Estate and Trust of Edward E. Clawson ( 2020 )


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  • J-A14011-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: ESTATE AND TRUST OF              :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    EDWARD E. CLAWSON                       :         PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: MARK A. MCCULLOUGH           :
    :
    :
    :
    :    No. 1622 WDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered September 19, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County Orphans’ Court
    at No(s): Case No. 65-13-1442
    BEFORE: SHOGAN, J., McLAUGHLIN, J., and MUSMANNO, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY SHOGAN, J.:                       FILED DECEMBER 21, 2020
    Appellant, Mark A. McCullough, appeals from the orphans’ court’s
    September 19, 2019 order overruling Appellant’s Objections to the First and
    Final Account/Petition for Adjudication/Statement of Proposed Distribution of
    Linda Bliel (“Objections” and/or “objections”).      Additionally, Appellant’s
    attorney, George C. Miller, Jr., Esquire, has filed a motion to withdraw as
    counsel. After careful review, we affirm the orphans’ court order and grant
    the motion to withdraw as counsel.
    The following facts and procedural history have been adopted from the
    facts included in the filings in the orphans’ court, the orphans’ court opinion
    filed on September 19, 2019, and our own review of the record:
    On September 12, 2001, Edward Clawson (“Clawson”) executed his will
    and established the Clawson Family Trust (the “Trust”). Objections, 9/17/18,
    J-A14011-20
    Exhibits A and B.       The will and Trust documents were prepared by Bruce
    Bilohlavek, Esquire.
    Id. at ¶ 18.1
           The will provided that upon Clawson’s
    death, all of his property would pour over into the Trust.
    Id. Exhibit A, ¶
    6.
    Clawson’s will also declared that Clawson “intentionally and with full
    knowledge omitted to provide for his heirs.”
    Id. at ¶ 7.
    Clawson named his
    sister, Mary McCullough (“Mary”), as executrix and her son, Appellant, as
    alternate executor.
    Id. at 9-1.
    The Trust named Clawson as the initial trustor and sole trustee, with
    Mary and Appellant as successor trustees. Objection, 9/17/18, Exhibit B 4-1.
    Clawson also granted Mary power of attorney over his health care and asset
    management decisions and named Appellant as alternative agent in both
    documents. N.T., 6/24/19, at 69.2
    ____________________________________________
    1 Attorney Bilohlavek died on January 5, 2012. Objections, 9/17/18, at ¶ 18.
    Appellant contacted the attorney assigned by the President Judge of
    Washington County, Pennsylvania, to oversee Mr. Bilohlavek’s pending cases
    and was informed that Mr. Bilohlavek did not leave any files behind. N.T.,
    6/24/19, at 87. Mr. Bilohlavek’s surviving sister also was unaware of the
    existence of Mr. Bilohlavek’s case files.
    Id. at 88. 2
    Although Appellant testified without objection from the Commonwealth that
    he was named the alternative agent in the health care and asset management
    powers of attorney, the Commonwealth later objected to the admission of the
    powers of attorney documents on relevancy grounds. N.T., 6/24/19, at 79.
    The orphans’ court admitted the documents provisionally, subject to later
    review.
    Id. at 80.
    The orphans’ court ultimately decided that it was
    unnecessary to rule on the admissibility of these documents. Orphans’ Court
    Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered 5.
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    Three years later, when Clawson’s mental abilities began to decline,
    Appellant began assisting Clawson with bill paying and medical appointments.
    N.T., 6/24/19, at 111. Mary died in 2008, making Appellant the acting power
    of attorney for Clawson.
    Id. at 65, 69.
    In 2011, the Westmoreland County Area Agency on Aging (“the
    Agency”) began investigating Appellant’s handling of Clawson’s finances.
    N.T., 6/24/19, at 129.          Because Appellant was uncooperative with the
    investigation, the Agency petitioned for guardianship.
    Id. After Clawson was
    declared incompetent, the Agency was appointed as his guardian.
    Id. at 128.
    Appellant’s subsequent petition to have his guardianship reinstated was
    denied.
    Id. at 126.
