high of a bar for rebutting the presumption. To the extent
    that Kar implies that a will’s proponent must rebut a presumption of undue influence by a
    preponderance of the evidence, yet holds that this does not shift the ultimate burden of
    persuasion, Kar is internally inconsistent and should be clarified. Moreover, Kar was
    decided before the enactment of MRE 301 and MCL 700.3407,14 and its statements
    regarding the quantum of proof necessary to rebut a presumption of undue influence are
    inherently inconsistent with MRE 301 and MCL 700.3407, as well as caselaw of this
    Court. At the very least, this Court ought to address the problem created by Kar because,
    as this case illustrates, Kar is distorting the burden of proof in this important area of the
    law.
    Instead, consistently with our caselaw, I would hold that where a presumption of
    undue influence arises, a will’s proponent need only come forth with “substantial
    evidence” in rebuttal.15 Ultimately, this standard requires that a proponent of the will
    come forward with some objective evidence supporting the position that no undue
    influence existed, but does not require that the proponent “prove” by a preponderance
    that no undue influence existed.
    As even the proponent Helen Fisher concedes, I agree that this was an appropriate
    case giving rise to the presumption of undue influence. However, I would hold that
    Fisher offered sufficient evidence to rebut the presumption, thereby creating only a
    permissible inference to be weighed with the evidence generally by the finder of fact.
    Given that the probate court in this case found that the evidence was relatively evenly
    split on the question of undue influence, I am perplexed how the Court of Appeals and a
    majority of this Court could conclude that Fisher did not present sufficient evidence in
    rebuttal to eliminate the initial presumption of undue influence.
    The trial judge, an experienced probate judge sitting as fact-finder in this case, was
    well positioned to weigh all the evidence and understand the complexities presented in
    this case. The probate court was certainly aware of the unusual facts and circumstances
    that surrounded the creation of this will. Yet, the court admitted that it was perplexed
    14
    Kar was decided by this Court on December 31, 1976; MRE 301 became effective on
    March 1, 1978, while MCL 700.3407 became effective on April 1, 2000.
    15
    See 
    Widmayer, 422 Mich. at 286
    (providing that a presumption “is dissipated when
    substantial evidence is submitted by the opponents to the presumption”).
    7
    by this case, finding it to be an extraordinarily rare case in which the testimony by
    witnesses was totally partisan and contradictory. The probate court noted that there was
    very little overlap and that the evidence was essentially evenly split. Ultimately, the
    probate court concluded clearly and unequivocally that “there [are] not sufficient grounds
    to find undue influence under any of the conditions and standard[s] of the case law” and
    that petitioners “did not prove undue influence.” I would not upset this conclusion on the
    basis of an erroneous theory requiring the will’s proponent to demonstrate, by a
    preponderance of the evidence, the nonexistence of undue influence.
    Accordingly, I would reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and reinstate
    the trial court’s findings and conclusions of law. For all these reasons, I respectfully
    dissent from this Court’s decision to deny leave to appeal, which thereby deprives us of
    the opportunity to provide much needed clarity in the law governing the presumption of
    undue influence.
    MARKMAN and MARY BETH KELLY, JJ., join the statement of YOUNG, C.J.
    I, Corbin R. Davis, Clerk of the Michigan Supreme Court, certify that the
    foregoing is a true and complete copy of the order entered at the direction of the Court.
    May 25, 2012                        _________________________________________
    t0522                                                                 Clerk