    Clawson died testate on June 30, 2013. Objections, 9/17/18, at ¶ 1.
    After his death, Attorney Bruce Bert Muldovan, counsel for the estate/trust
    fiduciary, notified the Commonwealth, in its parens patriae capacity,3 of
    Clawson’s death along with copies of the will and Trust reflecting a charitable
    bequest to the Diocese of Greensburg (the “Diocese”).        Commonwealth’s
    Objection to the Account, 9/18/18, at ¶ 17 (“Commonwealth’s Objection”).4
    ____________________________________________
    3  The Pennsylvania Office of Attorney General, the Estate and Trust of
    Clawson, and the Diocese of Greensburg are designated as Participants in this
    appeal. Only the Commonwealth, which is an indispensable party in every
    proceeding which affects a charitable trust, see In re Insurance Trust of
    Sanders, 
    210 A.3d 192
    , 197 (Pa. Super. 2018), filed an appellate brief.
    4 Appellant retained Attorney Muldovan to represent the estate in July 2013.
    Response to Rule to Show Cause, 11/2/16, at ¶ 7.
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    In September 2016, upon learning that Appellant refused to inform the
    Diocese of Clawson’s death and that he intended to make a claim under the
    Trust in conflict with his duties as trustee and executor, the Commonwealth
    filed a Rule to Show Cause Why Appellant Should Not be Removed as
    Executor/Trustee. Rule to Show Cause, 10/5/16, at ¶ 20. On November 15,
    2016, Appellant was removed as executor and trustee by consent agreement
    and Linda Bliel (“Bliel”) was appointed substitute interim fiduciary. Consent
    Agreement, 11/15/16, at unnumbered 1–3.
    On August 3, 2018, Bliel filed a First and Final Account and Petition for
    Adjudication/Statement of Proposed Distribution (the “Petition”), seeking to
    distribute the proceeds of the Trust to the Diocese. Petition, 8/13/18, at ¶
    11. Appellant filed objections and petitioned the orphans’ court to reform the
    Trust naming him as the sole beneficiary.
    Id. at ¶ 29.5
    The Commonwealth
    likewise filed objections to the Petition on behalf of the estate concerning
    payments to Appellant and also filed preliminary objections to Appellant’s
    objections.       Commonwealth’s         Objection,   9/18/18,   at   ¶¶   27,   30;
    Commonwealth’s Preliminary Objections, 10/9/18, at ¶ 17.6
    ____________________________________________
    5  Appellant also requested to be reinstated as executor and trustee of the
    Trust. Petition to Reinstate, 12/5/18, at unnumbered 1. The orphans’ court
    denied the petition on January 25, 2019.
    6 In its preliminary objections, the Commonwealth averred that Appellant did
    not have standing to assert a claim of reformation of the Trust.
    Commonwealth’s Preliminary Objections, 10/9/18, at ¶ 17. The orphans’
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    On June 24, 2019, the orphans’ court held a hearing on Appellant’s
    objections     to    the    Petition.    Appellant   presented     two   witnesses:
    Richard Paremka (“Paremka”), a friend of Clawson’s, and himself. Paremka
    testified generally that he knew that Clawson created a trust and that Clawson
    mentioned that he intended to leave his estate to Mary and Appellant, and if
    they predeceased him, to the church. N.T., 6/24/19, at 53. Appellant testified
    that Clawson told him that he created a trust naming Mary and Appellant as
    beneficiaries.
    Id. at 102.
    On September 19, 2019, the orphans’ court overruled Appellant’s
    objections and declined to reform the Trust.          This appeal followed.    Both
    Appellant and the orphans’ court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    Appellant raises the following issues for appellate review:
    1. Whether the trial court erred in holding that the predicate to
    pursuing trust reformation is that Appellant had to first establish
    “clear and convincing evidence that [Clawson’s] intent was
    affected by a mistake of fact or law to justify application of 20
    Pa.C.S. § 7740.5[?]”
    2. Whether the trial court erred in its application of the additional
    burden of “exceptional circumstances” to the question of trust
    reformation, and, even if such a burden were properly applied,
    whether the trial court erred in holding that these circumstances
    did not demonstrate exceptional circumstances[?]
    3. Whether the trial court misapplied the standard announced by
    the Uniform Trust Code by placing controlling weight upon the
    trustor’s unknown intent at the precise time that the trust at issue
    ____________________________________________
    court overruled the objections on March 18, 2019.                Order, 3/18/19, at
    unnumbered 2.
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    was drafted, rather than placing controlling weight upon the
    trustor’s actual statements of intent[?]
    4. Whether the trial court’s holding that “. . . the testimony
    presented is not sufficient to rise to the level of clear and
    convincing evidence that a mistake of law or fact occurred” is
    against the weight of the evidence, including the patent design of
    the trust, or applicable law[?]
    5. Whether the trial court erred in failing or refusing to reform the
    trust instrument in light of the available evidence of the trustor’s
    “probable intention[?]”
    6. Whether the trial court erred in applying the evidentiary
    burden, “clear and convincing evidence,” rather than the lower
    burden, “preponderance of the evidence,” to Appellant's legally
    distinct claim that the trust beneficiary is uncertain or
    ambiguous[?]
    7. Whether the trial court erred in failing to find a scrivener’s error
    in the trust instrument[?]
    8. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in refusing to
    find the presence of either a patent or latent ambiguity in the trust
    instrument, and whether such a refusal is against the weight of
    the evidence[?]
    9. Whether the trial court erred in failing or refusing to rule upon
    objections or give sufficient weight to certain evidence offered by
    Appellant, in the course of the hearing below, to wit: Exhibit 3
    (power of attorney for health care) and Exhibit 4 (power of
    attorney for asset management)[?]
    Appellant’s Brief, at 5–7 (full capitalization and footnotes omitted).
    We condense Appellant’s nine allegations of error into three: 1) whether
    the orphans’ court erred in failing to reform the Trust under the Uniform Trust
    Code, 20 Pa.C.S. § 7740.5 (“UTC”) (Appellant’s Issues 1–6, 8); 2) whether
    the orphans’ court erred in failing to find that a scrivener’s error created an
    ambiguity in the Trust (Appellant’s Issue 7); and, 3) whether the orphans’
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    court erred in failing to rule on the admissibility of certain evidence presented
    at the June 24, 2019 hearing (Appellant’s Issue 9).
    Prior to addressing the merits of these contentions, we outline the
    applicable standard of review:
    Our standard of review of an orphans’ court’s decision is
    deferential. When reviewing an orphans’ court decree, this Court
    must determine whether the record is free from legal error and
    whether the orphans’ court’s findings are supported by the record.
    Because the orphans’ court sits as the finder of fact, it determines
    the credibility of the witnesses and, on review, this Court will not
    reverse its credibility determinations absent an abuse of
    discretion. However, this Court is not bound to give the same
    deference to the orphans’ court conclusions of law.
    Estate of Sacchetti v. Sacchetti, 
    128 A.3d 273
    , 281–282 (Pa. Super. 2015)
    (quotation and internal citations omitted).
    Appellant’s overarching argument challenges the orphans’ court failure
    to reform the Trust. Appellant contends that the following provisions of Article
    IV of the Trust misstate Clawson’s testamentary intent:
    D. Distribution of Gifts. The Trustee shall distribute gifts of
    trust property, subject to the provisions of ARTICLE IV.G. herein
    below, to beneficiaries as follows:
    MARY J. MC CULLOUGH 100%
    If any beneficiary named in this ARTICLE IV.D. is not then
    living, the gift to such deceased beneficiary shall lapse and shall
    become a portion of the remainder of the trust estate.
    E. Distribution of Remainder of Trust Estate. Upon the death
    of the Trustor, the Trustee shall, after paying or reserving for all
    amounts payable, as provided in ARTICLE IV A. through D., divide
    the remainder of the trust estate into * shares set forth as follows
    and shall hold, administer and distribute each share according to
    the provisions of ARTICLE IV.G. herein below:
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    F. Distribution of Deceased Beneficiary’s Share. In the event
    a beneficiary named in Paragraph E of this ARTICLE IV. is not then
    living, the share of such deceased beneficiary shall be distributed
    to GREENSBURG DIOCESE, BISHOP ANTHONY BOSCOE.
    Objection, 9/17/18, Exhibit B.7         Appellant claims that the presence of the
    asterisk (“*”) in paragraph E indicates an intention to name him as a successor
    beneficiary and he petitioned the orphans’ court to correct Article IV Section
    E of the Trust to include his name as the remainder beneficiary. He based this
    request to the orphans’ court on two grounds: 1) a scrivener’s error occurred
    making the proper distribution of the Trust and the identity of the proper
    beneficiary ambiguous; 2) if the orphans’ court did not find an ambiguity, the
    UTC:
    allows a court to “reform a trust instrument, even if unambiguous,
    to conform to the settlor’s probable intention if it is proved by clear
    and convincing evidence that the settlor’s intent as expressed in
    the trust instrument was affected by a mistake of fact or law,
    whether in expression or inducement. . . .”
    Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered 2 (quoting 20 Pa.C.S.
    § 7740.5).
    We review Appellant’s arguments with the following precepts in mind.
    The polestar in every trust is the settlor’s intent, see Estate of Pew, 
    655 A.2d 521
    , 533 (Pa. Super. 1994) (citation omitted), and the “best evidence of
    a testator’s intent is the testamentary document itself and the testator’s
    arrangements with his attorney.” Estate of Agnew v. Ross, 
    152 A.3d 247
    ,
    ____________________________________________
    7   Appellant does not contend that the provisions of Article IV.G are at issue.
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    261 (Pa. 2017) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).             The
    “evidence of intent of devisor should be derived from writing signed by him,
    otherwise innumerable cases would arise where evidence of mistake would be
    claimed and proved.”
    Id. at 262
    (citing Wallize v. Wallize, 
    55 Pa. 242
    , 248
    (1867)). Disregarding the text of a trust agreement invites fraud, which the
    statutory requirements that a trust be written and signed by the trustor, see
    20 Pa.C.S. §§ 7732, 7737, seek to prevent. See also Estate of 
    Agnew, 152 A.3d at 262
    (the execution requirement and the bar on extrinsic evidence
    prevent speculation regarding a testator’s intent when that intent is properly
    reflected only in an executed testamentary document”). Therefore, a trust
    instrument that is unambiguous on a matter may not be superseded by
    extrinsic evidence of the settlor’s intent.   Id.; see also In re Beisgen's
    Estate, 
    128 A.2d 52
    , 55 (Pa. 1956) (“The dangers inherent in admitting parol
    evidence to prove a testator’s intention—namely, opening the door to fraud,
    changing or defeating the testator’s intention . . . make clear the reason for
    the exclusion of such evidence”).
    The UTC provides for the following limited exception to this general rule:
    The court may reform a trust instrument, even if unambiguous, to
    conform to the settlor’s probable intention if it is proved by clear
    and convincing evidence that the settlor’s intent as expressed in
    the trust instrument was affected by a mistake of fact or law,
    whether in expression or inducement.
    20 Pa.C.S. § 7740.5. The Uniform Law Comment to § 7740.5 further explains:
    This section applies whether the mistake is one of expression or
    one of inducement. A mistake of expression occurs when the
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    terms of the trust misstate the settlor’s intention, fail to include a
    term that was intended to be included, or include a term that was
    not intended to be included. A mistake in the inducement occurs
    when the terms of the trust accurately reflect what the settlor
    intended to be included or excluded but this intention was based
    on a mistake of fact or law. Mistakes of expression are frequently
    caused by scriveners’ errors while mistakes of inducement often
    trace to errors of the settlor.
    Reformation is different from resolving an ambiguity. Resolving
    an ambiguity involves the interpretation of language already in
    the instrument. Reformation, on the other hand, may involve the
    addition of language not originally in the instrument, or the
    deletion of language originally included by mistake, if necessary
    to conform the instrument to the settlor’s intent. Because
    reformation may involve the addition of language to the
    instrument, or the deletion of language that may appear clear on
    its face, reliance on extrinsic evidence is essential. To guard
    against the possibility of unreliable or contrived evidence in such
    circumstance, the higher standard of clear and convincing proof is
    required.
    20 Pa.C.S. § 7740.5, cmt. (citations omitted). Clear and convincing evidence
    is defined as “testimony that is so clear, direct, weighty, and convincing as to
    enable the trier of fact to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the
    truth of the precise facts in issue.” In re Adoption of L.J.B., 
    18 A.3d 1098
    ,
    1107 (Pa. 2011) (quotation omitted).
    As to Appellant’s argument that a scrivener’s error created an ambiguity
    in the Trust, the orphans’ court determined that the trust instrument did not
    contain an ambiguity that permitted it to “utilize any evidence beyond the
    document itself to interpret [Clawson’s] intent.”       Orphans’ Court Opinion
    9/19/19, at unnumbered 2. In so concluding, the orphans’ court cogently
    analyzed the terms of the Trust, as follows:
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    In Article IV Section D of the trust instrument, [Clawson] clearly
    and unambiguously devises 100% of the trust to [Mary]. To
    support his position, [Appellant] points out an asterisk that was
    not removed and replaced in Article IV Section E. That section is
    titled “Distribution of Remainder of Trust Estate.” Upon reading
    Section E, it is clear that the asterisk refers to the number of
    shares that the remainder of the trust would be divided into after
    distribution pursuant to Section D. The asterisk does not require
    the filling in of a name, but a name could be filled in after the
    colon if the number of shares is put in place of the asterisk. Since
    one hundred percent of the trust was clearly devised to [Mary],
    there was no remainder of the trust estate to divide into shares
    and make Section E applicable.
    Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, unnumbered at 2–3.
    The orphans’ court also rejected Appellant’s argument that the trust
    should be reformed under the UTC. The court noted that the only evidence of
    Clawson’s intent was Appellant’s own representation that Clawson assured
    him that Appellant “would be taken care of in his estate planning” and
    Paremka’s statement that Appellant was the only family member that Clawson
    spoke of favorably. Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered 4. The
    orphans’ court discounted Paremka’s testimony because he was unable to
    show that Clawson’s statements to him were made contemporaneously with
    the creation of the Trust.
    Id. Thus, the orphans’
    court concluded that
    Appellant failed to establish by “clear and convincing evidence” that
    [Clawson’s] intent was affected by a mistake of fact or law to justify the
    application of 20 Pa. C.S. §7740.5.
    Id. On appeal, Appellant
    contends generally that the orphans’ court erred
    “in refusing find the presence of either a patent or latent ambiguity in the
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    Trust. . . .” Appellant’s Brief at 34.         Specifically, Appellant asserts that in
    refusing to reform the Trust, the orphans’ court improperly focused on
    whether Clawson was mistaken when he signed the Trust documents, rather
    than whether the terms of the Trust were consistent with Clawson’s intent.
    Appellant’s Brief at 19. The basis of Appellant’s largely semantical argument
    is that “[t]he express terms of the Uniform Law Comment to § 7740.5 are not
    addressed to whether a trustor is mistaken at the time the trust is executed.
    Rather, the necessary inquiry is whether at the time of execution “the terms
    of the trust misstate the settlor’s intention . . .[.]”
    Id. Case law instructs
    that the time of execution is the point that courts
    must examine in ascertaining the testator’s intentions.             In re Estate of
    Tscherneff, 
    203 A.3d 1020
    , 1024 (Pa. Super. 2019) (“[I]n ascertaining the
    testator’s intention, a will is to be construed as of the date of its execution”).8
    Although Appellant suggests that the time of execution does not govern an
    inquiry concerning whether the trust accurately reflects the testator’s
    intention, he offers no authority to support this assertion. In fact, Appellant’s
    own words contradict this theory, to wit: “the necessary inquiry is whether at
    the time of execution ‘the terms of the trust misstate the settlor’s
    intention.’” Appellant’s Brief at 19 (emphasis added).
    ____________________________________________
    8 “Principles applicable to trust construction are essentially same as those
    used in will construction and intent of settlor must prevail.” Estate of 
    Agnew 152 A.3d at 262
    (citing In re Tracy, 
    346 A.2d 750
    , 752 (Pa. 1975)).
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    Appellant also asserts that the orphans’ court should have considered
    extrinsic evidence to ascertain whether the terms of the Trust misstated
    Clawson’s intent.   However, as explained by the orphan’s court, Appellant
    failed to hurdle the UTC’s threshold requirement of clear and convincing
    evidence demonstrating that Clawson’s intent was affected by a mistake. The
    orphans’ court observed:
    [T]his [c]ourt does not find that [Appellant] established by clear
    and convincing evidence that [Clawson’s] intent was affected
    by a mistake of fact or law to justify the application of 20 Pa. C.S.
    §7740.5. Reforming of a trust pursuant to the UTC is only
    supposed to be done in an “exceptional circumstance.” In re
    Navarra, 
    185 A.3d 342
    (Pa. Super. Ct. 2018). No exceptional
    circumstances exist in the current matter. Decedent was clearly
    aware of [Appellant] at the time the trust document was created
    because he included [Appellant] as a successor trustee in the
    event that Mary could not serve.           [Clawson] also included
    [Appellant] as a successor executor of his will if Mary could not
    serve. What [Clawson] did not do is include [Appellant] as a
    successor to Mary’s devise of one hundred percent of the trust in
    the event that she could not obtain same due to her predeceasing
    [Clawson]. If that was his intent, he could have easily continued
    naming [Appellant] as Mary’s successor by listing his name in
    Section E.
    * * *
    As a result, this Court finds that the testimony presented is not
    sufficient to rise to the level of clear and convincing evidence
    that a mistake of law or fact occurred that frustrated [Clawson’s]
    true intent.
    Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered 4 (emphases added).
    We discern no error in either the orphans’ court parsing of the Trust’s
    terms or its assessment of Appellant’s evidence of Clawson’s supposed
    contrary intent.    The orphans’ court correctly determined that the Trust
    unambiguously devised one hundred percent of its proceeds to Mary and that
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    the asterisk in Section E referred to the number of shares that the remainder
    of the Trust would be divided into after distribution pursuant to Section D.
    Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered 3. Moreover, Appellant’s
    contention that the orphans’ court erred in applying the clear and convincing
    evidentiary burden to Appellant’s claim that the Trust was ambiguous, see
    Appellant’s Brief at 30, is unsupported. The orphans’ court’s initial conclusion
    that the Trust was unambiguous resulted from a straightforward scrutiny of
    the language of the Trust, and it did not employ the “clear and convincing”
    standard of proof in arriving at its decision.
    That being said, we conclude that the orphans’ court did properly employ
    the clear and convincing standard in its ultimate finding that Appellant’s
    evidence that the Trust misstated Clawson’s intent was insufficient to justify
    reformation of the Trust. Paremka’s evidence was vague as to the specifics
    of Clawson’s intent and lacked the necessary temporal proximity to when the
    Trust was executed. Additionally, Appellant’s self-serving testimony clearly
    was not “so clear, direct, weighty, and convincing as to enable the [factfinder]
    to come to a clear conviction, without hesitancy, of the truth of the precise
    facts in issue.” 
    L.J.B., 18 A.3d at 1107
    .
    We also reject Appellant’s assertion that the holding of In re Navarra,
    
    185 A.3d 342
    (Pa. Super. 2018), supports his argument advocating
    reformation.   In Navarra, a wife’s plenary guardian brought an action to
    amend the wife’s will to disinherit residuary legatees, who were her husband’s
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    children, after the husband amended his will to disinherit his wife’s children.
    The guardian petitioned the orphans’ court to substitute its judgment for the
    wife’s, who suffered from dementia, pursuant to 20 Pa.C.S. § 5536(b),9 and
    disinherit the husband’s children.             In reaching its decision to grant the
    guardian’s petition to substitute its judgment, the orphans’ court determined
    the preponderance of the evidence standard, rather than the clear and
    convincing evidence standard, was the proper standard of proof to establish
    good cause to modify the husband’s will. 
    Navarra, 185 A.3d at 355
    . In a
    footnote, however, the orphans’ court observed that other inquiries as to
    testamentary intent require clear and convincing evidence:
    [W]e address another exceptional circumstance in which the
    legislature has required clear and convincing evidence: when a
    petitioner moves to reform a trust instrument to conform to the
    settlor’s intent when the trust instrument “was affected by a
    mistake of fact or law. . . .” 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 7740.5. The clear and
    convincing standard applies here not only “to guard against the
    possibility of unreliable or contrived evidence,” Uniform Law
    Comment, 20 Pa.C.S. § 7740.5, but also because Pennsylvania
    traditionally has required clear and convincing evidence to reform
    instruments on the basis of mistake. See Thrasher v. Rothrock,
    
    377 Pa. 562
    , 
    105 A.2d 600
    , 604 (1954) (citing In re Ridgway's
    Account, 
    206 Pa. 587
    , 
    56 A. 25
    (1903)).
    The circumstances addressed in Section 7740.5 do not exist here.
    [The guardian] does not contend that Wife’s will was the product
    of mistake at the time of execution. Instead, [the guardian]
    contends that the will was consistent with Wife’s intent at the time
    of execution, but that (1) Wife and Husband had reciprocal wills,
    (2) Husband later amended his will to disinherit Wife's children,
    so (3) as a matter of reciprocity, Wife would have responded to
    Husband’s amendment by amending her own will to disinherit
    ____________________________________________
    9 20 Pa.C.S. §5536(b) governs distributions of income and principal during
    periods of incapacity.
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    Husband's legatees. Thus, Section 7740.5 would not persuade us
    that the clear and convincing test applies to the present case.
    
    Navarra, 185 A.3d at 356
    n.7.       Appellant contends that the above-cited
    language demonstrates that the Navarra Court endorsed his position that
    there is a distinction between circumstances when a settlor is mistaken at the
    time a trust is executed and those wherein the terms of the trust misstate the
    settlor’s intention. Appellant’s Brief at 20. That is not an accurate reading of
    the decision. Rather, this Court simply concluded that although the wife’s will
    accurately reflected her intent at the time of execution, the orphans’ court had
    good cause to substitute its judgment and modify the will due to her husband’s
    subsequent revision of his will to exclude the wife’s children. 
    Navarra, 185 A.3d at 57
    . Other than observing that this was not a situation where the will
    was the product of mistake at the time of execution, the Navarra court did
    not discuss the distinction Appellant advocates as crucial to this matter.
    Appellant next asserts that the orphans’ court required proof of
    “exceptional circumstances” before reforming the Trust. Appellant’s Brief at
    21. This argument is baseless. It its opinion, the orphans’ court observed that
    “[r]eforming of a trust pursuant to the UTC is only supposed to be done in an
    “exceptional circumstance.” Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at unnumbered
    4 (citing 
    Navarra, 185 A.3d at 342
    ). However, it is clear from the previously-
    cited excerpt from the orphans’ court opinion on page 
    13, supra
    , and the
    language highlighted therein that it utilized the clear and convincing standard
    in evaluating the evidence proffered by Appellant regarding Clawson’s intent.
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    J-A14011-20
    Appellant also alleges that the orphans’ court improperly focused on
    Clawson’s intent at the time he executed the estate documents. Appellant’s
    Brief at 23. However, as earlier explained, time of execution is the point in
    when courts must examine in ascertaining the testator’s intentions.
    
    Tscherneff, 203 A.3d at 1024
    (in ascertaining the testator’s intention, a will
    is to be construed as of the date of its execution).
    Appellant additionally maintains that the orphans’ court’s finding that
    the testimony of Appellant and Paremka was insufficient to rise to the level of
    “clear and convincing” is against the weight of the evidence. Appellant’s Brief
    at 26. In a companion argument, Appellant urges that the orphans’ court
    erred in refusing to reform the Trust in light of the evidence of Clawson’s
    probable intention.
    Id. at 29.
    Specifically, Appellant urges that he presented
    uncontradicted testimony that the Trust contained a mistake in expression
    because it failed to name him as a beneficiary of the Trust.
    We have already concluded that the orphans’ court correctly decided
    that Appellant’s and Paremka’s testimony did not demonstrate clear and
    convincing evidence of Clawson’s probable intent.         We likewise reject
    Appellant’s claim that the orphans’ court’s decision not to reform the Trust
    was against the weight of the evidence. See In re Duncan's Estate, 
    232 A.2d 717
    , 720 (Pa. 1967) (where the auditing judge sees and hears the
    witnesses, determines their credibility and the weight to be given their
    testimony, his findings, like those of a jury, will not be disturbed except for
    - 17 -
    J-A14011-20
    clear error). We have no reason to disturb the orphans’ court assessment of
    the evidence.     Appellant’s self-interested testimony was limited to one
    conversation with his uncle wherein Appellant claimed that Clawson assured
    him that he would take care of Mary and Appellant and that he created a trust
    to that effect. N.T., 6/24/ 19, at 86, 102.      Paremka merely recalled that
    Clawson had a trust and that, at some unspecified time, Clawson mentioned
    that he would remember Appellant in his estate plan.
    Id. at 53.
    The fact that
    the evidence was not contradicted does not mean that it was clear and
    convincing. The court was within its discretion when it determined that this
    information was not persuasive evidence of Clawson’s intent.
    Appellant next asserts that the orphans’ court erred when it failed to
    find a scrivener’s error. Appellant’s Brief at 32. Appellant contends that the
    orphans’ court incorrectly confined its review of the Trust to the four corners
    of the document and failed to consider his and Paremka’s testimony of
    Clawson’s testamentary intent. Appellant directs our attention to the presence
    of the asterisk and colon in Article IV E of the Trust and posits that in light of
    his and Paremka’s testimony the “oddity of Article IVE must at the very least
    represent a scrivener’s error.”
    Id. “[M]istake of a
    scrivener in preparing a deed, will, or other writing may
    be established by parol evidence and the instrument reformed accordingly.”
    In re Mihordin, 
    162 A.3d 1166
    , 1172 (Pa. Super. 2017) (quotation omitted).
    Whether the mistake be unilateral or bilateral, “the proof of the mistake must
    - 18 -
    J-A14011-20
    be established by evidence that is clear, precise, convincing, and of the most
    satisfactory character.”
    Id. As with Appellant’s
    other claims extolling the
    persuasiveness of his and Paremka’s testimony, it is obvious that this evidence
    of Clawson’s intent does not rise to the standard of clear and convincing proof
    required to establish the existence of a scrivener’s mistake.
    Appellant’s last issue concerns the orphans’ court failure to rule on
    certain evidentiary issues. By way of background, during the June 24, 2019
    hearing, the Commonwealth raised objections based upon, inter alia, the Dead
    Man’s Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 5930, regarding Appellant’s testimony related to
    Clawson’s testamentary intent and the introduction of Appellant’s exhibits
    reflecting his appointment as power of attorney. The orphans’ court reserved
    ruling on the objections, and allowed the case to proceed. N.T., 6/24/19, at
    80. After the hearing, the parties submitted briefs on the evidentiary issues.
    In its opinion, the orphans’ court then observed the following:     “Since the
    evidence presented, even if all of it is admitted and taken into consideration,
    does not support the sustaining of the objections raised, there is no need for
    this [c]ourt to rule on the objections to admission of the evidence made by
    the Commonwealth during the hearing.” Orphans’ Court Opinion, 9/19/19, at
    unnumbered 5. Therefore, Appellant’s issue and also the Commonwealth’s
    argument concerning the Dead Man’s Act which Appellant addresses in his
    reply brief, are not before us.
    Order affirmed. Petition to withdraw as counsel granted.
    - 19 -
    J-A14011-20
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/21/2020
    - 20 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1622 WDA 2019

Filed Date: 12/21/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2020